Philosophical stuff about this dotfiles structure, decisions, etc..
Because I used to spin new machines quite often at one point and I always personalized them manually.
Then I dicovered .dotfiles and the world around them.
At first, this repo contained the homebrew installation and other stuff like that. I realized it would be better to split that into another repo, so this one would contain only the configs, and the other handles only software installation.
This is a WIP for now, but at least brew apps have been now separated into 3 files.
Brewfile.sh
- Main dependencies for the good work of my dotfiles (bare minimum)BrewfileExtra.sh
- Extra tools I use most timesBrewfileMacOS.sh
- Only specific Mac tools
Run the other 2 files only when needed.
VEDITOR
stands for "visual editor", and is set to code
be default. EDITOR
is set to vim
.
PROJECTS
is default to ~/personal/projects
. The shortcut to that folder in the shell
is c
.
You can change that by adding your custom overrides in ~/.localrc
.
Everything's built around topic areas. If you're adding a new area to your
forked dotfiles — say, "Erlang" — you can simply add a erlang
directory and
put files in there. Anything with an extension of .zsh
will get automatically
included into your shell. Anything with an extension of .symlink
will get
symlinked without extension into $HOME
when you run scripts/bootstrap
.
There are a few special files in the hierarchy:
- bin/: Anything in
bin/
will get added to your$PATH
and be made available everywhere. - topic/*.zsh: Any files ending in
.zsh
get loaded into your environment. - topic/path.zsh: Any file named
path.zsh
is loaded first and is expected to setup$PATH
or similar. - topic/completion.zsh: Any file named
completion.zsh
is loaded last and is expected to setup autocomplete. - topic/*.symlink: Any files ending in
*.symlink
get symlinked into your$HOME
. This is so you can keep all of those versioned in your dotfiles but still keep those autoloaded files in your home directory. These get symlinked in when you runscripts/bootstrap
. - topic/install.sh: Any file with this name and with exec permission, will
ran at
bootstrap
anddot_update
phase, and are expected to install plugins, and stuff like that.
TODO: Update docs as we are not using Antidote anymore This project uses the pure prompt (which is awesome!) and some other zsh plugins. All of them managed by Antidote, a faster and simpler Antigen-like program written in Go.
I try to keep it working in both Linux (no specific distro) and OS X.
The CI also is also ran on Linux and OSX.