Option Declarations
An option declaration specifies the name, type and description of a
NixOS configuration option. It is invalid to define an option that
hasn’t been declared in any module. An option declaration generally
looks like this:
options = {
name = mkOption {
type = type specification;
default = default value;
example = example value;
description = lib.mdDoc "Description for use in the NixOS manual.";
};
};
The attribute names within the name attribute
path must be camel cased in general but should, as an exception,
match the
package attribute name when referencing a Nixpkgs package.
For example, the option
services.nix-serve.bindAddress references the
nix-serve Nixpkgs package.
The function mkOption accepts the following
arguments.
type
The type of the option (see
). This argument is
mandatory for nixpkgs modules. Setting this is highly
recommended for the sake of documentation and type checking.
In case it is not set, a fallback type with unspecified
behavior is used.
default
The default value used if no value is defined by any module. A
default is not required; but if a default is not given, then
users of the module will have to define the value of the
option, otherwise an error will be thrown.
defaultText
A textual representation of the default value to be rendered
verbatim in the manual. Useful if the default value is a
complex expression or depends on other values or packages. Use
lib.literalExpression for a Nix expression,
lib.literalMD for a plain English
description in
Nixpkgs-flavored
Markdown format.
example
An example value that will be shown in the NixOS manual. You
can use lib.literalExpression and
lib.literalMD in the same way as in
defaultText.
description
A textual description of the option, in
Nixpkgs-flavored
Markdown format, that will be included in the NixOS
manual. During the migration process from DocBook it is
necessary to mark descriptions written in CommonMark with
lib.mdDoc. The description may still be
written in DocBook (without any marker), but this is
discouraged and will be deprecated in the future.
Utility functions for common option patternsmkEnableOption
Creates an Option attribute set for a boolean value option i.e
an option to be toggled on or off.
This function takes a single string argument, the name of the
thing to be toggled.
The option’s description is Whether to enable
<name>..
For example:
lib.mkEnableOption (lib.mdDoc "magic")
# is like
lib.mkOption {
type = lib.types.bool;
default = false;
example = true;
description = lib.mdDoc "Whether to enable magic.";
}
mkPackageOption,
mkPackageOptionMD
Usage:
mkPackageOption pkgs "name" { default = [ "path" "in" "pkgs" ]; example = "literal example"; }
Creates an Option attribute set for an option that specifies the
package a module should use for some purpose.
Note: You shouldn’t
necessarily make package options for all of your modules. You
can always overwrite a specific package throughout nixpkgs by
using
nixpkgs
overlays.
The default package is specified as a list of strings
representing its attribute path in nixpkgs. Because of this, you
need to pass nixpkgs itself as the first argument.
The second argument is the name of the option, used in the
description The <name> package to use.. You
can also pass an example value, either a literal string or a
package’s attribute path.
You can omit the default path if the name of the option is also
attribute path in nixpkgs.
During the transition to CommonMark documentation
mkPackageOption creates an option with a
DocBook description attribute, once the transition is completed
it will create a CommonMark description instead.
mkPackageOptionMD always creates an option
with a CommonMark description attribute and will be removed some
time after the transition is completed.
Examples:
lib.mkPackageOptionMD pkgs "hello" { }
# is like
lib.mkOption {
type = lib.types.package;
default = pkgs.hello;
defaultText = lib.literalExpression "pkgs.hello";
description = lib.mdDoc "The hello package to use.";
}
lib.mkPackageOptionMD pkgs "GHC" {
default = [ "ghc" ];
example = "pkgs.haskell.packages.ghc92.ghc.withPackages (hkgs: [ hkgs.primes ])";
}
# is like
lib.mkOption {
type = lib.types.package;
default = pkgs.ghc;
defaultText = lib.literalExpression "pkgs.ghc";
example = lib.literalExpression "pkgs.haskell.packages.ghc92.ghc.withPackages (hkgs: [ hkgs.primes ])";
description = lib.mdDoc "The GHC package to use.";
}
Extensible Option Types
Extensible option types is a feature that allow to extend certain
types declaration through multiple module files. This feature only
work with a restricted set of types, namely
enum and submodules and any
composed forms of them.
Extensible option types can be used for enum
options that affects multiple modules, or as an alternative to
related enable options.
As an example, we will take the case of display managers. There is
a central display manager module for generic display manager
options and a module file per display manager backend (sddm, gdm
…).
There are two approaches we could take with this module structure:
Configuring the display managers independently by adding an
enable option to every display manager module backend. (NixOS)
Configuring the display managers in the central module by
adding an option to select which display manager backend to
use.
Both approaches have problems.
Making backends independent can quickly become hard to manage. For
display managers, there can only be one enabled at a time, but the
type system cannot enforce this restriction as there is no
relation between each backend’s enable option.
As a result, this restriction has to be done explicitly by adding
assertions in each display manager backend module.
On the other hand, managing the display manager backends in the
central module will require changing the central module option
every time a new backend is added or removed.
By using extensible option types, it is possible to create a
placeholder option in the central module
(Example:
Extensible type placeholder in the service module), and to
extend it in each backend module
(Example:
Extending
services.xserver.displayManager.enable in the
gdm module,
Example:
Extending
services.xserver.displayManager.enable in the
sddm module).
As a result, displayManager.enable option
values can be added without changing the main service module file
and the type system automatically enforces that there can only be
a single display manager enabled.
Example: Extensible type placeholder in
the service module
services.xserver.displayManager.enable = mkOption {
description = "Display manager to use";
type = with types; nullOr (enum [ ]);
};
Example: Extending
services.xserver.displayManager.enable in the
gdm module
services.xserver.displayManager.enable = mkOption {
type = with types; nullOr (enum [ "gdm" ]);
};
Example: Extending
services.xserver.displayManager.enable in the
sddm module
services.xserver.displayManager.enable = mkOption {
type = with types; nullOr (enum [ "sddm" ]);
};
The placeholder declaration is a standard
mkOption declaration, but it is important that
extensible option declarations only use the
type argument.
Extensible option types work with any of the composed variants of
enum such as
with types; nullOr (enum [ "foo" "bar" ])
or
with types; listOf (enum [ "foo" "bar" ]).