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Building Specific Parts of NixOS
With the command nix-build, you can build specific parts of your NixOS
configuration. This is done as follows:
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/nixos
$ nix-build -A config.option
where option is a NixOS option with type "derivation" (i.e. something
that can be built). Attributes of interest include:
system.build.toplevel-
The top-level option that builds the entire NixOS system. Everything else in your configuration is indirectly pulled in by this option. This is what
nixos-rebuildbuilds and what/run/current-systempoints to afterwards.A shortcut to build this is:
$ nix-build -A system system.build.manual.manualHTML-
The NixOS manual.
system.build.etc-
A tree of symlinks that form the static parts of
/etc. system.build.initialRamdisk,system.build.kernel-
The initial ramdisk and kernel of the system. This allows a quick way to test whether the kernel and the initial ramdisk boot correctly, by using QEMU's
-kerneland-initrdoptions:$ nix-build -A config.system.build.initialRamdisk -o initrd $ nix-build -A config.system.build.kernel -o kernel $ qemu-system-x86_64 -kernel ./kernel/bzImage -initrd ./initrd/initrd -hda /dev/null system.build.nixos-rebuild,system.build.nixos-install,system.build.nixos-generate-config-
These build the corresponding NixOS commands.
systemd.units.unit-name.unit-
This builds the unit with the specified name. Note that since unit names contain dots (e.g.
httpd.service), you need to put them between quotes, like this:$ nix-build -A 'config.systemd.units."httpd.service".unit'You can also test individual units, without rebuilding the whole system, by putting them in
/run/systemd/system:$ cp $(nix-build -A 'config.systemd.units."httpd.service".unit')/httpd.service \ /run/systemd/system/tmp-httpd.service # systemctl daemon-reload # systemctl start tmp-httpd.serviceNote that the unit must not have the same name as any unit in
/etc/systemd/systemsince those take precedence over/run/systemd/system. That's why the unit is installed astmp-httpd.servicehere.