X-Git-Url: https://iankelling.org/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=README;fp=README;h=71f44188c5cba46ac08f87b71f539fec72fa6892;hb=eb9b839bb5a91c60cc4f6eb9d7e38ffbf73f0e90;hp=1633f7853cc48802d84b461bccfb3c32745cd45c;hpb=87f900c44182d9175700349890c24440a740c121;p=distro-setup diff --git a/README b/README index 1633f78..71f4418 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,4 +1,38 @@ -Misc configs & ~1k loc in bashrc +~2.7k lines of bash to setup all my computers + +Initial os install is also automated using a separate repo called +automated-distro-installer, also at iankelling.org/git. + +This is not meant for other people to run verbatum, but for them to read +and copy the good parts. It has dependencies on other repos at +https://iankelling.org/git. Most notably, my bashrc, distro functions, +and config files repo. + + +The main thing missing for someone else to use things is the expected +location of repos in the filesystem. So you would need to lookout for +paths starting with /a and adjust them. + +Background: reasoning behind using /a: The home directory is typically +used for local software development, but I use paths like /a instead, +for the following reasons: + +1. I want to run code directly from where I work on it, instead of +always having to create and use some install process. If that code is in +a home directory, and you want to run it as root (especially in contexts +where SUDO_USER is not set, like cron/systemd), you have to hardcode the +username for /home/username, or create some install process where that +username is saved somewhere, and then you are stuck with a single +username. If it ever got packaged for a gnu/linux distro, it would rely +on a hardcoded path with no username in it, so let's just do that. + +2. The home directory is inconvenient. It's filled with a bunch of junk +you don't care about, which makes directory listing horrible, makes it so +you can't back it up easily (for example, gvfs mountpoint in it breaks +lots of things), and has things you don't want to backup. So, you could +use a subdirectory. But typing /s is much faster than ~/s and in every +root context, /home/username/s. + Part of how I run GNU/Linux. I try fully automate my systems and store all configs and scripts, except private info at