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I have a number of "dot" files in my home directory that I'd like to track with git - e.g. .pryrc, .zshrc, etc. I want to have a remote repository for these files so that a) there is an easy way to recover my configuration settings should I lose my machine for any reason; and b) to safely track any changes made to the files in the event I screw something up when configuring changes.

I initially set up a git repository in the home directory to track them, with a .gitignore file configured to ignore every file except specific, whitelisted file names. However, I realized I'm not crazy about having a git repository in my home directory, and there is also the added distraction of seeing the branch name "master" in my terminal window. I use ZSH with settings to display the git branch in the prompt, and it has turned out to be surprising and confusing to see that I'm in a git repository while navigating in directories that I don't expect to have a repository.

I attempted to create a configuration directory below the home folder, initialize it a git repository, and generate symlinks to the desired files. However, I noted after adding and committing everything that the remote branch only showed the link, not the actual content of the file.

What is the best way to achieve this?

2 Answers 2

8

This is how I figured it out:

First, I created a directory ~/repositories/configurations/ which I use to house the git repository. After navigating to this directory, I run git init as usual.

Next, I created a .gitignore file configured to ignore all files except those on a whitelist. (Note that you can do this later in the process before the commit, but if you run git status before setting up the .gitignore you'll see a LOT of untracked files).

# ignore everything
*

# except these whitelisted files:
!.gitignore
!.pryrc
!.zshrc
!.bashrc
!.bash_profile
!.bash_login

Then point the git repository to a different working directory:

git config core.worktree "/User/username"

Running git status now shows:

Untracked files:
  (use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)

  ../../.bash_login
  ../../.bash_profile
  ../../.bashrc
  ../../.gitignore
  ../../.pryrc
  ../../.zshrc

From here, we git add ~/.bash_profile ~/.bashrc ~/.pryrc ~/.zshrc and commit. Setting up and pushing to a remote repository is standard.

One note - I decided that I wanted a local README.md file to document the purpose of the directory and how it was configured, etc. I didn't want this file in my home folder where it would be out of context. After creating the README I had to use -f flag to add it to the repository:

git add -f README.md.

I attempted to add it to the .gitignore whitelist, but couldn't convince git to find the file with variations of the path, such as !~/repositories/configurations/README.md and so forth. Regardless of how I tried to specify the path git didn't see the file. After adding with force though, it's working fine. Someone smarter than me may have a suggestion how to do this.

This procedure worked like a charm. I now have a working repository to track dot file changes and safely store them remotely.

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  • Thanks Scro, this works like a charm I find it really useful. I don't have an answer for the .gitignore, went through the same myself.
    – vabada
    Jun 28, 2017 at 19:37
4

Check out Homesick, a framework for keeping track of your dotfiles in a Git repo.

It works by

  • creating a Git repo that keeps track of the files you want it to manage
  • sym-linking the files from your home folder (~) to the Git repo
  • providing commands to track new files, commit/push/pull changes

You can install it by running

gem install homesick

Then follow the documentation to start tracking your files.

I recommend using something like Homesick, as its proven to work, and is minimally invasive. It does not pollute your home folder with a Git repo, and it allows you to share and restore your configuration on any machine you might be working on.

Here's a link to my personal dotfiles repo if you want to take a look at how I'm using Homesick.

Homesick is built using Ruby - if you want a Bash-only solution, check out Homeshick.

For a full list of available solutions around managing your dotfiles, check out the GitHub dotfiles page.

4
  • Thanks for the recommendation. I read through the documentation. What I don't understand is how this is better than using vanilla git? With the method I outlined, there's no need to rely on an extra gem, with a different API. By setting up a git repository in a logical directory and pointing git to the home directory, I get all the advantages of normal git workflow, without the overhead of managing a different interface.
    – Scro
    Aug 6, 2015 at 20:27
  • Fair enough! It's really a "buy vs. build" decision. Homesick (and similar frameworks) have a working solution, and you invested time in creating a custom solution that works for you - nothing wrong with that. Homesick has a command for adding new files (homesick track) while you have to add the file to your .gitignore file - different approaches serving the same purpose. Again, nothing wrong with that, I just wanted to point out an existing alternative.
    – nwinkler
    Aug 7, 2015 at 6:19
  • BTW: I've added a link to the GitHub dotfiles page (dotfiles.github.io), which has lots of tools for this purpose. Check out the "General-purpose dotfile utilities" section.
    – nwinkler
    Aug 7, 2015 at 6:23
  • Awesome, thanks for doing so! Wasn't aware of Homesick when I tried to figure this out. Good option to know about.
    – Scro
    Aug 7, 2015 at 13:46

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