1
Fork 0
satellite/hosts/nixos/calypso/filesystems/default.nix

72 lines
2.1 KiB
Nix

{ lib, ... }:
{
imports = [ (import ./partitions.nix { }) ];
boot.supportedFilesystems = [ "btrfs" ];
services.btrfs.autoScrub.enable = true;
# {{{ Mark a bunch of paths as needed for boot
fileSystems =
lib.attrsets.genAttrs
[
"/"
"/nix"
"/persist/data"
"/persist/state"
"/persist/local/cache"
"/boot"
]
(p: {
neededForBoot = true;
});
# }}}
# {{{ Rollback
boot.initrd.systemd.services.rollback = {
description = "Rollback BTRFS root subvolume to a pristine state";
wantedBy = [ "initrd.target" ];
after = [ "systemd-cryptsetup@enc.service" ];
before = [ "sysroot.mount" ];
unitConfig.DefaultDependencies = "no";
serviceConfig.Type = "oneshot";
script = ''
mkdir -p /mnt
# We first mount the btrfs root to /mnt
# so we can manipulate btrfs subvolumes.
mount -o subvol=/ /dev/mapper/crypted /mnt
# While we're tempted to just delete /root and create
# a new snapshot from /root-blank, /root is already
# populated at this point with a number of subvolumes,
# which makes `btrfs subvolume delete` fail.
# So, we remove them first.
#
# /root contains subvolumes:
# - /root/var/lib/portables
# - /root/var/lib/machines
#
# I suspect these are related to systemd-nspawn, but
# since I don't use it I'm not 100% sure.
# Anyhow, deleting these subvolumes hasn't resulted
# in any issues so far, except for fairly
# benign-looking errors from systemd-tmpfiles.
btrfs subvolume list -o /mnt/root |
cut -f9 -d' ' |
while read subvolume; do
echo "deleting /$subvolume subvolume..."
btrfs subvolume delete "/mnt/$subvolume"
done &&
echo "deleting /root subvolume..." &&
btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/root
echo "restoring blank /root subvolume..."
btrfs subvolume snapshot /mnt/root-blank /mnt/root
# Once we're done rolling back to a blank snapshot,
# we can unmount /mnt and continue on the boot process.
umount /mnt
'';
};
# }}}
}