Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
58 lines (43 loc) · 2.95 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

58 lines (43 loc) · 2.95 KB

These are my dotfiles. They are full of dot and files.

I use these dotfiles on all my machines; laptop, desktop, servers, shell accounts, everywhere.

So I avoid putting hardware-specific or system-specific configuration into this repo, as I don't necessarily have root everywhere I use it.

.config

I endeavour to move as many files into .config as I can, to comply with the XDG Base Directory Specification.

I also like the drop-in config directory approach that is increasingly common even at a system level in Linux; for example, instead of editing /etc/sudoers directly, many distros now support dropping config snippets into the /etc/sudoers.d directory. I try to emulate this in my personal configs.

bash

The drop-in configs approach is most noticeable in the way I organize my bash configuration.

My .bashrc just does a few things, and then sources the contents of the .config/bash directory. In .config/bash are different files setting up my prompt, aliases, etc.

This way if I have some local configuration that I don't want to push to this shared dotfiles repository, I can just drop a local.sh file in .config/bash, and everything just works.

xinit

I also try to keep my .xinitrc modular. xinitrc usually consists of a list of programs to run after X is started through startx.

I have several small scripts in the .config/xinit directory which I can run from a local, not-committed .xinitrc. Each script is just a list of commands to run, and I put lines sourcing some selection of scripts in my .xinitrc.

Unfortunately, I run very few X programs on startup, so the files in .config/xinit are very small. They are so small that it would be a lot easier to just copy the commands into my local .xinitrc. However, I want to store the commands that I run at X startup in git, and have them accessible across all my machines.

A better solution would be running these commands as systemd --user services that depend on X. Eventually systemd --user sessions will become more widely used to start and manage a user's DE, WM, and other X services. At that point I will be able to just commit these X startup commands as .service files, and systemctl --user enable/disable them locally.

dconf (GNOME)

I've written a blog post here about the approach I take for dconf.

systemd

I use systemd --user sessions to run the daemons or programs that I want always running in the background. At least, those that don't depend on X, and therefore can be run even on shell servers or TTYs. So this folder contains systemd.unit(5) files that run those programs as systemd services.

I don't do anything special with the orginzation of these unit files; systemd already expects them to be laid out in a neat and orderly way.