Awesome
dotstow
manage dotfiles with git and stow
dotstow
is a tool to manage your dotfiles using Git and Stow.
It allows you to keep your dotfiles in a version control system
and easily sync them across multiple computers, even computers with
completely different operating systems.
Install
To install dotstow, run the following command:
$(curl --version >/dev/null 2>/dev/null && echo curl -L || echo wget -O-) https://gitlab.com/risserlabs/community/dotstow/-/raw/main/install.sh 2>/dev/null | sh
or
git clone https://github.com/clayrisser/dotstow
cd dotstow
make install
Usage
1. Initialize dotstow
To start using dotstow, you need to initialize it with your Git repository. Run the following command:
dotstow init <REPO>
Replace <REPO> with the your git repository. This will create a dotfiles folder in your home
directory at ~/.local/state/dotstow/dotfiles
and clone your git repository into it.
This location was chosen to comply with the
XDG Base Directory Specification.
For convenience, the ~/.local/state/dotstow/dotfiles
location is also symlinked to ~/.dotfiles
.
You can always find the location of your dotfiles by running the command
dotstow path
.
2. Stow a package
Once you have initialized dotstow, you can stow a package using the following command:
dotstow stow <PACKAGE>
Replace <PACKAGE> with the name of the package you want to stow. This will create symbolic links in your home directory to the corresponding files in the package folder.
3. Sync dotfiles
To sync your dotfiles with the git repository, use the following command:
dotstow sync
This will pull any changes as well as commit and push any changes in your dotfiles to the git repository.
You can always check the git status of your dotfiles by running the command
dotstow status
.
Organization
dotstow
searches for packages in one of three folder: global, <PLATFORM>, and <FLAVOR>. These folders are
determined based on the operating system of your computer.
On Linux, the <PLATFORM> folder is called linux
and the <FLAVOR> folder is the Linux distribution name,
for example debian
, suse
, alpine
or rhel
.
On macOS, dotstow sets <PLATFORM> to darwin
. The <FLAVOR> folder is not supported on macOS.
The folders are searched in the following order:
- <FLAVOR>
- <PLATFORM>
- global
For example, if you're on a Linux machine with the <FLAVOR> set to debian
, and you run the command dotstow stow zsh
,
dotstow will look for the zsh
package in the following folders, in order:
debian/zsh
linux/zsh
global/zsh
If dotstow finds the zsh
package in the debian/zsh
folder, it will create symbolic links to the
files in that folder in your home directory.
Example
You can use my dotfiles as an example, reference or even as a starting point for your dotfiles.
gitlab.com/clayrisser/dotfiles
Other Commands
dotstow
provides several other commands to manage your dotfiles. Here is a list of some of them:
dotstow unstow <PACKAGE>
: Remove symbolic links to a package.dotstow wizard
: Interactive command to add and remove packages.dotstow available
: List available packages in your Git repository.dotstow stowed
: List packages that have been stowed.dotstow status
: Show the Git status of your dotfiles.dotstow reset
: Reset your dotfiles to the last commit.dotstow path
: Print the path of your dotfiles folder.
Please note that
dotstow wizard
only works on debian based linux systems of its dependency on debconf.
dotstow - manage dotfiles with git and stow
dotstow [options] command <PACKAGE>
options:
-h, --help show brief help
commands:
init <REPO> initialize dotstow
s, stow <PACKAGE> stow a package
u, unstow <PACKAGE> unstow a package
w, wizard dotfiles wizard
a, available available packages
stowed stowed packages
sync sync dotfiles
status dotfiles git status
reset reset dotfiles
path get dotfiles path