nix-files/hosts/common/hardware/default.nix

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{ config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
{
imports = [
./x86_64.nix
];
boot.initrd.supportedFilesystems = [ "ext4" "btrfs" "ext2" "ext3" "vfat" ];
# useful emergency utils
boot.initrd.extraUtilsCommands = ''
copy_bin_and_libs ${pkgs.btrfs-progs}/bin/btrfstune
copy_bin_and_libs ${pkgs.util-linux}/bin/{cfdisk,lsblk,lscpu}
copy_bin_and_libs ${pkgs.gptfdisk}/bin/{cgdisk,gdisk}
copy_bin_and_libs ${pkgs.smartmontools}/bin/smartctl
copy_bin_and_libs ${pkgs.e2fsprogs}/bin/resize2fs
'' + lib.optionalString pkgs.stdenv.hostPlatform.isx86_64 ''
copy_bin_and_libs ${pkgs.nvme-cli}/bin/nvme # doesn't cross compile
'';
boot.kernelParams = [
"boot.shell_on_fail"
#v experimental full pre-emption for hopefully better call/audio latency on moby.
# also toggleable at runtime via /sys/kernel/debug/sched/preempt
# defaults to preempt=voluntary
# "preempt=full"
];
# other kernelParams:
# "boot.trace"
# "systemd.log_level=debug"
# "systemd.log_target=console"
# hack in the `boot.shell_on_fail` arg since that doesn't always seem to work.
boot.initrd.preFailCommands = "allowShell=1";
# default: 4 (warn). 7 is debug
boot.consoleLogLevel = 7;
boot.loader.grub.enable = lib.mkDefault false;
boot.loader.generic-extlinux-compatible.enable = lib.mkDefault true;
# non-free firmware
hardware.enableRedistributableFirmware = true;
# default is 252274, which is too low particularly for servo.
# manifests as spurious "No space left on device" when trying to install watches,
# e.g. in dyn-dns by `systemctl start dyn-dns-watcher.path`.
# see: <https://askubuntu.com/questions/828779/failed-to-add-run-systemd-ask-password-to-directory-watch-no-space-left-on-dev>
boot.kernel.sysctl."fs.inotify.max_user_watches" = 1048576;
# powertop will default to putting USB devices -- including HID -- to sleep after TWO SECONDS
powerManagement.powertop.enable = false;
# linux CPU governor: <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/cpu-freq/governors.txt>
# - options:
# - "powersave" => force CPU to always run at lowest supported frequency
# - "performance" => force CPU to always run at highest frequency
# - "ondemand" => adjust frequency based on load
# - "conservative" (ondemand but slower to adjust)
# - "schedutil"
# - "userspace"
# - not all options are available for all platforms
# - intel (intel_pstate) appears to manage scaling w/o intervention/control from the OS.
# - AMD (acpi-cpufreq) appears to manage scaling via the OS *or* HW. but the ondemand defaults never put it to max hardware frequency.
# - qualcomm (cpufreq-dt) appears to manage scaling *only* via the OS. ondemand governor exercises the full range.
# - query details with `sudo cpupower frequency-info`
powerManagement.cpuFreqGovernor = "ondemand";
services.logind.extraConfig = ''
# dont shutdown when power button is short-pressed
HandlePowerKey=ignore
'';
# some packages build only if binfmt *isn't* present
nix.settings.system-features = lib.mkIf (config.boot.binfmt.emulatedSystems == []) [
"no-binfmt"
];
# services.snapper.configs = {
# root = {
# subvolume = "/";
# extraConfig = {
# ALLOW_USERS = "colin";
# };
# };
# };
# services.snapper.snapshotInterval = "daily";
}