Automate deployment of dotfiles to local paths or remote hosts
Project description
Dotlink is a simple script to automate deploying an arbitrary set of “dotfiles” from a repository to either a local path or even a remote host using ssh/scp.
Dotlink does not manage the dotfiles themselves, but uses a simple text file mapping dotfile names in the repository to their ultimate location relative to the target path. This allows you to have files without the dot prefix, for instance, or avoid replicating deep directory structures to track a single file.
setup
To install Dotlink system-wide:
# pip install dotlink
Or if you want to hack on Dotlink a bit, clone the repo and run:
# python setup.py develop
usage
You’ll first need to create a mapping file in the root of your dotfile repository named “dotfiles”, following this format:
Each line contains the local repository filename, optionally followed by a colon and the target filename if different than the local filename.
Comments are denoted by lines beginning with the # symbol, and are ignored.
An example mapping might look like:
# dotfiles aliases: .alias .bashrc .profile: .profile htop: .config/htop/htoprc vim: .vim vimrc: .vimrc
Once the mapping is in place, run Dotlink, and tell it where you repository is, as well as where you want it to deploy to:
$ dotlink -s path/to/repository [[[user@]host:]path/to/target]
Targets can include local paths, or remote paths accessible via ssh by providing a hostname as well as username if different than your current login. If you don’t give a target path, Dotlink will assume you want to deploy to your home directory; this works for remote targets too.
todo
Some planned features and changes are:
Rework –source as positional parameter that defaults to $CWD
Add support for remote sources, like ssh/scp, but also git repos or tarballs
Generate mapping file from repository contents ?
advanced
If you’d like to embed Dotlink within your dotfile repository, dotlink/dotlink.py is a self-contained script, specifically to allow for this use case. Simply copy dotfile.py into your repository; it has no external dependencies.
legal
Dotlink is copyright 2013 John Reese.
Dotlink is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more details.
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