Dotter is a dotfile manager and templater.
Dotfiles are configuration files that usually live in the home directory and start with a dot.
Often times, it is desirable to have a backup of all the configurations on your system, which is why a lot of users have their dotfiles saved in a git repository, then symlinking them to their target locations using ln -s
.
However, there are several issues with that barebones approach:
Dotter aims to solve all those problems by providing a flexible configuration and automatic templating or symlinking to the target locations.
Dotter is available on homebrew using brew install dotter
The following AUR packages are available:
All of those are maintained by orhun - huge thanks to him!
Dotter is available on Scoop. Run scoop install dotter
to install the latest release.
Download the binary for your platform from the latest release and then put it in your $PATH
or in your dotfile repository (then you'd run it with ./dotter
).
Alternatively, Dotter is on crates.io, so if you have Rustup installed, run cargo install dotter
.
Check out the wiki for more information. Among other things, it explains how to setup and configure Dotter, as well as giving insight on how the templating and deployment works.
Now that you've configured all the global and local file sections, you can simply run dotter
from within your repository.\
All the files will be deployed to their target locations.
Check out dotter -h
for the command-line flags that Dotter supports:
A dotfile manager and templater written in rust
Usage: dotter [OPTIONS] [COMMAND]
Commands:
deploy Deploy the files to their respective targets. This is the default subcommand
undeploy Delete all deployed files from their target locations. Note that this operates on all files that are currently in cache
init Initialize global.toml with a single package containing all the files in the current directory pointing to a dummy value and a local.toml that selects that package
watch Run continuously, watching the repository for changes and deploying as soon as they happen. Can be ran with `--dry-run`
gen-completions Generate shell completions
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Options:
-g, --global-config <GLOBAL_CONFIG>
Location of the global configuration [default: .dotter/global.toml]
-l, --local-config <LOCAL_CONFIG>
Location of the local configuration [default: .dotter/local.toml]
--cache-file <CACHE_FILE>
Location of cache file [default: .dotter/cache.toml]
--cache-directory <CACHE_DIRECTORY>
Directory to cache into [default: .dotter/cache]
--pre-deploy <PRE_DEPLOY>
Location of optional pre-deploy hook [default: .dotter/pre_deploy.sh]
--post-deploy <POST_DEPLOY>
Location of optional post-deploy hook [default: .dotter/post_deploy.sh]
--pre-undeploy <PRE_UNDEPLOY>
Location of optional pre-undeploy hook [default: .dotter/pre_undeploy.sh]
--post-undeploy <POST_UNDEPLOY>
Location of optional post-undeploy hook [default: .dotter/post_undeploy.sh]
-d, --dry-run
Dry run - don't do anything, only print information. Implies -v at least once
-v, --verbose...
Verbosity level - specify up to 3 times to get more detailed output. Specifying at least once prints the differences between what was before and after Dotter's run
-q, --quiet
Quiet - only print errors
-f, --force
Force - instead of skipping, overwrite target files if their content is unexpected. Overrides --dry-run
-y, --noconfirm
Assume "yes" instead of prompting when removing empty directories
-p, --patch
Take standard input as an additional files/variables patch, added after evaluating `local.toml`. Assumes --noconfirm flag because all of stdin is taken as the patch
--diff-context-lines <DIFF_CONTEXT_LINES>
Amount of lines that are printed before and after a diff hunk [default: 3]
-h, --help
Print help
-V, --version
Print version
Contributions to Dotter are welcome, whether in the form of a pull request or an issue (for bug repots, feature requests, or other helpful comments)
Like what I do and want to encourage me to continue?\ You can donate a small amount via Paypal.\ Donations are not expected but greatly appreciated.