# Dotfiles The purpose of this directory is to monitor dotfiles via a bare git repository. It is inspired by this https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/dotfiles blogpost, which in turn was inspired by this https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11070797 HN thread. The repo has two branches, the main branch I use on Ubuntu distros with an GNOME DE. The arch branch is surprisingly for my minimal arch setup, currently running X11 + openbox + polybar. ## Setting up this project initially: 1. git init --bare $HOME/.cfg 2. alias config='/usr/bin/git --git-dir=$HOME/.cfg/ --work-tree=$HOME' or echo "alias config='usr/bin/git --git-dir=$HOME/.cfg/ --work-tree=$HOME'" >> $HOME/.bashrc 3. config config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no ## Installing on a new system While in $HOME 1. Add the following to .bashrc alias config='/usr/bin/git --git-dir=$HOME/.cfg/ --work-tree=$HOME' 2. source .bashrc 3. echo ".cfg">> .gitignore. This is to prevent potential recursive problems 4. git clone --bare https://github.com/leoalho/dotfiles.git $HOME/.cfg 5. Checkout the content to $HOME: config checkout 6. config config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no ## .git_aliases To use the git aliases in your .gitconfig. Add the following lines to your .gitconfig: [include] path = ~/.git_aliases, or any other path depending on your $HOME ## .bash_aliases To use the bash aliases in your .bashrc include the following to your .bashrc if [ -f ~/.bash_aliases ]; then . ~/.bash_aliases fi Also a .bash_prompt file is included that can be included in the same way as the bash_aliases. It provides styling for the prompt ## Tmux uses the tpm for plugins https://github.com/tmux-plugins/tpm ## Nvim uses vim-plug https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug