/disko

Declarative disk partitioning and formatting using nix [maintainer=@Lassulus]

Primary LanguageNixMIT LicenseMIT

disko - Declarative disk partitioning

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NixOS is a Linux distribution where everything is described as code, with one exception: during installation, the disk partitioning and formatting are manual steps. disko aims to correct this sad šŸ¤” omission.

This is especially useful for unattended installations, re-installation after a system crash or for setting up more than one identical server.

Overview

disko can either be used after booting from a NixOS installer, or in conjunction with nixos-anywhere if you're installing remotely.

Before using disko, the specifications of the disks, partitions, type of formatting and the mount points must be defined in a Nix configuration. You can find examples of typical configurations in the Nix community repository, and use one of these as the basis of your own configuration.

You can keep your configuration and re-use it for other installations, or for a system rebuild.

disko is flexible, in that it supports most of the common formatting and partitioning options, including:

  • Disk layouts: GPT, MBR, and mixed.
  • Partition tools: LVM, mdadm, LUKS, and more.
  • Filesystems: ext4, btrfs, ZFS, bcachefs, tmpfs, and others.

It can work with these in various configurations and orders, and supports recursive layouts.

How to use disko

Disko doesn't require installation: it can be run directly from nix-community repository. The Quickstart Guide documents how to run Disko in its simplest form when installing NixOS. Alternatively, you can also use the new disko-install tool, which combines the disko and nixos-install into one step.

For information on other use cases, including upgrading from an older version of disko, using disko without NixOS and downloading the module, see the How To Guide

For more detailed options, such as command line switches, see the Reference Guide

To access sample configurations for commonly-used disk layouts, refer to the examples provided.

Disko can be also used to create disk images.

Sample Configuration and CLI command

A simple disko configuration may look like this:

{
  disko.devices = {
    disk = {
      my-disk = {
        device = "/dev/sda";
        type = "disk";
        content = {
          type = "gpt";
          partitions = {
            ESP = {
              type = "EF00";
              size = "500M";
              content = {
                type = "filesystem";
                format = "vfat";
                mountpoint = "/boot";
              };
            };
            root = {
              size = "100%";
              content = {
                type = "filesystem";
                format = "ext4";
                mountpoint = "/";
              };
            };
          };
        };
      };
    };
  };
}

If you'd saved this configuration in /tmp/disk-config.nix, and wanted to create a disk named /dev/sda, you would run the following command to partition, format and mount the disk.

sudo nix --experimental-features "nix-command flakes" run github:nix-community/disko -- --mode disko /tmp/disk-config.nix

Related Tools

This tool is used by nixos-anywhere, which carries out a fully-automated remote install of NixOS.

We also acknowledge https://github.com/NixOS/nixpart, the conceptual ancestor of this project.

Licensing and Contribution details

This software is provided free under the MIT Licence.

Get in touch

We have a public matrix channel at disko.


This project is supported by Numtide. Untitledpng

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