User Management NixOS supports both declarative and imperative styles of user management. In the declarative style, users are specified in configuration.nix. For instance, the following states that a user account named alice shall exist: users.extraUsers.alice = { isNormalUser = true; home = "/home/alice"; description = "Alice Foobar"; extraGroups = [ "wheel" "networkmanager" ]; openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [ "ssh-dss AAAAB3Nza... alice@foobar" ]; }; Note that alice is a member of the wheel and networkmanager groups, which allows her to use sudo to execute commands as root and to configure the network, respectively. Also note the SSH public key that allows remote logins with the corresponding private key. Users created in this way do not have a password by default, so they cannot log in via mechanisms that require a password. However, you can use the passwd program to set a password, which is retained across invocations of nixos-rebuild. If you set users.mutableUsers to false, then the contents of /etc/passwd and /etc/group will be congruent to your NixOS configuration. For instance, if you remove a user from users.extraUsers and run nixos-rebuild, the user account will cease to exist. Also, imperative commands for managing users and groups, such as useradd, are no longer available. A user ID (uid) is assigned automatically. You can also specify a uid manually by adding uid = 1000; to the user specification. Groups can be specified similarly. The following states that a group named students shall exist: users.extraGroups.students.gid = 1000; As with users, the group ID (gid) is optional and will be assigned automatically if it’s missing. In the imperative style, users and groups are managed by commands such as useradd, groupmod and so on. For instance, to create a user account named alice: $ useradd -m alice To make all nix tools available to this new user use `su - USER` which opens a login shell (==shell that loads the profile) for given user. This will create the ~/.nix-defexpr symlink. So run: $ su - alice -c "true" The flag causes the creation of a home directory for the new user, which is generally what you want. The user does not have an initial password and therefore cannot log in. A password can be set using the passwd utility: $ passwd alice Enter new UNIX password: *** Retype new UNIX password: *** A user can be deleted using userdel: $ userdel -r alice The flag deletes the user’s home directory. Accounts can be modified using usermod. Unix groups can be managed using groupadd, groupmod and groupdel.