this post was submitted on 06 Mar 2024
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Programming
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I usually use nix to manage my development environments.
At the root of the git repo for my blog, there is a shell.nix file. This file, shell.nix, declares an entire shell environment, giving me tools, environment variables, and other things I need. I just run
nix-shell
while in the same directory as the shell.nix file, and it creates that shell environment.There are other options, like VSCode has support for developing in a docker container (only docker, not podman or lxc).
I think lxc/incus (same thing) containers are kinda excessive for this case, because those containers are a full linux system, complete with an init system and whatnot. Such a thing is going to use more resources (ram, cpu, and storage space), and it's also going to be more to manage compared to application containers (docker, podman), which are typically very stripped down and come with only what is needed to run the application.
I used to use anaconda, but switched away because it doesn't have all the packages I wanted, and couldn't control the versions of packages installed very well, whereas nix does these both very well. Anaconda is very similar in usage though, especially once you start setting up multiple virtual anaconda environments for separate projects. However, I don't know if anaconda is as portable as nix is, able to create an entire environment from a single file of code.
Thank you for your thoughtful reply, but does nix package manager need to be using NixOS?
It doesn't, you can install it on mostly any Linux distro
Will toy around with it, thank you for the suggestion!