# Activation script {#sec-activation-script} The activation script is a bash script called to activate the new configuration which resides in a NixOS system in `$out/activate`. Since its contents depend on your system configuration, the contents may differ. This chapter explains how the script works in general and some common NixOS snippets. Please be aware that the script is executed on every boot and system switch, so tasks that can be performed in other places should be performed there (for example letting a directory of a service be created by systemd using mechanisms like `StateDirectory`, `CacheDirectory`, ... or if that's not possible using `preStart` of the service). Activation scripts are defined as snippets using [](#opt-system.activationScripts). They can either be a simple multiline string or an attribute set that can depend on other snippets. The builder for the activation script will take these dependencies into account and order the snippets accordingly. As a simple example: ```nix system.activationScripts.my-activation-script = { deps = [ "etc" ]; # supportsDryActivation = true; text = '' echo "Hallo i bims" ''; }; ``` This example creates an activation script snippet that is run after the `etc` snippet. The special variable `supportsDryActivation` can be set so the snippet is also run when `nixos-rebuild dry-activate` is run. To differentiate between real and dry activation, the `$NIXOS_ACTION` environment variable can be read which is set to `dry-activate` when a dry activation is done. An activation script can write to special files instructing `switch-to-configuration` to restart/reload units. The script will take these requests into account and will incorporate the unit configuration as described above. This means that the activation script will "fake" a modified unit file and `switch-to-configuration` will act accordingly. By doing so, configuration like [systemd.services.\.restartIfChanged](#opt-systemd.services) is respected. Since the activation script is run **after** services are already stopped, [systemd.services.\.stopIfChanged](#opt-systemd.services) cannot be taken into account anymore and the unit is always restarted instead of being stopped and started afterwards. The files that can be written to are `/run/nixos/activation-restart-list` and `/run/nixos/activation-reload-list` with their respective counterparts for dry activation being `/run/nixos/dry-activation-restart-list` and `/run/nixos/dry-activation-reload-list`. Those files can contain newline-separated lists of unit names where duplicates are being ignored. These files are not create automatically and activation scripts must take the possibility into account that they have to create them first. ## NixOS snippets {#sec-activation-script-nixos-snippets} There are some snippets NixOS enables by default because disabling them would most likely break your system. This section lists a few of them and what they do: - `binsh` creates `/bin/sh` which points to the runtime shell - `etc` sets up the contents of `/etc`, this includes systemd units and excludes `/etc/passwd`, `/etc/group`, and `/etc/shadow` (which are managed by the `users` snippet) - `hostname` sets the system's hostname in the kernel (not in `/etc`) - `modprobe` sets the path to the `modprobe` binary for module auto-loading - `nix` prepares the nix store and adds a default initial channel - `specialfs` is responsible for mounting filesystems like `/proc` and `sys` - `users` creates and removes users and groups by managing `/etc/passwd`, `/etc/group` and `/etc/shadow`. This also creates home directories - `usrbinenv` creates `/usr/bin/env` - `var` creates some directories in `/var` that are not service-specific - `wrappers` creates setuid wrappers like `sudo`