nix3-help-stores(1) General Commands Manual nix3-help-stores(1)

Warning
This program is experimental and its interface is subject to change.

nix help-stores - show help about store types and their settings

nix help-stores [option…]

Nix supports different types of stores:

  • Dummy Store
  • Experimental Local Overlay Store
  • Experimental SSH Store
  • Experimental SSH Store with filesytem mounted
  • HTTP Binary Cache Store
  • Local Binary Cache Store
  • Local Daemon Store
  • Local Store
  • S3 Binary Cache Store
  • SSH Store

Stores are specified using a URL-like syntax. For example, the command

# nix path-info --store https://cache.nixos.org/ --json \
  /nix/store/a7gvj343m05j2s32xcnwr35v31ynlypr-coreutils-9.1

fetches information about a store path in the HTTP binary cache located at https://cache.nixos.org/, which is a type of store.

Store URLs can specify store settings using URL query strings, i.e. by appending ?name1=value1&name2=value2&... to the URL. For instance,

--store ssh://machine.example.org?ssh-key=/path/to/my/key

tells Nix to access the store on a remote machine via the SSH protocol, using /path/to/my/key as the SSH private key. The supported settings for each store type are documented below.

The special store URL auto causes Nix to automatically select a store as follows:

  • Use the local store /nix/store if /nix/var/nix is writable by the current user.
  • Otherwise, if /nix/var/nix/daemon-socket/socket exists, connect to the Nix daemon listening on that socket.
  • Otherwise, on Linux only, use the local chroot store ~/.local/share/nix/root, which will be created automatically if it does not exist.
  • Otherwise, use the local store /nix/store.

Store URL format: dummy://

This store type represents a store that contains no store paths and cannot be written to. It’s useful when you want to use the Nix evaluator when no actual Nix store exists, e.g.

# nix eval --store dummy:// --expr '1 + 2'

path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

Warning

This store is part of an experimental feature.

To use this store, make sure the local-overlay-store experimental feature is enabled. For example, include the following in nix.conf:

extra-experimental-features = local-overlay-store

Store URL format: local-overlay

This store type is a variation of the [local store] designed to leverage Linux’s Overlay Filesystem (OverlayFS for short). Just as OverlayFS combines a lower and upper filesystem by treating the upper one as a patch against the lower, the local overlay store combines a lower store with an upper almost-[local store]. (“almost” because while the upper fileystems for OverlayFS is valid on its own, the upper almost-store is not a valid local store on its own because some references will dangle.) To use this store, you will first need to configure an OverlayFS mountpoint appropriately as Nix will not do this for you (though it will verify the mountpoint is configured correctly).

This is a more abstract/conceptual description of the parts of a layered store, an authoritative reference. For more “practical” instructions, see the worked-out example in the next subsection.

The parts of a local overlay store are as follows:

Lower store:
Specified with the lower-store setting.
This is any store implementation that includes a store directory as part of the native operating system filesystem. For example, this could be a [local store], [local daemon store], or even another local overlay store.
The local overlay store never tries to modify the lower store in any way. Something else could modify the lower store, but there are restrictions on this Nix itself requires that this store only grow, and not change in other ways. For example, new store objects can be added, but deleting or modifying store objects is not allowed in general, because that will confuse and corrupt any local overlay store using those objects. (In addition, the underlying filesystem overlay mechanism may impose additional restrictions, see below.)
The lower store must not change while it is mounted as part of an overlay store. To ensure it does not, you might want to mount the store directory read-only (which then requires the [read-only] parameter to be set to true).
Lower store directory:
Specified with lower-store.real setting.
This is the directory used/exposed by the lower store.
As specified above, Nix requires the local store can only grow not change in other ways. Linux’s OverlayFS in addition imposes the further requirement that this directory cannot change at all. That means that, while any local overlay store exists that is using this store as a lower store, this directory must not change.
Lower metadata source:
Not directly specified. A consequence of the lower-store setting, depending on the type of lower store chosen.
This is abstract, just some way to read the metadata of lower store store objects. For example it could be a SQLite database (for the [local store]), or a socket connection (for the [local daemon store]).
This need not be writable. As stated above a local overlay store never tries to modify its lower store. The lower store’s metadata is considered part of the lower store, just as the store’s file system objects that appear in the store directory are.
Upper almost-store:
Not directly specified. Instead the constituent parts are independently specified as described below.
This is almost but not quite just a [local store]. That is because taken in isolation, not as part of a local overlay store, by itself, it would appear corrupted. But combined with everything else as part of an overlay local store, it is valid.
Upper layer directory:
Specified with upper-layer setting.
This contains additional store objects (or, strictly speaking, their file system objects that the local overlay store will extend the lower store with).
Upper store directory:
Specified with the real setting. This the same as the base local store setting, and can also be indirectly specified with the root setting.
This contains all the store objects from each of the two directories.
The lower store directory and upper layer directory are combined via OverlayFS to create this directory. Nix doesn’t do this itself, because it typically wouldn’t have the permissions to do so, so it is the responsibility of the user to set this up first. Nix can, however, optionally check that that the OverlayFS mount settings appear as expected, matching Nix’s own settings.
Upper SQLite database:
Not directly specified. The location of the database instead depends on the state setting. It is is always ${state}/db.
This contains the metadata of all of the upper layer store objects (everything beyond their file system objects), and also duplicate copies of some lower layer store object’s metadta. The duplication is so the metadata for the closure of upper layer store objects can be found entirely within the upper layer. (This allows us to use the same SQL Schema as the [local store]’s SQLite database, as foreign keys in that schema enforce closure metadata to be self-contained in this way.)

Here is a worked out example of usage, following the concepts in the previous section.

Say we have the following paths:

  • /mnt/example/merged-store/nix/store
  • /mnt/example/store-a/nix/store
  • /mnt/example/store-b

Then the following store URI can be used to access a local-overlay store at /mnt/example/merged-store:

local-overlay://?root=/mnt/example/merged-store&lower-store=/mnt/example/store-a&upper-layer=/mnt/example/store-b

The lower store directory is located at /mnt/example/store-a/nix/store, while the upper layer is at /mnt/example/store-b.

Before accessing the overlay store you will need to ensure the OverlayFS mount is set up correctly:

mount -t overlay overlay \
  -o lowerdir="/mnt/example/store-a/nix/store" \
  -o upperdir="/mnt/example/store-b" \
  -o workdir="/mnt/example/workdir" \
  "/mnt/example/merged-store/nix/store"

Note that OverlayFS requires /mnt/example/workdir to be on the same volume as the upperdir.

By default, Nix will check that the mountpoint as been set up correctly and fail with an error if it has not. You can override this behaviour by passing check-mount=false if you need to.

check-mount
Check that the overlay filesystem is correctly mounted.
Nix does not manage the overlayfs mount point itself, but the correct functioning of the overlay store does depend on this mount point being set up correctly. Rather than just assume this is the case, check that the lowerdir and upperdir options are what we expect them to be. This check is on by default, but can be disabled if needed.
Default: true
log
directory where Nix will store log files.
Default: /nix/var/log/nix
lower-store
Store URL for the lower store. The default is auto (i.e. use the Nix daemon or /nix/store directly).
Must be a store with a store dir on the file system. Must be used as OverlayFS lower layer for this store’s store dir.
Default: empty
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
read-only
Allow this store to be opened when its database is on a read-only filesystem.
Normally Nix will attempt to open the store database in read-write mode, even for querying (when write access is not needed), causing it to fail if the database is on a read-only filesystem.
Enable read-only mode to disable locking and open the SQLite database with the immutable parameter set.
Warning Do not use this unless the filesystem is read-only.
Using it when the filesystem is writable can cause incorrect query results or corruption errors if the database is changed by another process. While the filesystem the database resides on might appear to be read-only, consider whether another user or system might have write access to it.
Default: false
real
Physical path of the Nix store.
Default: /nix/store
remount-hook
Script or other executable to run when overlay filesystem needs remounting.
This is occasionally necessary when deleting a store path that exists in both upper and lower layers. In such a situation, bypassing OverlayFS and deleting the path in the upper layer directly is the only way to perform the deletion without creating a “whiteout”. However this causes the OverlayFS kernel data structures to get out-of-sync, and can lead to ‘stale file handle’ errors; remounting solves the problem.
The store directory is passed as an argument to the invoked executable.
Default: empty
require-sigs
Whether store paths copied into this store should have a trusted signature.
Default: true
root
Directory prefixed to all other paths.
Default: ``
state
Directory where Nix will store state.
Default: /dummy
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
upper-layer
Directory containing the OverlayFS upper layer for this store’s store dir.
Default: empty
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

Warning

This store is part of an experimental feature.

To use this store, make sure the mounted-ssh-store experimental feature is enabled. For example, include the following in nix.conf:

extra-experimental-features = mounted-ssh-store

Store URL format: mounted-ssh-ng://[username@]hostname

Experimental store type that allows full access to a Nix store on a remote machine, and additionally requires that store be mounted in the local file system.

The mounting of that store is not managed by Nix, and must by managed manually. It could be accomplished with SSHFS or NFS, for example.

The local file system is used to optimize certain operations. For example, rather than serializing Nix archives and sending over the Nix channel, we can directly access the file system data via the mount-point.

The local file system is also used to make certain operations possible that wouldn’t otherwise be. For example, persistent GC roots can be created if they reside on the same file system as the remote store: the remote side will create the symlinks necessary to avoid race conditions.

base64-ssh-public-host-key
The public host key of the remote machine.
Default: empty
compress
Whether to enable SSH compression.
Default: false
log
directory where Nix will store log files.
Default: /nix/var/log/nix
max-connection-age
Maximum age of a connection before it is closed.
Default: 4294967295
max-connections
Maximum number of concurrent connections to the Nix daemon.
Default: 1
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
real
Physical path of the Nix store.
Default: /nix/store
remote-program
Path to the nix-daemon executable on the remote machine.
Default: nix-daemon
remote-store
Store URL to be used on the remote machine. The default is auto (i.e. use the Nix daemon or /nix/store directly).
Default: empty
root
Directory prefixed to all other paths.
Default: ``
ssh-key
Path to the SSH private key used to authenticate to the remote machine.
Default: empty
state
Directory where Nix will store state.
Default: /dummy
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

Store URL format: ssh-ng://[username@]hostname

Experimental store type that allows full access to a Nix store on a remote machine.

base64-ssh-public-host-key
The public host key of the remote machine.
Default: empty
compress
Whether to enable SSH compression.
Default: false
max-connection-age
Maximum age of a connection before it is closed.
Default: 4294967295
max-connections
Maximum number of concurrent connections to the Nix daemon.
Default: 1
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
remote-program
Path to the nix-daemon executable on the remote machine.
Default: nix-daemon
remote-store
Store URL to be used on the remote machine. The default is auto (i.e. use the Nix daemon or /nix/store directly).
Default: empty
ssh-key
Path to the SSH private key used to authenticate to the remote machine.
Default: empty
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

Store URL format: http://..., https://...

This store allows a binary cache to be accessed via the HTTP protocol.

compression
NAR compression method (xz, bzip2, gzip, zstd, or none).
Default: xz
compression-level
The preset level to be used when compressing NARs. The meaning and accepted values depend on the compression method selected. -1 specifies that the default compression level should be used.
Default: -1
index-debug-info
Whether to index DWARF debug info files by build ID. This allows dwarffs to fetch debug info on demand
Default: false
local-nar-cache
Path to a local cache of NARs fetched from this binary cache, used by commands such as nix store cat.
Default: empty
parallel-compression
Enable multi-threaded compression of NARs. This is currently only available for xz and zstd.
Default: false
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
secret-key
Path to the secret key used to sign the binary cache.
Default: empty
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false
write-nar-listing
Whether to write a JSON file that lists the files in each NAR.
Default: false

Store URL format: file://path

This store allows reading and writing a binary cache stored in path in the local filesystem. If path does not exist, it will be created.

For example, the following builds or downloads nixpkgs#hello into the local store and then copies it to the binary cache in /tmp/binary-cache:

# nix copy --to file:///tmp/binary-cache nixpkgs#hello

compression
NAR compression method (xz, bzip2, gzip, zstd, or none).
Default: xz
compression-level
The preset level to be used when compressing NARs. The meaning and accepted values depend on the compression method selected. -1 specifies that the default compression level should be used.
Default: -1
index-debug-info
Whether to index DWARF debug info files by build ID. This allows dwarffs to fetch debug info on demand
Default: false
local-nar-cache
Path to a local cache of NARs fetched from this binary cache, used by commands such as nix store cat.
Default: empty
parallel-compression
Enable multi-threaded compression of NARs. This is currently only available for xz and zstd.
Default: false
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
secret-key
Path to the secret key used to sign the binary cache.
Default: empty
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false
write-nar-listing
Whether to write a JSON file that lists the files in each NAR.
Default: false

Store URL format: daemon, unix://path

This store type accesses a Nix store by talking to a Nix daemon listening on the Unix domain socket path. The store pseudo-URL daemon is equivalent to unix:///nix/var/nix/daemon-socket/socket.

log
directory where Nix will store log files.
Default: /nix/var/log/nix
max-connection-age
Maximum age of a connection before it is closed.
Default: 4294967295
max-connections
Maximum number of concurrent connections to the Nix daemon.
Default: 1
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
real
Physical path of the Nix store.
Default: /nix/store
root
Directory prefixed to all other paths.
Default: ``
state
Directory where Nix will store state.
Default: /dummy
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

Store URL format: local, root

This store type accesses a Nix store in the local filesystem directly (i.e. not via the Nix daemon). root is an absolute path that is prefixed to other directories such as the Nix store directory. The store pseudo-URL local denotes a store that uses / as its root directory.

A store that uses a root other than / is called a chroot store. With such stores, the store directory is “logically” still /nix/store, so programs stored in them can only be built and executed by chroot-ing into root. Chroot stores only support building and running on Linux when mount namespaces and user namespaces are enabled.

For example, the following uses /tmp/root as the chroot environment to build or download nixpkgs#hello and then execute it:

# nix run --store /tmp/root nixpkgs#hello
Hello, world!

Here, the “physical” store location is /tmp/root/nix/store, and Nix’s store metadata is in /tmp/root/nix/var/nix/db.

It is also possible, but not recommended, to change the “logical” location of the Nix store from its default of /nix/store. This makes it impossible to use default substituters such as https://cache.nixos.org/, and thus you may have to build everything locally. Here is an example:

# nix build --store 'local?store=/tmp/my-nix/store&state=/tmp/my-nix/state&log=/tmp/my-nix/log' nixpkgs#hello

log
directory where Nix will store log files.
Default: /nix/var/log/nix
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
read-only
Allow this store to be opened when its database is on a read-only filesystem.
Normally Nix will attempt to open the store database in read-write mode, even for querying (when write access is not needed), causing it to fail if the database is on a read-only filesystem.
Enable read-only mode to disable locking and open the SQLite database with the immutable parameter set.
Warning Do not use this unless the filesystem is read-only.
Using it when the filesystem is writable can cause incorrect query results or corruption errors if the database is changed by another process. While the filesystem the database resides on might appear to be read-only, consider whether another user or system might have write access to it.
Default: false
real
Physical path of the Nix store.
Default: /nix/store
require-sigs
Whether store paths copied into this store should have a trusted signature.
Default: true
root
Directory prefixed to all other paths.
Default: ``
state
Directory where Nix will store state.
Default: /dummy
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

Store URL format: s3://bucket-name

This store allows reading and writing a binary cache stored in an AWS S3 (or S3-compatible service) bucket. This store shares many idioms with the HTTP Binary Cache Store.

For AWS S3, the binary cache URL for a bucket named example-nix-cache will be exactly s3://example-nix-cache. For S3 compatible binary caches, consult that cache’s documentation.

If your binary cache is publicly accessible and does not require authentication, it is simplest to use the [HTTP Binary Cache Store] rather than S3 Binary Cache Store with https://example-nix-cache.s3.amazonaws.com instead of s3://example-nix-cache.

Your bucket will need a bucket policy like the following to be accessible:

{
    "Id": "DirectReads",
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Sid": "AllowDirectReads",
            "Action": [
                "s3:GetObject",
                "s3:GetBucketLocation"
            ],
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Resource": [
                "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache",
                "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*"
            ],
            "Principal": "*"
        }
    ]
}

Nix will use the default credential provider chain for authenticating requests to Amazon S3.

Note that this means Nix will read environment variables and files with different idioms than with Nix’s own settings, as implemented by the AWS SDK. Consult the documentation linked above for further details.

Your bucket will need a bucket policy allowing the desired users to perform the s3:GetObject and s3:GetBucketLocation action on all objects in the bucket. The anonymous policy given above can be updated to have a restricted Principal to support this.

Your account will need an IAM policy to support uploading to the bucket:

{
  "Version": "2012-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Sid": "UploadToCache",
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Action": [
        "s3:AbortMultipartUpload",
        "s3:GetBucketLocation",
        "s3:GetObject",
        "s3:ListBucket",
        "s3:ListBucketMultipartUploads",
        "s3:ListMultipartUploadParts",
        "s3:PutObject"
      ],
      "Resource": [
        "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache",
        "arn:aws:s3:::example-nix-cache/*"
      ]
    }
  ]
}

With bucket policies and authentication set up as described above, uploading works via nix copy (experimental).

To upload with a specific credential profile for Amazon S3:
$ nix copy nixpkgs.hello \
--to 's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&region=eu-west-2'
To upload to an S3-compatible binary cache:
$ nix copy nixpkgs.hello --to \
's3://example-nix-cache?profile=cache-upload&scheme=https&endpoint=minio.example.com'

buffer-size
Size (in bytes) of each part in multi-part uploads.
Default: 5242880
compression
NAR compression method (xz, bzip2, gzip, zstd, or none).
Default: xz
compression-level
The preset level to be used when compressing NARs. The meaning and accepted values depend on the compression method selected. -1 specifies that the default compression level should be used.
Default: -1
endpoint
The URL of the endpoint of an S3-compatible service such as MinIO. Do not specify this setting if you’re using Amazon S3.
Note
This endpoint must support HTTPS and will use path-based addressing instead of virtual host based addressing.
Default: empty
index-debug-info
Whether to index DWARF debug info files by build ID. This allows dwarffs to fetch debug info on demand
Default: false
local-nar-cache
Path to a local cache of NARs fetched from this binary cache, used by commands such as nix store cat.
Default: empty
log-compression
Compression method for log/* files. It is recommended to use a compression method supported by most web browsers (e.g. brotli).
Default: empty
ls-compression
Compression method for .ls files.
Default: empty
multipart-upload
Whether to use multi-part uploads.
Default: false
narinfo-compression
Compression method for .narinfo files.
Default: empty
parallel-compression
Enable multi-threaded compression of NARs. This is currently only available for xz and zstd.
Default: false
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
profile
The name of the AWS configuration profile to use. By default Nix will use the default profile.
Default: empty
region
The region of the S3 bucket. If your bucket is not in us–east-1, you should always explicitly specify the region parameter.
Default: us-east-1
scheme
The scheme used for S3 requests, https (default) or http. This option allows you to disable HTTPS for binary caches which don’t support it.
Note
HTTPS should be used if the cache might contain sensitive information.
Default: empty
secret-key
Path to the secret key used to sign the binary cache.
Default: empty
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false
write-nar-listing
Whether to write a JSON file that lists the files in each NAR.
Default: false

Store URL format: ssh://[username@]hostname

This store type allows limited access to a remote store on another machine via SSH.

base64-ssh-public-host-key
The public host key of the remote machine.
Default: empty
compress
Whether to enable SSH compression.
Default: false
max-connections
Maximum number of concurrent SSH connections.
Default: 1
path-info-cache-size
Size of the in-memory store path metadata cache.
Default: 65536
priority
Priority of this store when used as a substituter. A lower value means a higher priority.
Default: 0
remote-program
Path to the nix-store executable on the remote machine.
Default: nix-store
remote-store
Store URL to be used on the remote machine. The default is auto (i.e. use the Nix daemon or /nix/store directly).
Default: empty
ssh-key
Path to the SSH private key used to authenticate to the remote machine.
Default: empty
store
Logical location of the Nix store, usually /nix/store. Note that you can only copy store paths between stores if they have the same store setting.
Default: /nix/store
system-features
Optional system features available on the system this store uses to build derivations.
Example: "kvm"
Default: machine-specific
trusted
Whether paths from this store can be used as substitutes even if they are not signed by a key listed in the trusted-public-keys setting.
Default: false
want-mass-query
Whether this store can be queried efficiently for path validity when used as a substituter.
Default: false

--debug
Set the logging verbosity level to ‘debug’.
--log-format format
Set the format of log output; one of raw, internal-json, bar or bar-with-logs.
--print-build-logs / -L
Print full build logs on standard error.
--quiet
Decrease the logging verbosity level.
--verbose / -v
Increase the logging verbosity level.

--help
Show usage information.
--offline
Disable substituters and consider all previously downloaded files up-to-date.
--option name value
Set the Nix configuration setting name to value (overriding nix.conf).
--refresh
Consider all previously downloaded files out-of-date.
--version
Show version information.

Note

See man nix.conf for overriding configuration settings with command line flags.