I’ve seen a lot of talks on the benefits of immutable distros (specifically Fedora Silverblue) but it always seemed to me as more of a hassle. Has anyone here been daily driving an immutable distro? Would you say it’s worth the effort of getting into?

  • sntx@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    I’ve recently switched over to NixOS in gradual rollouts to my systems:

    Stage 0 (~2h):

    • Installed NixOS with Gnome on my Laptop for testing an getting a feel for it (I prefer testing on bare-metal initially)
    • Tweaked it a bit via the config: removed gnome apps that came with the preset, installed all programs I needed and tested them

    Stage 1 (~3d):

    • Installed NixOS minimal on my primary system
    • Set up sway according to the wiki
    • Bodged together something similar to my previous arch setup, mostly my linking old config files with nix to programs installed with nix

    Stage 2 (~4d):

    • Moved all configs I could from my linked config files to the nix module declarations
    • Seperated config file into files ordered as like config-tree
    • Achieved a similar working state to my previous arch install
    • Moved channel from 22.11 to unstable (rolling release)

    Stage 3 (~7d):

    • Set up home-manager
    • Finally moved all config declarations into nix modules, no non-nix files left in my config
    • Also copied the config to my laptop, a single activation and I switched from gnome to sway without any problems

    Stage 4 (~21d):

    • Looked at a bunch of other peoples system configs
    • Recreated everything as a flake, similar to dunklecat’s config from sourcehut
    • Applied the config to my primay system and laptop
    • Wrote a bunch more config modules

    Stage 4.5:

    • Wrote some tools to make moving around nix easier for me, but mostly to get accustomed to the ecosystem

    Stage 5 (~6d):

    • Created and applied further system configs for a hetzner server & VMs

    Stage 6 (tbd):

    • Refining my config
    • Adding further modules

    Edit 1 (added personal experience): I’m a computer science student and have been using *nix as a daily driver for half a decade, my previous daily driver was arch for about two years. I spend ~1000h/y coding on non-University or Work related projects. I’m at a point where I can typically pick up a the basics of a new language in two to three weeks and write simple programs with it -> library/specific knowledge comes with usage.

    • sntx@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      Nix(OS)'s biggest killer feature for me is that I never had to update, wait for updates or fix updates after setting up the modules properly and getting CI set up for my git repo -> all systems are build before the update is rolled out, if the build fails, the update won’t be rolled out. Systems decide for themselves when to update and how they should handle them (i.e. server vs. desktop).

      That goes for all my systems: Laptop, PC, Servers and VMs