The dotfiles we use when pairing.
Uses the homesick format.
Using the stock OSX version of git will likely cause problems. You probably want to brew install git and ensure that /usr/local/bin precedes /usr/bin in your $PATH. You may also want to brew install vim (if you don't, you'll run into a bug in vim that causes it to crash with the message Caught deadly ABRT signal).
curl -L https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/raw/master/tools/install.sh | sh
gem install homesick
homesick clone benjaminoakes/homesick-vi-everywhere
homesick clone ContinuityControl/dotfiles
homesick symlink homesick-vi-everywhere
homesick symlink dotfiles
If you're going to use hitch or other ruby scripts in our dotfiles, install gem
dependencies by installing bundler (gem install bundler), and then running
bundle in the dotfiles directory:
cd ~/.homesick/repos/dotfiles/home
bundle
NOTE: if you use rvm, this will only install these gems for the environment
specified by the .ruby-{version,gemfile}. You may need to switch to a
different version of ruby.
In order for vim plugins (and a couple tmux ones) to work correctly, you have to go through a few steps.
Enter your git user details into ~/.gitconfig.d/user and make sure you have
an ssh key added to Github.
[user]
name = [YOUR NAME HERE]
email = [YOUR EMAIL HERE]
Run git submodule update from the ~/.homesick/repos/dotfiles/home/.vim/bundle
directory.
If at this point you have a bunch of unstaged changes in the gitsubmodule directories, this is a known quirk with submodules and can be fixed. Until you do, opening vim will likely result in a bunch of errors.
Note: These steps assume that the unstaged changes are a bunch of deletions in
each submodule directory. If this is not the case for you, then modify the
foreach commands to execute the correct git commands to undo the changes you
have.
- Run
git submodule foreach --recursive git reset - Run
git submodule foreach --recursive git co .
homesick pull homesick-vi-everywhere
homesick pull dotfiles
homesick symlink homesick-vi-everywhere
homesick symlink dotfiles
cd ~/.homesick/repos/dotfiles
bundle
If you want to track personal dotfiles that are gitignored, here is an approach. (Not final, but see the note about tmux.)
Make a private repo (username/my-dotfiles) with the private dotfiles you want to track. It should have a structure like this:
.
└── home
├── .personal
│ ├── bin
│ │ ├── foo
│ │ └── bar
│ ├── gitconfig.d
│ │ └── user
│ ├── tmux
│ │ └── user.conf
│ ├── vim
│ │ └── spell
│ │ ├── en.utf-8.add
│ │ └── en.utf-8.add.spl
│ └── zsh
│ └── local.zsh
└── .vimrc.local
Then add another homesick castle, after you set up benjaminoakes/homesick-vi-everywhere and ContinuityControl/dotfiles.
homesick clone username/my-dotfiles
homesick symlink my-dotfiles --force
(Note: you can't call it username/dotfiles because that would conflict with ContinuityControl/dotfiles. Also, be aware that conflicting paths will overwrite. It's best to keep personal dotfiles in .personal for this reason.)
Then add these files (for now, more improvements coming later):
$ cat ~/.zsh/local.zsh
source "$HOME/.personal/zsh/local.zsh"
$ cat ~/.gitconfig.d/user
[include]
path = ~/.personal/gitconfig.d/user
$ cat ~/.tmux/user.conf
source-file "$HOME/.personal/tmux/user.conf"
(These are still gitignored, but at least they'll stay tiny.)
The zsh and git configs could be made to look in .personal and skip if it doesn't exist (allowing this idea to be pulled up into this repository), but unfortunately tmux complains when it can't source a file, which is why we went this route for now.