nixcfg/systems/x86_64-linux/x1/hardware-configuration.nix

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# Do not modify this file! It was generated by nixos-generate-config
# and may be overwritten by future invocations. Please make changes
# to /etc/nixos/configuration.nix instead.
{ config, lib, pkgs, modulesPath, ... }:
{
imports =
[
(modulesPath + "/profiles/qemu-guest.nix")
];
boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ "ahci" "xhci_pci" "virtio_pci" "sr_mod" "virtio_blk" ];
boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ ];
boot.kernelModules = [ "kvm-intel" ];
boot.extraModulePackages = [ ];
boot.initrd.luks.devices.data = {
device = "/dev/nvme0n1p5";
preLVM = true;
};
boot.initrd.luks.devices.swap = {
device = "/dev/nvme0n1p5";
preLVM = true;
};
fileSystems."/" =
{
device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/ebb90474-ddcb-484b-9663-d71863827af4";
fsType = "ext4";
};
fileSystems."/boot" =
{
device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/941C-7B02";
fsType = "vfat";
};
swapDevices = [ ];
# Enables DHCP on each ethernet and wireless interface. In case of scripted networking
# (the default) this is the recommended approach. When using systemd-networkd it's
# still possible to use this option, but it's recommended to use it in conjunction
# with explicit per-interface declarations with `networking.interfaces.<interface>.useDHCP`.
networking.useDHCP = lib.mkDefault true;
# networking.interfaces.enp1s0.useDHCP = lib.mkDefault true;
nixpkgs.hostPlatform = lib.mkDefault "x86_64-linux";
}