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+++ date = "2022-06-21" draft = false path = "/blog/nixos-disk-images-m1" tags = ["nix", "nixos"] title = "Adventures in building disk images of NixOS virtual machines for M1" +++
I work in a thoroughly Nix-based environment, and sometimes I need to test NixOS things, but I have a Mac at work. So, time to get a NixOS VM going on the M1, I guess! This was a partially-planned adventure.
People I know have been saying good things about the (mostly) qemu wrapper UTM (also on GitHub here), so that was the tool of choice.
I kind of didn't realize there were normal installer images that would absolutely just work (since UTM implements UEFI by default), so I tried a more fun option: just build the root filesystem offline and import it.
To do this, you will need a Linux machine with Nix and the capacity to execute aarch64 binaries, either by emulation with binfmt-misc and qemu-user on Linux, or natively because you have an aarch64-linux computer with Nix on it. I have the latter because Oracle Cloud apparently just gives away 24GB memory aarch64 instances for free.
NixOS has infrastructure for building disk images of systems, so it's more or less a case of doing it, with the correct configuration.
The config for the bootloader is also documented on the NixOS wiki here. The listed config worked for me, which is:
{ ... }: {
boot.loader.grub = {
efiSupport = true;
efiInstallAsRemovable = true;
device = "nodev";
};
}
Notable things about the hardware UTM configures by default:
- Ethernet: enp0s5, with the host at 192.168.64.1/24 and the guest receiving an IP via DHCP (probably 192.168.64.2)
- Disk: root on vda2, boot on vda1
It's a QEMU VM so everything is virtio; NixOS provides a configuration to get
all the necessary modules, which you can import at
(modulesPath + "/profiles/qemu-guest.nix").
Here's the configuration I used:
{{ codefile(path="./configuration.nix", code_lang="nix", colocated=true, hide=true) }}
Build with:
$ nix-build -I "nixpkgs=channel:nixos-22.05,nixos-config=$(pwd)/configuration.nix" \
'<nixpkgs>/nixos' -A config.system.build.image
Creating a VM
To do this, create a VM, selecting the "Other" type:
{% image(name="./1-os-dialog.png", colocated=true) %} Screenshot of the UTM operating system selection dialog, in which macOS, Linux, Windows, and Other are listed. {% end %}
Then disable ISO boot, since we don't need an installer where we're going.
{% image(name="./2-disable-iso-boot.png", colocated=true) %} Dialog in UTM: "disable ISO boot" checkbox checked {% end %}
Finish setting up the VM, don't worry about the disk size since we will immediately delete it. Select "Open VM Settings" on the summary page so you can do that.
{% image(name="./3-open-vm-settings.png", colocated=true) %} UTM VM creation summary dialog with "Open VM Settings" box checked {% end %}
Then select the disk and delete it:
{% image(name="./4-delete-volume.png", colocated=true) %} Screenshot of the VM settings showing the delete button of the disk selected in the sidebar. {% end %}
Finally, create a new disk, selecting import to get the newly built root filesystem image from Nix:
{% image(name="./5-import-image.png", colocated=true) %} Screenshot of the "create disk" dialog, with the import button visible. {% end %}