550 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
550 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
# Homemaker #
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Homemaker is a lightweight tool for straightforward and efficient management of \*nix configuration files found in the
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user's home directory, commonly known as dot-files. It can also be readily used for general purpose system
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bootstrapping, including installing packages, cloning repositories, etc. This tool is written in Go, requires no
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installation, has no dependencies and makes use of simple configuration file structure inspired by
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[make](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Make_%28software%29) to generate symlinks and execute system commands to aid in
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configuring a new system for use.
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Naturally, I use Homemaker to manage my own dot-files, which you can view on the respective [project
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page](https://github.com/FooSoft/dotfiles). Once there, you may want to take a look at the
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[config.toml](https://github.com/FooSoft/dotfiles/blob/master/config.toml) file, which contains the actual configuration
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data.
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![](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/img/demo.gif)
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## Table of Contents ##
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* [Motivation](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#motivation)
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* [Installation](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#installation)
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* [Configuration](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#configuration)
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* [Environment Variables](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#environment-variables)
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* [Command Macros](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#command-macros)
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* [Task and Macro Variants](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#task-and-macro-variants)
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* [Conditional Execution](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#conditional-execution)
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* [Usage](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#usage)
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* [License](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/#license)
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## Motivation ##
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Ever since switching to using Linux as my daily driver operating system, I have been searching for a way to effectively
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manage settings between different computers (and system reinstalls on the same machine) while avoiding the accumulation
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of cruft that plagues our home directories.
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Specifically, I required a solution that had the following characteristics:
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* **Do not require software installation**
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The user may not have root privileges on all the computers that she accesses, making it difficult to make use
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software that has additional dependencies. Even if the user has root on the machine in question, it is sub-optimal
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to require her to install software packages just to bootstrap the system.
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* **Support configuration variants**
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The user should be able to use cherry-pick which settings they wish to use. Different system installs have different
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configuration requirements; it must be possible to share common settings while keeping the unique bits unique to
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each machine. Furthermore, it should be possible to store all configuration settings in one location.
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* **Make no assumptions about synchronization**
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While Git often works well for managing dot-files, it is not ideal for every situation. I've seen some applications
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add and remove seemingly randomly-named files within their configuration directories, while others store their
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settings in large, opaque binary blobs. Managing configuration settings for such poorly-behaved applications may be
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easier through, [Dropbox](https://www.dropbox.com/), [rsync](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rsync), or some other
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utility outside of version control.
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* **Be easy to read and modify the source**
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As a programmer, I always consider the underlying technology of a tool when deciding whether or not to use it. The
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user should feel empowered to change and test the application without having to deal with the archaic incantations
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otherwise known as shell scripts. Scripting languages can work well but are closely tied to the environment in which
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they are executed.
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It soon became apparent to me that utility which met all of my requirements for simply did not exist. After making do
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with a hastily hacked-together Python script for a couple of months, I decided that this problem deserved a clean,
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formal solution. I settled on building this new utility in Go because in addition to the language syntax being clear and
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easy to understand, executables built by the Go compiler are statically linked, making them highly portable. Just drop
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the binary on your system and you are ready! The result of my work is Homemaker; I hope that you find it suitable for
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your needs.
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## Installation ##
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If you already have the Go environment and toolchain set up, you can get the latest version by running:
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```
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$ go get github.com/FooSoft/homemaker
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```
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Otherwise, you can use the pre-built binaries for the platforms below:
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* [homemaker\_darwin\_386.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_darwin_386.tar.gz)
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* [homemaker\_darwin\_amd64.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_darwin_amd64.tar.gz)
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* [homemaker\_linux\_386.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_linux_386.tar.gz)
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* [homemaker\_linux\_amd64.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_linux_amd64.tar.gz)
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* [homemaker\_linux\_arm.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_linux_arm.tar.gz)
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* [homemaker\_windows\_386.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_windows_386.tar.gz)
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* [homemaker\_windows\_amd64.tar.gz](https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/dl/homemaker_windows_amd64.tar.gz)
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## Configuration ##
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Configuration files for Homemaker can be authored in your choice of [TOML](https://github.com/toml-lang/toml),
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[JSON](http://json.org/), or [YAML](http://yaml.org/) markup languages. Being the easiest to read out of the three,
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TOML will be used for the example configuration files. Worry not if you are unfamiliar with this format; everything you
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need to know about it will be shown below.
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Let's start by looking at a basic example configuration file, `example.toml`. Notice that Homemaker determines which
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markdown language processor to use based on the extension of your c:nfiguration file. Use `.toml/.tml` for TOML,
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`.yaml/.yml` for YAML, and `.json` for JSON. Be aware that specifying an incorrect file extension will prevent your
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configuration file from being parsed correctly.
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```toml
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[tasks.default]
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links = [
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[".config/fish"],
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[".config/keepassx"],
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[".config/terminal"],
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[".config/vlc"],
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[".gitconfig"],
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[".xinputrc"],
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]
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```
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We could have just as easily written this configuration in JSON (or YAML for that matter), but it's subjectively uglier:
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```json
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{
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"tasks": {
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"default": {
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"links": [
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[".config/fish"],
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[".config/keepassx"],
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[".config/terminal"],
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[".config/vlc"],
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[".gitconfig"],
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[".xinputrc"]
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]
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}
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}
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}
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```
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To create symlinks based on the contents of the TOML file from before, we invoke the `homemaker` utility as follows:
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```
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$ homemaker example.toml /mnt/data/config
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```
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To get a better idea of what `/mnt/data/config` is, let's look at the in-program documentation:
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```
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Usage: homemaker [options] conf src
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https://foosoft.net/projects/homemaker/
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Parameters:
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-clobber
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delete files and directories at target
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-dest string
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target directory for tasks (default "/home/alex")
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-force
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create parent directories to target (default true)
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-nocmds
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don't execute commands
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-nolinks
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don't create links
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-task string
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name of task to execute (default "default")
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-unlink
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remove existing links instead of creating them
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-variant string
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execution variant for tasks and macros
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-verbose
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verbose output
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```
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For the purpose of our illustration, `src` is defined on the command line to be `/mnt/data/config`; namely the source
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directory where your dot-files live (this will be your Git repository, Dropbox folder, rsync root, etc.). The symlinks
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that Homemaker creates will point to the configuration files in this directory. You may have noticed that you can also
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provide a destination directory via the `-dest` command line argument; this is where the symlinks should be created and
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it defaults to your home directory.
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Another useful parameter is `task`; it will be initialized to the value `default` unless you override it on the command
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line. In practice, this means that Homemaker will try to find a task called `default` and execute it. You can create as
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many unique tasks as necessary to correspond to your configuration requirements, and then choose which one will execute
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by specifying it on the command line in the format `-task=taskname`. Good candidates for tasks are computer names, as
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shown in the configuration file below:
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```toml
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[tasks.flatline]
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links = [
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[".config/syncthing", ".config/syncthing_flatline"],
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[".s3cfg"],
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[".sabnzbd"],
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[".ssh", ".ssh_flatline"],
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]
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[tasks.wintermute]
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links = [
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[".config/syncthing", ".config/syncthing_wintermute"],
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[".ssh", ".ssh_wintermute"],
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]
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```
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Here we see two tasks, named after the computers that will be using them, `flatline` and `wintermute`. Certain
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configuration data like key pairs and other per-machine settings should only be linked on the computer that is using
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them. That is to say if `flatline` and `wintermute` both try to manage the `.ssh` directory, a conflict will occur at
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both the source and destination directories. We can easily resolve the source directory conflict by giving the `.ssh`
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directories unique names, such as `.ssh_flatline` and `.ssh_wintermute`. The conflict at the destination directory can
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be fixed as shown above; we will create per-machine tasks that will symlink only the needed directory.
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You may have noticed that each entry in the `links` collection is an array, which up until now has contained only one
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item. A second item can be added if the source file or directory name is different from that in the destination. If the
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paths provided are relative they will be assumed to be relative to the destination and source directories respectively.
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Now that we have machine specific tasks defined in our configuration file, it would be nice to still be able to share
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configuration settings that are common to the two computers. We can do this by adding a `dep` array to our tasks as
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shown below:
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```toml
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[tasks.common]
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links = [
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[".config/fish"],
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[".config/keepassx"],
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[".config/terminal"],
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[".config/vlc"],
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[".gitconfig"],
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[".xinputrc"],
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]
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[tasks.flatline]
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deps = ["common"]
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links = [
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[".config/syncthing", ".config/syncthing_flatline"],
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[".s3cfg"],
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[".sabnzbd"],
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[".ssh", ".ssh_flatline"],
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]
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[tasks.wintermute]
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deps = ["common"]
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links = [
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[".config/syncthing", ".config/syncthing_wintermute"],
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[".ssh", ".ssh_wintermute"],
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]
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```
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Homemaker will process the dependency tasks before processing the task itself.
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Sometimes, just linking a config file is not enough, because the content of the configuration file needs to be adapted
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to the target and we do not want to maintain several different versions of the same file. For such use cases, Homemaker
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supports templates. The configuration syntax for templates is the same as for links.
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```toml
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[tasks.template]
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templates = [
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[".gitconfig"]
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]
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```
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In the template file, the [go templating syntax](https://godoc.org/text/template) is used for the customization of the
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configuration file. With the `.Env` prefix, all environment variables are available. Template example:
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```
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[user]
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name = "John Doe"
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{{if eq .Env.USER "john"}}
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email = "john@doe.me"
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{{else}}
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email = "john.doe@work.com"
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{{end}}
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```
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In addition to creating links and processing templates, Homemaker is capable of executing commands on a per-task basis.
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Commands should be defined in an array called `cmds`, split into an item per each command line argument. All of the commands
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are executed with `dest` as the working directory (as mentioned previously, this defaults to your home directory). If any
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command returns a nonzero exit code, Homemaker will display an error message and prompt the user to determine if it should
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*abort*, *retry*, or *cancel*. Additionally, if you must have explicit control of whether commands execute before or
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after the linking phase, you can use the `cmdspre` and `cmdspost` arrays which have similar behavior.
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The example task below will clone and install configuration files for Vim into the `~/.config` directory, and create
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links to it from the home directory. You may notice that this task references an environment variable (set by Homemaker
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itself) in the `links` block; you can read more about how to use environment variables in the following section.
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```toml
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[tasks.vim]
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cmds = [
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["rm", "-rf", ".config/vim"],
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["git", "clone", "https://github.com/FooSoft/dotvim", ".config/vim"],
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]
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links = [
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[".vimrc", "${HM_DEST}/.config/vim/.vimrc"],
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[".vim", "${HM_DEST}/.config/vim/.vim"],
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]
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```
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### Environment Variables ###
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Homemaker supports the expansion of environment variables for both command and link blocks as well as for dependencies.
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This is a good way of avoiding having to hard code absolute paths into your configuration file. To reference an
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environment variable simply use `${ENVVAR}` or `$ENVVAR`, where `ENVVAR` is the variable name (notice the similarity
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to normal shell variable expansion). In addition to being able to reference all of the environment variables defined
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on your system, Homemaker defines a couple of extra ones for ease of use:
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* `HM_CONFIG`
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Path to the homemaker configuration file.
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* `HM_TASK`
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Task name invoked from the command line.
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* `HM_SRC`
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Source directory for link creation.
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* `HM_DEST`
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Destination directory for link creation.
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* `HM_VARIANT`
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Variant used for task and macro execution.
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Environment variables can also be set within tasks block by assigning them to the `envs` variable. The example below
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demonstrates the setting and clearing of environment variables:
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```toml
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[tasks.default]
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envs = [
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["MYENV1", "foo"], # set MYENV1 to foo
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["MYENV2", "foo", "bar"], # set MYENV2 to foo,bar
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["MYENV3"], # clear MYENV3
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]
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```
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It should be pointed out that it is possible to reference other environment variables using the syntax shown in the
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first part of this section. This makes it possible to expand variables like `PATH` without overwriting their existing
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value.
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### Command Macros ###
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It is often convenient to execute certain commands repeatedly within task blocks to install packages, clone git
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repositories, etc. Homemaker provides macro blocks for this purpose; you can specify a command *prefix* and *suffix*
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that is used to wrap the parameters you provide. For example, you can declare a macro for `apt-get install` and with the
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declaration shown below (much like tasks, macro declarations are global).
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```toml
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[macros.install]
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prefix = ["sudo", "apt-get", "install", "-y"]
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```
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Macros can be referenced from commands by prefixing the macro name with the `@` symbol (it must be the first character
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of the first item of a command). For example, the task below installs several python packages using the macro above:
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```toml
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[tasks.python]
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cmds = [
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["@install", "python-dev", "python-pip", "python3-pip"]
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]
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```
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Macros can have dependencies just like tasks. The `git clone` macro below makes sure that git is installed before
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attempting to clone a repository with it.
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```toml
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[macros.clone]
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deps = ["git"]
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prefix = ["git", "clone"]
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[tasks.git]
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cmds = [
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["@install", "git"]
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]
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```
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Macros help reduce the clutter that comes from the repeated commands which must be executed to bootstrap a new system.
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When executed with the `verbose` option, Homemaker will echo the expanded macro commands before executing them.
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### Task and Macro Variants ###
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If you wish to use this tool in a truly cross-platform and cross-distribution manner without authoring multiple
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configuration files, you will have to provide information to Homemaker about the environment it is running in. Different
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operating systems and distributions use different package managers and package names; we solve this problem with task
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and macro *variants*.
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For example, if you want to write a generic macro for installing packages that works on both Ubuntu and Arch Linux, you
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can define the following variants (Ubuntu uses the *apt* package manager and Arch Linux uses *pacman*).
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```toml
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[macros.install__ubuntu]
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prefix = ["sudo", "apt-get", "install"]
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[macros.install__arch]
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prefix = ["sudo", "pacman", "-S"]
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```
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The double underscore characters signify that the following identifier is a *variant decorator*. In most cases, you only
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have to think about variants when you are writing task and macro definitions, not when using them. For example, to see
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how to use the `install` macro that we just created, examine the configuration below:
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```toml
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[tasks.tmux]
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cmds = [["@install", "tmux"]]
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```
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Notice that the package manager is conveniently abstracted by the `install` macro. Be aware that for this example to
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work properly, you must specify a variant on the command line as shown below. Failing to specify a variant will cause
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Homemaker try to look for an undecorated `install` macro (which doesn't exist), leading to failure.
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```
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$ homemaker --variant=ubuntu example.toml /mnt/data/config
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```
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Tasks can be be decorated much like commands:
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```toml
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[tasks.vim__server]
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cmds = [["@install", "vim-nox"]]
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[tasks.vim]
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cmds = [["@install", "gvim"]]
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```
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In the above example, we avoid installing `gvim` on the server variant, where the X windowing system is not installed or
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needed. Homemaker only executes the best task or macro candidate; if the provided variant does not match any tasks or
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macros, the base undecorated version will be used instead if it is available.
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The command below will execute the `vim__server` task:
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```
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$ homemaker --variant=server example.toml /mnt/data/config
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```
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Both of the commands below will execute the `vim` task:
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```
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$ homemaker --variant=foobar example.toml /mnt/data/config
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$ homemaker example.toml /mnt/data/config
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```
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If for some reason you wish to explicitly reference the base task from the decorated task, you can add a dependency that
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contains a *variant override* as shown in the somewhat contrived examples below:
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```toml
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[tasks.foo]
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[tasks.foo__specific]
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deps = ["foo__"] # executes foo and foo_specific
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[tasks.bar__specific]
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[tasks.bar]
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deps = ["bar__specific"] # executes bar_specific and bar
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```
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Although variants are somewhat of an advanced topic as far as Homemaker features are concerned, they can be used to
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provide some basic conditional functionality to your configuration file without significantly increasing complexity for
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the user.
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### Conditional Execution ###
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Homemaker provides a facility for determining whether or not a given task should execute at runtime; this is
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accomplished with the `accepts` and `rejects` task variables. Both follow the same syntax as the `cmds` variable and
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support macro and environment variable expansion.
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* **accepts**
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Execute commands non-interactively; any non-zero return code will cause the task to be skipped.
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* **rejects**
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Execute commands non-interactively; any return code of zero code will cause the task to be skipped.
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The intent of this feature is to allow tasks to "early out" when the work they carry out has already been completed. In
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the example below, we use the `which` command to see if [fish shell](https://fishshell.com/) is already installed before
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trying to install it. This is possible because `which` returns a non-zero value when it encounters strings which do not
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correspond to applications installed on the current system.
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```toml
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[tasks.fish]
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rejects = [["which", "fish"]]
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cmds = [["@install", "fish"], ["chsh", "-s", "/usr/bin/fish"]]
|
|
links = [[".config/fish/config.fish"]]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The `accepts` variable is the logical opposite of `rejects` and can be used to conditionally execute tasks only when all
|
|
of the specified commands exit out with a return code of zero.
|
|
|
|
## Usage ##
|
|
|
|
Executing Homemaker with the `-help` command line argument will trigger online help to be displayed. The list below
|
|
provides a more detailed description of what the parameters do.
|
|
|
|
* **clobber**
|
|
|
|
By default, Homemaker will only remove identically-named symlinks at the destination directory. Using this parameter
|
|
will cause Homemaker to be more aggressive and delete clashing files and entire directories as well. This can be
|
|
useful for getting rid of the default configuration settings some applications write when you run them for the first
|
|
time, but should obviously be used with caution.
|
|
|
|
* **dest**
|
|
|
|
This parameter specifies destination where Homemaker is to create symlinks. This will default to the home directory
|
|
for the current user, and as long as you are just using this application to manage dot-files, will probably never
|
|
need to be changed.
|
|
|
|
* **force**
|
|
|
|
Sometimes dot-files for an application are nested within parent directories that must exist in order to allow the
|
|
symlink to be successfully created (for example the `.config` directory in `.config/vlc`). As this is the expected
|
|
behavior, this parameter defaults to `true`; however you can explicitly disable it if required. You can specify the
|
|
access permissions of directories created by force by providing a third array item in the link descriptor. For
|
|
example, if you wanted the `.ssh` directory to be created with mode `700`, you could write the following:
|
|
`[".ssh/id_rsa.pub", ".ssh_flatline/id_rsa.pub", "0700"]`. Notice that you can specify permissions in octal notation
|
|
by adding a leading zero value (the `0x` prefix signifies hexadecimal).
|
|
|
|
* **nocmds**
|
|
|
|
Do not execute commands for the `cmds` blocks inside of tasks.
|
|
|
|
* **nolinks**
|
|
|
|
Do not create links for the `links` blocks inside of tasks.
|
|
|
|
* **task**
|
|
|
|
This parameter is used to specify which task Homemaker will process when executed. It defaults to the `default`
|
|
task, which should be used when creating a configuration file that does not have system-specific tasks specified.
|
|
|
|
* **unlink**
|
|
|
|
Sometimes it's useful to "uninstall" links previously created by Homemaker. When running with the `unlink` flag, the
|
|
tool will delete the links created by the tasks provided. This flag automatically sets the `nocmds` flag as well,
|
|
because it makes no sense to execute commands when performing an uninstall operation.
|
|
|
|
* **variant**
|
|
|
|
When using homemaker across different operating systems or distributions it can be useful to be able to perform
|
|
conditional command and task execution, allowing for variation in things like package names and package management
|
|
tools. This parameter is used for specifying the name of the variant that should be used.
|
|
|
|
* **verbose**
|
|
|
|
When something isn't going the way you expect, you can use this parameter to make Homemaker to log everything it is
|
|
doing to console.
|
|
|
|
## License ##
|
|
|
|
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of
|
|
this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in
|
|
the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to
|
|
use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of
|
|
the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
|
|
subject to the following conditions:
|
|
|
|
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
|
|
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
|
|
|
|
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
|
|
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS
|
|
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR
|
|
COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER
|
|
IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
|
|
CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
|