Skip to content

neon64/dotfiles

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Dotfiles

The dotfiles themselves can be found in the master branch.

These dotfiles should theoretically work on any UNIX-like system, including macOS and msys2, both of which I use from time to time. However the greatest compatibility will be with Arch Linux, which is what I use daily.

Installation

Automatic installation

$ curl "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/neon64/dotfiles/master/.local/bin/dotf_install" | bash

What does the install script do?

  1. run a git clone of the repository and attempts to git checkout the dotfiles (note: this will fail if you have existing dotfiles on your system)
  2. it does some other miscellaneous stuff like setting up the dotf alias, as outlined in the manual installation guide
  3. it tries to run ~/.local/bin/dotf_setup, which performs some further setup.
    • On arch & macOS it will try and install some packages for you.
    • Updates are now handled through topgrade.
    • Installs fisher & fish plugins
    • Links "platform specific" dotfiles
    • Sets up dotf to ignore untracked files
    • Sets fish as the default shell
  4. at the end, you should be able to log back in as that user and have everything working (fish shell, sway, terminal utils etc...)

Manual installation

To install these dotfiles manually, only a couple of commands are needed:

$ alias dotf='/usr/bin/git --git-dir=$HOME/.local/share/dotfiles/ --work-tree=$HOME'
$ echo ".local/share/dotfiles/" >> .gitignore
$ git clone --bare --branch master https://github.com/neon64/dotfiles $HOME/.local/share/dotfiles

Then attempt to checkout the configuration files into your home directory:

$ dotf checkout

You will most likely have to decide what to do with the existing dotfiles on your system.

If fish isn't already installed, you'll need to install it now using an appropriate package manager and also eventually set it as the default shell.

Also update the git repo location used by the script ~/.local/bin/dotf to point to wherever you stored the bare dotfiles repository (by default we use ~/.local/share/dotfiles)

Also run the following to ensure untracked files (i.e.: the rest of your home directory) don't show up when running dotf commands.

$ dotf config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no

Aside: the problem with installer scripts

Inevitably, things change as people fine-tune their system. Thus, the contents of these install scripts may not reflect what I actually run on my system on a day-to-day basis. Perhaps the only way of permanently fixing this would be to switch to a distribution like NixOS which is entirely configured by configuration files in a stateless manner.

Alas, Arch is more convenient in the short-term, so I think these install scripts will always remain, albeit somewhat half-baked.

How to edit these dotfiles?

The brilliant benefit of just using plain git to manage dotfiles (as detailed here), is that making changes is easy.

To stage changes to a file, just run:

$ dotf add path/to/file

If you want to be fancier and stage everything you've changed:

$ dotf add -u

Don't ever try dotf add -A - It tries to stage everything in your home directory :D

To commit changes:

$ dotf commit -m "Describing the change"

In conclusion: it's exactly like normal Git, just with git replaced with the script dotf (which is just a wrapper for git internally)

About these dotfiles

Included software

Window Manager

  • sway, as my daily driver when I'm on Linux
    • waybar as the bar, with icons from ttf-line-awesome.
    • wofi (similar to rofi)
    • fzf drives a lot of my config
    • my notes

Terminal Emulator & Shell

Editor

  • Visual Studio Code
  • CLion / Intellij IDEA IDEs
  • Neovim, when I need to use the command line
  • Doom Emacs

Music

  • Spotify

Useful scripts

I've found that over time it is easier to write my own shell scripts to do things like enable/disable bluetooth or change wallpapers, as I can tailor those scripts to my particular needs rather than trying to make use of a one-size-fits-all GUI application. That said, this definitely isn't for the faint of heart because these scripts are likely brittle and I am constantly updating them.

  • browse_files: open a graphical file browser, aliased to b
  • browse_web: open a URL or search Google
  • dotf: manage these dotfiles with git
  • kbd: activate us-intl keyboard in sway
  • launch_util: command-line app launcher with fzf (currently unused)
  • package_sizes: list packages sorted by size
  • package_orphans: list orphaned packages
  • switch_res: switches resolutions on Sway, aliased to sr
  • theme: changes themes
  • wpaper: change wallpapers for sway and generates a new lockscreen image

Machine-specific configuration

These dotfiles are complemented by my machine-specific configuration, arch_machine, which takes the form of a collection of packages for Arch Linux. These packages configure the whole system, rather than being specific to one user-account.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published