/nix-on-droid

Nix-enabled environment for your Android device.

Primary LanguageNixMIT LicenseMIT

Nix-on-Droid

Get it on F-Droid

Nix package manager on Android, in a single-click installable package. This is not full NixOS running inside Android, but you get easy access to nixpkgs' vast collection of (precompiled!) software and the best package manager under the sun. It's prototype-grade quality as of now, but hey, it works!

It does not require root, user namespaces support or disabling SELinux, but it relies on proot and other hacks instead. It uses a fork of Termux-the-terminal-emulator app, but has no relation to Termux-the-distro. Please do not pester Termux folks about Nix-on-Droid.

This repository contains:

  1. Nix expressions that generate a bootstrap zipball, which is then used to install Nix package manager on Android along with the nix-on-droid executable.
  2. A module system for configuring the local Nix-on-Droid installation directly on the device.

It is only tested with aarch64 (64-bit ARM devices). It also used to compile for i686 devices, but the developers don't own any and nobody has reported whether it actually worked or not, so it's no longer built unless a user shows up. Sorry, it would not work on 32-bit ARM devices and it's not an easy feat to pull off.

Try it out

Install it from F-Droid, launch the app, press OK, expect many hundreds megabytes of downloads to happen.

Nix-on-Droid and the module system

Config file

The Nix-on-Droid system can be managed through a custom config file in ~/.config/nixpkgs/nix-on-droid.nix as generated on first build, for example:

{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  environment.packages = [ pkgs.vim ];
  system.stateVersion = "23.05";
}

An alternative location is ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix with the key nix-on-droid, for example:

{
  nix-on-droid =
    { pkgs, ... }:

    {
      environment.packages = [ pkgs.vim ];
      system.stateVersion = "23.05";
    };
}

See https://t184256.github.io/nix-on-droid/ for list of all available options.

home-manager integration

To enable home-manager you simply need to follow the instructions already provided in the example nix-on-droid.nix:

  1. Add home-manager channel:
    nix-channel --add https://github.com/rycee/home-manager/archive/release-23.05.tar.gz home-manager
    nix-channel --update
  2. Configure home-manager:
    { pkgs, ... }:
    
    {
      # Read Nix-on-Droid changelog before changing this value
      system.stateVersion = "23.05";
    
      # insert Nix-on-Droid config
    
      home-manager.config =
        { pkgs, ... }:
        {
          # Read home-manager changelog before changing this value
          home.stateVersion = "23.05";
    
          # insert home-manager config
        };
    
      # or if you have a separate home.nix already present:
      home-manager.config = ./home.nix;
    }

nix-on-droid executable

This executable is responsible for activating new configurations: Use nix-on-droid switch to activate the current configuration and nix-on-droid rollback to rollback to the latest build.

For more information, please run nix-on-droid help.

Build Nix-on-Droid on your own

The terminal emulator part is probably not interesting for you, just download and use a prebuilt one. If you really want to rebuild it, you can just use Android Studio for that.

The zipball generation is probably what you are after. Get an x86_64 computer with flake-enabled Nix.

tl;dr: Use the deploy app like the following which executes all steps mentioned below:

nix run ".#deploy" -- <public_url> <rsync_target>
# or run the following for explanation of this script
nix run ".#deploy"

Run

nix build ".#bootstrapZip" --impure

Put the zip file from result on some HTTP server and specify the parent directory URL during the installation. To re-trigger the installation, you can use 'clear data' on the Android app (after backing stuff up, obviously).

If you want to change the Nix-on-Droid channel to your custom one, you can do that either with nix-channel after the installation, or by setting the environment variable NIX_ON_DROID_CHANNEL_URL. Other environment variables are NIXPKGS_CHANNEL_URL an NIX_ON_DROID_FLAKE_URL.

Note: The proot binary is not built on the android device (NDK is required for building it, and it's not available on mobile platforms). The way we work around it is to push proot derivation to cachix. The current workaround is to hardcode the path to the wanted proot nix store path in modules/environment/login/default.nix. During evaluation time on the android device this store path will be downloaded from the binary cache (https://nix-on-droid.cachix.org/). This in return means the proot derivation has to be present there or in any other binary cache configured in the nix.conf on the device.

Obviously it's an annoyance if one wants to fork this repo and test something. To minimize the hassle with this scenario, proot derivation is also bundled with the bootstrap zipball. This way you only need your own binary cache if you are planning to maintain a long-term fork that users can update from. In case you only care about updates through wiping the data, or are forking to submit a one-off pull request, you shouldn't need a binary cache for that.

Nix flakes

Note: Nix flake support is still experimental at the moment and subject to change.

Examples / templates

A minimal example could look like the following:

{
  description = "Minimal example of Nix-on-Droid system config.";

  inputs = {
    nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-23.05";

    nix-on-droid = {
      url = "github:t184256/nix-on-droid/release-23.05";
      inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
    };
  };

  outputs = { self, nixpkgs, nix-on-droid }: {

    nixOnDroidConfigurations.default = nix-on-droid.lib.nixOnDroidConfiguration {
      modules = [ ./nix-on-droid.nix ];
    };

  };
}

For more examples and nix flake templates, see templates directory or explore with:

nix flake init --template github:t184256/nix-on-droid#advanced

Usage with nix-on-droid

Use nix-on-droid switch --flake path/to/flake#device to build and activate your configuration (path/to/flake#device will expand to .#nixOnDroidConfigurations.device). If you run nix-on-droid switch --flake path/to/flake, the default configuration will be used.

Note: Currently, Nix-on-Droid can not be built with an pure flake build because of hardcoded store paths for proot. Therefore, every evaluation of a flake configuration will be executed with --impure flag. (This behaviour will be dropped as soon as the default setup does not require it anymore.)

Emulate Nix-on-Droid-like environment with fakedroid

For easier debugging and testing, there is a so-called fakedroid environment which emulates the on-device environment including proot as good as possible.

You can enter this emulated environment with

nix run --impure ".#fakedroid"

This will install Nix-on-Droid with initial channel setup and save the state of this session in the .fakedroid directory in the project directory. To enter this environment with initial flake setup, set USE_FLAKE=1 as environment variable. Channel and flake setups can co-exist in the .fakedroid state directory. To rebuild/re-test the bootstrap process, remove the .fakedroid directory.

To only run a command in fakedroid and not enter an interactive shell, just call it with the command as arguments:

nix run --impure ".#fakedroid" -- ls -l

Testing

In the ./tests/on-device directory, there is small set of bats tests that can be executed on the android device or run in the fakedroid environment.

To run the tests (on device or in fakedroid), run

nix-on-droid on-device-test

Note: This currently requires a channel setup and should only be executed on clean installations.

Tips

  • To grant the app access to the storage, use the toggle in the app settings (reachable from Android settings).
  • If the terminal freezes, use 'Acquire wakelock' button in the notification and/or tone down your device's aggressive power saving measures.
  • We have a wiki with tips and success stories, you're encouraged to add yours as well.

Technical overview

OK, real brief.

Developer's device:

  1. proot for the target platform is cross-compiled against bionic, (to fake file paths like /nix/store; think 'userspace chroot')
  2. Target nix is taken from the original release tarball
  3. Target nix database is initialized
  4. Support scripts and config files are built with nix and the Nix-on-Droid module system
  5. From these, a bootstrap zipball is built and published on an HTTP server

User's device:

  1. Android app is installed and launched, bootstrap URL is entered
  2. Bootstrap zipball gets downloaded and unpacked
  3. 'First boot' begins, Nix builds the environment (or, possibly, pulls it from Cachix)
  4. Nix installs the environment (login scripts, config files, etc.)

You can refer to a NixCon 2019 presentation talk for a more extensive overview of the subject.

Licensing and credits

Licensed under MIT License, see LICENSE. Copyright (c) 2019-2021 Alexander Sosedkin and other contributors, see AUTHORS.

Two rewrites ago it was based off the official Nix install script (https://nixos.org/nix/install), presumably written by Eelco Dolstra.

Is deployed and used with a fork of Termux-the-terminal-emulator app, but has no relation to Termux-the-distro.

Previous project that did use Termux-the-distro: https://github.com/t184256/nix-in-termux