You should look at the darwin.builder, which is now part of nixpkgs.
linuxkit-nix was started in 2017 when QEMU did not support macOS' Hypervisor.framework API. This meant that QEMU had to use full emulation with no hardware acceleration. Not ideal for building large software.
QEMU also had some issues on macOS with userspace networking.
At the time, LinuxKit was the easiest way to spin up a VM for builds, because it spun up HyperKit for hardware accelerated virtualisation and VPNKit for userspace networking - both used in Docker for Mac.
Theoretically the underlying technology was stable but it was bit
tricky to get everything working well together. There were
bootstrapping issues. For example, we had to be careful when
referencing linux-x86_64
packages because we were on darwin-x86_64
and it could only fetch from Hydra - it couldn't even build a custom
shell script for the Linux VM until we got that initial VM running.
This project also had issues with daemons, permissions and race conditions.
In 2018, QEMU got experimental support for Hypervisor.framework and that got promoted to stable in 2019. QEMU is now fast and since nixpkgs has great support for building and running QEMU virtual machines, there's little need for this project.
LinuxKit Nix makes it easy to build Linux binaries from a macOS machine using Nix. It's installing a VM using the native virtualization (Hypervisor.Framework) so it's quite liteweight compared to installing VirtualBox. The project also comes with an installation script that configures Nix to use the VM as a remote builder automatically.
This project depends on Nix and a nixpkgs channel >= 18.03.
Fetch it from the NixOS binary cache:
nix-env -i /nix/store/jgq3savsyyrpsxvjlrz41nx09z7r0lch-linuxkit-builder
nix-linuxkit-configure
It'll write to:
- ~/.cache/nix-linuxkit-builder/, in particular ~/.cache/nix-linuxkit-builder/nix-state/console-ring is interesting
- ~root/.ssh/ for the SSH config
- /etc/nix/machines
- ~/Library/LaunchAgents/org.nix-community.linuxkit-builder.plist
Once installed the daemon should automatically start and stay running.
To see if the daemon is running execute the following command and look at the
first column. If it has a number (PID) it's running, if it's -
then it's
stopped:
launchctl list | grep linuxkit
You can force start it with:
launchctl start org.nix-community.linuxkit-builder
You can force stop it with:
launchctl stop org.nix-community.linuxkit-builder
If after you stop it you may want to check for processes, like:
pgrep vpnkit
pgrep linuxkit
pgrep hyperkit
If something goes wrong and it didn't stop properly, you can try:
pkill -F ~/.cache/nix-linuxkit-builder/nix-state/hyperkit.pid hyperkit
When runninng nix-linuxkit-configure
, an SSH config is created at
/var/root/.ssh/nix-linuxkit-ssh-config
. Copy the contents of that SSH config
into your regular SSH config located at ~/.ssh/config
.
Check the /etc/nix/nix.conf
file for a builders
option. It should either
be set to @/etc/nix/machines
or not set at all for LinuxKit Nix to work
properly.
Another solution is to set export NIX_REMOTE_SYSTEMS=/etc/nix/machines
before running the nix or nixops command.
Something is wrong with LinuxKit. See the debugging section to try things out.
Leave an issue at https://github.com/nix-community/linuxkit-nix/issues
# Remove configuration
rm -rf ~/.cache/nix-linuxkit-builder/
# Remove build machine
# (edit manually if you have other configuration here)
sudo rm -f /etc/nix/machines
# Remove LaunchAgent
launchctl stop org.nix-community.linuxkit-builder
rm -f ~/Library/LaunchAgents/org.nix-community.linuxkit-builder.plist
# Remove SSH config
# (edit manually if you have other configuration here)
sudo rm -rf /var/root/.ssh
# Uninstall Nix package
nix-env -e linuxkit-builder