This guide will help you convert your existing NixOS configurations into a Clan. !!! Warning Migrating instead of starting new can be trickier and might lead to bugs or unexpected issues. We recommend reading the [Getting Started](/getting-started/creating-your-first-clan.md) guide first. Once you have a working setup and understand the concepts transfering your NixOS configurations over is easy. ## Back up your existing configuration Before you start, it is strongly recommended to back up your existing configuration in any form you see fit. If you use version control to manage your configuration changes, it is also a good idea to follow the migration guide in a separte branch until everything works as expected. ## Starting Point We assume you are already using NixOS flakes to manage your configuration. If not, migrate to a flake-based setup following the official [NixOS documentation](https://nix.dev/manual/nix/2.25/command-ref/new-cli/nix3-flake.html). The snippet below shows a common Nix flake. For this example we will assume you have have two hosts: **berlin** and **cologne**. ```nix { inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable"; outputs = { self, nixpkgs, ... }: { nixosConfigurations = { berlin = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem { system = "x86_64-linux"; modules = [ ./machines/berlin/configuration.nix ]; }; cologne = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem { system = "x86_64-linux"; modules = [ ./machines/cologne/configuration.nix ]; }; }; }; } ``` ## 1. Add `clan-core` to `inputs` Add `clan-core` to your flake as input. ```nix inputs.clan-core = { url = "https://git.clan.lol/clan/clan-core/archive/main.tar.gz"; # Don't do this if your machines are on nixpkgs stable. inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs"; } ``` ## 2. Update Outputs To be able to access our newly added dependency, it has to be added to the output parameters. ```diff - outputs = { self, nixpkgs, ... }: + outputs = { self, nixpkgs, clan-core }: ``` The existing `nixosConfigurations` output of your flake will be created by clan. In addition, a new `clanInternals` output will be added. Since both of these are provided by the output of `clan-core.lib.clan`, a common syntax is to use a `let...in` statement to create your clan and access it's parameters in the flake outputs. For the provide flake example, your flake should now look like this: ```nix { inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable"; inputs.clan-core = { url = "https://git.clan.lol/clan/clan-core/archive/main.tar.gz"; inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs"; }; outputs = { self, nixpkgs, clan-core, ... }: let clan = clan-core.lib.clan { self = self; # this needs to point at the repository root specialArgs = {}; meta.name = throw "Change me to something unique"; machines = { berlin = { nixpkgs.hostPlatform = "x86_64-linux"; imports = [ ./machines/berlin/configuration.nix ]; }; cologne = { nixpkgs.hostPlatform = "x86_64-linux"; imports = [ ./machines/cologne/configuration.nix ]; }; }; }; in { inherit (clan.config) nixosConfigurations nixosModules clanInternals; clan = clan.config; }; } ``` ✅ Et voilà! Your existing hosts are now part of a clan. Existing Nix tooling should still work as normal. To check that you didn't make any errors, run `nix flake show` and verify both hosts are still recognized as if nothing had changed. You should also see the new `clan` output. ``` ❯ nix flake show git+file:///my-nixos-config ├───clan: unknown └───nixosConfigurations ├───berlin: NixOS configuration └───cologne: NixOS configuration ``` Of course you can also rebuild your configuration using `nixos-rebuild` and veryify everything still works. ## 3. Add `clan-cli` to your `devShells` At this point Clan is set up, but you can't use the CLI yet. To do so, it is recommended to expose it via a `devShell` in your flake. It is also possible to install it any other way you would install a package in Nix, but using a developtment shell ensures the CLI's version will always be in sync with your configuration. A minimal example is provided below, add it to your flake outputs. ```nix devShells."x86_64-linux".default = nixpkgs.legacyPackages."x86_64-linux".mkShell { packages = [ clan-core.packages."x86_64-linux".clan-cli ]; } ``` To use the CLI, execute `nix develop` in the directory of your flake. The resulting shell, provides you with the `clan` CLI tool. Since you will be using it every time you interact with Clan, it is recommended to set up [direnv](https://direnv.net/). Verify everything works as expected by running `clan machines list`. ``` ❯ nix develop [user@host:~/my-nixos-config]$ clan machines list berlin cologne ``` ## Specify Targets Clan needs to know where it can reach your hosts. For testing purpose set `clan.core.networking.targetHost` to the machines adress or hostname. ```nix # machines/berlin/configuration.nix { clan.core.networking.targetHost = "123.4.56.78"; } ``` See our guide on for properly [configuring machines networking](/guides/networking/networking.md) ## Next Steps You are now fully set up. Use the CLI to manage your hosts or proceed to configure further services. At this point you should be able to run commands like `clan machines update berlin` to deploy a host.