--- title: "Nixos Subjectively" date: 2023-08-31T08:30:14+03:00 --- Previously I [bloggged]({{< ref "log/2023/end-of-summer.md" >}}) about the cool things I did with NixOS. After publishing the post, my friend promptly asked: > Wondering what's your professional take on NixOS. Would you give it a short > for a small-to-medium size server fleet provisioning? It felt rather involved > and not very mature when I looked at it. Kind of a commitment, too. Here is my response: > My journey to NixOS has been bumpy ride: it's been over a year since I looked > at first, and I still sometimes feel I did not escape the beginner level. The > learning curve is steep, and it is best to take it on gently or have a good > mentor nearby. I started by installing NixOS on my primary laptop, which was > a mistake. The annoyance of "I can do this in Debian in 5 seconds, and I am > an hour in without an end of sight in this thing" was very discouraging at > times. > > I reinstalled my laptop back to Debian and took a few slow months to > provision 2 personal servers (the thing that's detailed in the blog). Taking > it slow has been fantastic experience. The folks in Matrix are very helpful > where documentation, especially high-level, is patchy. Now I feel comfortable > enough to retry NixOS on my laptop again. > > Recently I realized that what I originally perceived as immaturity later > turned out lack of knowledge and/or lack of high-level documentation. > Technicals are good. Granted, I have found some bugs (though trivially > [fixed][nixos-prs]), but they mostly come from the power to configure it and > thus the huge surface area. Also, variety does not help: for example, there > are [10 deployment tools][deployment-tools] in the wiki ("nixops related" > counts too). It is hard to choose when I don't know what to expect, much less > know what's possible. It is also nontrivial to ask for a "high-level" advice: > a beginner will just tell their favorite system, not knowing the trade-offs > or alternatives. An expert will tell "depends on what you want to do". Moving > beyond such answer requires time and a beverage, which brings it's own > constraints. In this concrete case, I spent quite some time learning krops, > which later turned out to be a dead-end. Later moved to deploy-rs, which > turned out to be a good decision so far. > > As far as recommendations go. For smaller companies, especially where > developers are also taking care of operations/deployments/infrastructure, I > can't recommend NixOS enough. For medium-large size companies it would > certainly bring a lot of value (I can already see how many things mine or my > sister-team at Uber had to re-implement which come out of the box in NixOS), > but, like with anything that has a different paradigm, requires a mentality > shift, which may be very hard organizationally. > > There is at least one large-ish company I know that uses NixOS > ([proof][canva]). I did not look, I found it by accident. I also know a few > folks in Tweag; their primary consulting stream is helping companies onboard > to Bazel and/or Nix. They won't tell who they are, but there are "quite a > few, of different sizes, flying under the radar". [nixos-prs]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pulls?q=is%3Apr+author%3Amotiejus+is%3Aclosed [deployment-tools]: https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Applications#Deployment [canva]: https://opencollective.com/canvaofficial/expenses/115338