Examples
The easiest way to try out nix-bitcoin is to use one of the provided examples.
git clone https://github.com/fort-nix/nix-bitcoin
cd nix-bitcoin/examples/
nix-shell
The following example scripts set up a nix-bitcoin node according to configuration.nix and then
shut down immediately. They leave no traces (outside of /nix/store) on the host system.
By default, configuration.nix enables bitcoind and clightning (with an onion service).
-
./deploy-container.shcreates a NixOS container.
This is the fastest way to set up a node.
Requires: Nix, a systemd-based Linux distro and root privileges -
./deploy-qemu-vm.shcreates a QEMU VM.
Requires: Nix -
./deploy-nixops.shcreates a VirtualBox VM via NixOps.
NixOps can be used to deploy to various other backends like cloud providers.
Requires: Nix, VirtualBox -
./deploy-container-minimal.shcreates a container defined by minimal-configuration.nix that doesn't use the secure-node.nix preset. Also shows how to use nix-bitcoin in an existing NixOS config.
Requires: Nix, a systemd-based Linux distro and root privileges
Run the examples with option --interactive or -i to start a shell for interacting with
the node:
./deploy-qemu-vm.sh -i
Tests
The internal test suite is also useful for exploring features.
The following run-tests.sh commands leave no traces (outside of /nix/store) on
the host system.
git clone https://github.com/fort-nix/nix-bitcoin
cd nix-bitcoin/test
# Run a Python test shell inside a VM node
./run-tests.sh debug
print(succeed("systemctl status bitcoind"))
# Run a node in a container. Requires systemd and root privileges.
./run-tests.sh container
c systemctl status bitcoind
# Explore a single feature
./run-tests.sh --scenario electrs container
See run-tests.sh for a complete documentation.