Does anyone have experience using GNU Stow for managing dot files? I’m especially interested in using it to build a git repo to include my .vimrc
file so I can sync it between hosts.
I know I’ve seen other methods, such as making your home directory a bare git repo, so you can check-in your config files without moving them. There is also the chezmoi golang project.
How do others sync .vimrc
between hosts?
I’m especially interested in using it to build a git repo to include my .vimrc
I have tried many different ways to manage my dotfiles across different systems, IMHO the best way is using a “git bare” repository, it takes a few minutes to wrap your head around how it works (your entire home being a “selective git repo”) but thankfully yadm
makes this super easy and once you have it setup properly it’s life changing.
What I like the most about it is the fact that there’s no more manual trigger commands to copy/symlink the files, you work on the file directly and then commit directly (as your homefolder is essentially the git repo) and here’s the best thing any command that works on git works with the yadm bare repo, so you can branch, rebase, revert commits, bisect, etc.
In my dot files I have a simple alias to yadm as follows: dot='/home/bhagwan/dots/yadm/yadm --yadm-repo /home/bhagwan/dots/yadm-repo-priv -C /home/bhagwan'
and I use it as git
command replacement for the yadm repo, say I want to see diff or status I would execute dot status
(or dot diff
respectively) and even have zsh command completeion for it with tab
.
If nothing else, use yadm just for this quote (from their homepage): When you are away from your own configurations, you are an orphaned refugee in unfamiliar and hostile surroundings :-)
If this peaked your interest, you can also checkout the bootstrap script for the yadm repo from my dotfiles.
This is really interesting! I’ve kept a selective repo of my config files for many years and maintained a bootstrap script inside of it that sounds similar, but distinctly different in a couple of ways, from this approach.
My approach has always been to have the actual files in a git directory in my home directory and the bootstrap script builds the symlinks around my system but the actual files still live in the directory. It never occurred to me to make my whole home directory a fit repo, though, and manage the files selectively that way…. Might try that out on this Arch system I just got up and running since the home dir isn’t too big yet
I’ve been using Chezmoi for 2 weeks and it’s fine so far. I guess most of those tools have the same features and IMHO it’s a waste of time to compare every little detail. Use one for a month (stow in your case) and see if it’s good for you.
Do you use any of the encrypted secrets features? That’s one of the big differences between chezmoi and the other options.
I don’t use such a feature. I only keep basic configurations that I don’t want to reproduce everywhere like my emacs configuration. I suspect it’s mostly used by developers who need to store SSH keys, server configs, or other weird stuff. I’m a developer for backend or regular applications and I don’t need this kind of synchronization.
I agree with @glad_cat@lemmy.sdf.org, all of these are just different ways to skin the cat. Whatever gets the files in the proper directories. Once you pick one (even arbitrarily, to a degree), you’ll very likely find no reason to push you toward another solution. I myself use symlinks with GNU cp -s
I’ve never heard of cp -faTs
before. I did some experimenting and was surprised that it was recursive. I thought you needed an -R
for that, but you don’t. So, cp -faRTs
appears to do the same thing, but is funnier.
In any case, thanks for sharing your repo. I take it, that after the initial install, you can just repeatedly git pull https://git.sr.ht/~igemnace/vim-config
and then run vim-config/scripts/install-cfg
to keep your config files up-to-date.
Right! Recursive is implied by -a
Yep. There’s a single ./install
script in project root that calls install-cfg
and install-plugins
. I only really need to run it once (first time I set up on a machine), and every time I add a new file. If all I’ve done is update existing files, a simple git pull
will update my dotfiles’ content automatically, as everything is symlinked already.
Nice! I never knew cp could do that. No more struggling to remember in which order the ln
parameters should be!
Worth noting that this is GNU-specific! For macOS for example, you’d have to install GNU userland (e.g. from homebrew) to get the flag. There’s still value in using other solutions (such as ln
), portability-wise.
As an aside: I mostly think of the ln
param orders as exactly the same as cp
and mv
:
cp FROM TO
mv FROM TO
ln [-s] FROM TO
Maybe that could help!
Here’s and example in my dotfiles: https://github.com/nbn22385/dotfiles/blob/master/install.sh
I have been using GNU Stow for about a year and it’s great.