Easily manage your dotfiles
Project description
dotfiles is a tool to make managing your dotfile symlinks in $HOME easy, allowing you to keep all your dotfiles in a single directory.
Hosting is up to you. You can use a VCS like git, Dropbox, or even rsync to distribute your dotfiles repository across multiple hosts.
The repository can be specified at runtime, so you can manage multiple repositories without hassle. See the Configuration section below for further details.
Directories are supported as well. Any file object in your home directory that starts with a . is fair game.
Interface
- -a, --add <file...>
Add dotfile(s) to the repository.
- -c, --check
Check for missing or unsynced dotfiles.
- -l, --list
List currently managed dotfiles, one per line.
- -r, --remove <file...>
Remove dotfile(s) from the repository.
- -s, --sync [file...]
Update dotfile symlinks. You can overwrite colliding files with -f or --force. All dotfiles are assumed if you do not specify any files to this command.
- -m, --move <path>
Move dotfiles repository to another location, updating all symlinks in the process.
For all commands you can use the --dry-run option, which will print actions and won’t modify anything on your drive.
Installation
To install dotfiles, simply:
$ pip install dotfiles
Or, if you absolutely must:
$ easy_install dotfiles
But, you really shouldn’t do that.
If you want to work with the latest version, you can install it from the repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/jbernard/dotfiles $ cd dotfiles $ ./bin/dotfiles --help
Examples
To install your dotfiles on a new machine, you might do this:
$ git clone https://github.com/me/my-dotfiles Dotfiles $ dotfiles --sync
To add ‘~/.vimrc’ to your repository:
$ dotfiles --add ~/.vimrc (relative paths work also)
To make it available to all your hosts:
$ cd ~/Dotfiles $ git add vimrc $ git commit -m "Added vimrc, welcome aboard!" $ git push
You get the idea. Type dotfiles --help to see the available options.
Configuration
You can choose to create a configuration file to store personal customizations. By default, dotfiles will look for ~/.dotfilesrc. You can change this with the -C flag. An example configuration file might look like:
[dotfiles] repository = ~/Dotfiles ignore = [ '.git', '.gitignore', '*.swp'] externals = { '.bzr.log': '/dev/null', '.uml': '/tmp'}
You can also store your configuration file inside your repository. Put your settings in .dotfilesrc at the root of your repository and dotfiles will find it. Note that ignore and externals are appended to any values previously discovered.
Prefixes
Dotfiles are stored in the repository with no prefix by default. So, ~/.bashrc will link to ~/Dotfiles/bashrc. If your files already have a prefix, . is common, but I’ve also seen _, then you can specify this in the configuration file and dotfiles will do the right thing. An example configuration in ~/.dotfilesrc might look like:
[dotfiles] prefix = .
Externals
You may want to link some dotfiles to external locations. For example, bzr writes debug information to ~/.bzr.log and there is no easy way to disable it. For that, I link ~/.bzr.log to /dev/null. Since /dev/null is not within the repository, this is called an external. You can have as many of these as you like. The list of externals is specified in the configuration file:
[dotfiles] externals = { '.bzr.log': '/dev/null', '.adobe': '/tmp', '.macromedia': '/tmp'}
Ignores
If you’re using a VCS to manage your repository of dotfiles, you’ll want to tell dotfiles to ignore VCS-related files. For example, I use git, so I have the following in my ~/.dotfilesrc:
[dotfiles] ignore = [ '.git', '.gitignore', '*.swp']
Any file you list in ignore will be skipped. The ignore option supports glob file patterns.
Packages
Many programs store their configuration in ~/.config. It’s quite cluttered and you probably don’t want to keep all its content in your repository. For this situation you can use the packages setting:
[dotfiles] packages = ['config']
This tells dotfiles that the contents of the config subdirectory of your repository must be symlinked to ~/.config. If for example you have a directory config/awesome in your repository, it will be symlinked to ~/.config/awesome.
This feature allows one additional level of nesting, but further subdirectories are not eligible for being a package. For example, config is valid, but config/transmission is not valid. Arbitrary nesting is a feature under current consideration.
At the moment, packages can not be added or removed through the command line interface. They must be constructed and configured manually. Once this is done, sync, list, check, and move will do the right thing. Support for add and remove is a current TODO item.
Contribute
If you’d like to contribute, simply fork the repository, commit your changes, make sure tests pass, and send a pull request. Go ahead and add yourself to AUTHORS or I’ll do it when I merge your changes.
License
ISC License.
Copyright (c) 2011-2024, Jon Bernard <jbernard@jbernard.io> Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
History
0.6.5
Update copyright lines
Update config parser for Python 3.12
0.6.4
Add no_dot_prefix option
Fix error in syntax for missing repo message
Expands ~’s in config file path
0.6.3
Prevent adding toplevel package directories (bugfix)
Only replace existing dotfiles on remove operation (bugfix)
0.6.2
Fix single-sync in python 3.x (map is lazy)
Fix sync –force regression
Fix unit tests to exit with the correct return code
0.6.1
Add ability to sync only specified files
Create non-existent package directories
Mention using Dropbox to synchronize a dotfiles repository
0.6.0
Add “packages” feature
Add –dry-run option
Much needed code cleanup
0.5.6
Restore python 3 compatibility
0.5.5
Add support for Windows symlinks with Python 2
0.5.4
More Python 3 fixes
0.5.3
Update remaining references to ‘unmanaged’
Allow ~ in configuration file external targets
Make source compatible with Python 3
Add specific Python version trove classifiers
0.5.2
Improve wording of “unmanaged” with “unsynced”
Fix adding a directory with a trailing slash
Mention support for directories in documentation
0.5.1
Fix license formatting
0.5.0
Add support for in-repo configuration files
0.4.4
Restore python 2.5 compatibility
0.4.3
Add glob style pattern support for the ignore option
0.4.2
Fix bug when syncing an unmanaged directory symlink
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