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Aἰθήρ
[Aither] as a whole neither came into being nor admits of destruction, but is one and eternal, with no end or beginning of its total duration, containing and embracing in itself the infinity of time ...
— Aristotle, On the Heavens 1
Aether is a fully automated web server configured via pure and declarative package management, powered by NixOS. This allows for all aspects of the server's operation, including config files, software dependencies, and site content to be deployed and provisioned automatically.
In short, it's my personal web server.
Modules
As with all good NixOS configurations, Aether is split into modules that
each provide different functionality. These are stored in the modules/
directory.
Module Checklist
wireless
- WiFi supportssh
- SSH configurationforgejo
- Code forgefail2ban
- IP moderationsite
- Personal websitemail
- Mail serverbackup
- Automated backup systemcachix
- Nix build caching
Deployment
Aether is designed to separate individual machine details from the abstract
specification of the system, allowing for deployment to several different
types of system. This is handled using deployments in the deploy/
directory.
Currently, I deploy Aether physically to a
Raspberry Pi 5
running a modified UEFI bootloader
to provide Linux support. The NixOS code for this can be found in deploy/rpi5/
.
External Usage
If you use NixOS and are interested in any of these modules, you can import them for your own config!
Add this repository as a flake input:
{
inputs.aether.url = "https://git.tokinanpa.dev/toki/aether/archive/main.tar.gz";
}
Aether modules are then exposed under nixosModules.<name>
and deployments
under nixosModules.deploy-<name>
. You can activate a module by adding it
to your imports
:
{
imports = with aether.nixosModules; [
# Deployment
deploy-rpi5
# Modules
forgejo
ssh
];
# Required by forgejo module
aether.domain = "...";
}
Any number of modules can be activated at once, but activating more than one deployment will cause issues, so that should be avoided.
Some modules have options that can be used to configure their effects. If a
module has options, they can be found in the options.nix
file inside the
module directory. More general options used by multiple modules are
documented in modules/options.nix
.