Based off of cowboy/dotfiles
When dotfiles is run for the first time, it does a few things:
- In Ubuntu, Git is installed if necessary via APT (it's already there in OSX).
- This repo is cloned into your user directory, under
~/.dotfiles
. - Files in
/copy
are copied into~/
. (read more) - Files in
/link
are symlinked into~/
. (read more) - You are prompted to choose scripts in
/init
to be executed. The installer attempts to only select relevant scripts, based on the detected OS and the script filename. - Your chosen init scripts are executed (in alphanumeric order, hence the funky names). (read more)
On subsequent runs, step 1 is skipped, step 2 just updates the already-existing repo, and step 5 remembers what you selected the last time. The other steps are the same.
- The
/backups
directory gets created when necessary. Any files in~/
that would have been overwritten by files in/copy
or/link
get backed up there. - The
/bin
directory contains executable shell scripts (including the dotfiles script) and symlinks to executable shell scripts. This directory is added to the path. - The
/caches
directory contains cached files, used by some scripts or functions. - The
/conf
directory just exists. If a config file doesn't need to go in~/
, reference it from the/conf
directory. - The
/source
directory contains files that are sourced whenever a new shell is opened (in alphanumeric order, hence the funky names). - The
/test
directory contains unit tests for especially complicated bash functions. - The
/vendor
directory contains third-party libraries.
Any file in the /copy
subdirectory will be copied into ~/
. Any file that needs to be modified with personal information (like copy/.gitconfig which contains an email address and private key) should be copied into ~/
. Because the file you'll be editing is no longer in ~/.dotfiles
, it's less likely to be accidentally committed into your public dotfiles repo.
Any file in the /link
subdirectory gets symlinked into ~/
with ln -s
. Edit one or the other, and you change the file in both places. Don't link files containing sensitive data, or you might accidentally commit that data! If you're linking a directory that might contain sensitive data (like ~/.ssh
) add the sensitive files to your .gitignore file!
Scripts in the /init
subdirectory will be executed. A whole bunch of things will be installed, but only if they aren't already.
- Read my gently-worded note
- Fork this repo
- Open a terminal/shell and do this (change
cowboy
andmaster
as appropriate):
export DOTFILES_GH_USER=kmosher
export DOTFILES_GH_BRANCH=master
bash -c "$(wget -qO- https://raw.github.com/$DOTFILES_GH_USER/dotfiles/$DOTFILES_GH_BRANCH/bin/dotfiles)" && source ~/.zshrc
export DOTFILES_GH_USER=kmosher
export DOTFILES_GH_BRANCH=master
bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/$DOTFILES_GH_USER/dotfiles/$DOTFILES_GH_BRANCH/bin/dotfiles)" && source ~/.zshrc
Since you'll be using the dotfiles command on subsequent runs, you'll only have to set the DOTFILES_GH_USER
variable for the initial install, but if you have a custom branch, you will need to export DOTFILES_GH_BRANCH
for subsequent runs.
There's a lot of stuff that requires admin access via sudo
, so be warned that you might need to enter your password here or there.
Copyright (c) 2014 "Cowboy" Ben Alman
Licensed under the MIT license.
http://benalman.com/about/license/