Compiling a Custom Iosevka Font on Arch Linux
I personally am somewhat of a font
Step One: Initializing the git repository
This is as simple as running the commands:
$ mkdir "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/cfg"
$ git init --bare "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/cfg/.git/"
If you've used git for any period of time then you know that the git init
command initializes an empty repository in the folder that you're currently in.
Since we want to create a bare repository, we pass the --bare
flag and the
location of the git folder. This should create a .git
folder in
~/.config/cfg
. If you inspects its contents you'll find that they are similar
to any other repository's .git
folder.
Step Two: Accessing the repository via an alias/function
Add the following line to your .zshrc or .bashrc along with the rest of your aliases:
cfg() { git --git-dir="${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/cfg/.git/" --work-tree="$HOME" "$@" ; }
This function will allow us to stage and commit files to our backup repository.
The --git-dir
flag specifies the git repository we made in step one and
--work-tree
will allow us to track any file in our $HOME
directory
using the repo.
Step Three: Ignoring files we don't want to backup
Run exec $SHELl
or restart your terminal to make the alias we made in the
previous step available. Then, run the following command, so that the
repository doesn't display the hundreds of files in your home directory every
time you check it's status
:
$ cfg config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no
Step Four: Setup a remote repository
Create an empty remote repository (I will be using GitHub) and get its SSH or HTTP. On GitHub this is immediately available after the repo is created. Finally add the remote with:
$ cfg remote add origin <URL>
At this point you can simply do something like:
$ cfg add ~/.vimrc
$ cfg commit -m "Adding .vimrc"
$ cfg push origin master
This will make the repository start tracking your .vimrc and you can commit
and push the file to GitHub. Pretty much all git commands like status
and
diff
should now be available to you with the cfg
function.
Getting your dotfiles on a new system:
Now all you have to do on a new system is run the following commands and you'll have all your settings back:
git init --bare "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/cfg/.git/"
cfg() { git --git-dir="${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/cfg/.git/" --work-tree="$HOME" "$@" ; }
cfg config --local status.showUntrackedFiles no
cfg remote add origin https://github.com/nimaipatel/dotfiles.git
cfg pull origin master
You might get some errors if you already have, say, a .zshrc in your new system. In this case you probably would want to delete this before pulling your files from the remote.
That's it we're done 🥳. Please do tell me if you face any issues with the script, in case you use it!