{ config, pkgs, ... }: with pkgs.lib; let kernel = config.boot.kernelPackages.kernel; in { ###### interface options = { boot.kernelPackages = mkOption { default = pkgs.kernelPackages; example = '' Example code (copy & paste): pkgs.kernelPackages_2_6_25 ''; description = '' This option allows you to override the Linux kernel used by NixOS. Since things like external kernel module packages are tied to the kernel you're using, it also overrides those. This option is a function that takes Nixpkgs as an argument (as a convenience), and returns an attribute set containing at the very least an attribute kernel. Additional attributes may be needed depending on your configuration. For instance, if you use the NVIDIA X driver, then it also needs to contain an attribute nvidia_x11. ''; }; boot.kernelParams = mkOption { default = [ ]; description = '' The kernel parameters. If you want to add additional parameters, it's best to set . ''; }; boot.extraKernelParams = mkOption { default = [ ]; example = [ "debugtrace" ]; description = "Additional user-defined kernel parameters."; }; boot.extraModulePackages = mkOption { default = []; # !!! example = [pkgs.aufs pkgs.nvidia_x11]; description = "A list of additional packages supplying kernel modules."; }; boot.kernelModules = mkOption { default = []; description = '' The set of kernel modules to be loaded in the second stage of the boot process. Note that modules that are needed to mount the root file system should be added to or . ''; }; boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = mkOption { default = []; example = [ "sata_nv" "ext3" ]; description = '' The set of kernel modules in the initial ramdisk used during the boot process. This set must include all modules necessary for mounting the root device. That is, it should include modules for the physical device (e.g., SCSI drivers) and for the file system (e.g., ext3). The set specified here is automatically closed under the module dependency relation, i.e., all dependencies of the modules list here are included automatically. The modules listed here are available in the initrd, but are only loaded on demand (e.g., the ext3 module is loaded automatically when an ext3 filesystem is mounted, and modules for PCI devices are loaded when they match the PCI ID of a device in your system). To force a module to be loaded, include it in . ''; }; boot.initrd.kernelModules = mkOption { default = [ ]; description = "List of modules that are always loaded by the initrd."; }; system.modulesTree = mkOption { internal = true; default = []; description = '' Tree of kernel modules. This includes the kernel, plus modules built outside of the kernel. Combine these into a single tree of symlinks because modprobe only supports one directory. ''; merge = mergeListOption; # Convert the list of path to only one path. apply = pkgs.aggregateModules; }; }; ###### implementation config = { system.build = { inherit kernel; }; system.modulesTree = [ kernel ] ++ config.boot.extraModulePackages; boot.kernelParams = [ "splash=verbose" "vga=0x317" ]; boot.kernelModules = [ "loop" ]; boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ # Note: most of these (especially the SATA/PATA modules) # shouldn't be included by default since nixos-hardware-scan # detects them, but I'm keeping them for now for backwards # compatibility. # Some SATA/PATA stuff. "ahci" "sata_nv" "sata_via" "sata_sis" "sata_uli" "ata_piix" "pata_marvell" # Standard SCSI stuff. "sd_mod" "sr_mod" # Standard IDE stuff. "ide_cd" "ide_disk" "ide_generic" # Filesystems. "ext2" "ext3" # Support USB keyboards, in case the boot fails and we only have # a USB keyboard. "uhci_hcd" "ehci_hcd" "ohci_hcd" "usbhid" # Unix domain sockets (needed by udev). "unix" # Misc. stuff. "pcips2" "serio" "atkbd" "xtkbd" ]; boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ # For LVM. "dm_mod" # For usual AT keyboards "i8042" ]; # The Linux kernel >= 2.6.27 provides firmware. hardware.firmware = [ "${kernel}/lib/firmware" ]; }; }