AutoYADM is a small shell utility to automate the process of managing dotfiles with YADM by allowing the user to define a list of files & directories to be automatically added, committed and pushed whenever the script is run. Most notably, AutoYADM accounts for newly created files previously untracked by YADM.
- Configure a list of files & directories to be automatically tracked by YADM
- Tracked directories will also track any new files inside them!
- Automatically add, commit, and push tracked paths
Simply clone the repository:
git clone [email protected]:ficcdaf/autoyadm.git
You may consider adding aliases to your shell configuration:
alias autoyadm="/path/to/autoyadm/autoyadm.sh"
alias yadmadd="/path/to/autoyadm/yadmadd.sh"
# To enable automatic pushing:
alias yadmadd="AUTOYADMPUSH=1 /path/to/autoyadm/yadmadd.sh"
Click to see dependencies
- YADM
git
- Bash/Zsh
openssh
(optional)
Note: The following assumes you have created shell aliases to the two scripts. You may, of course, simply call them directly.
AutoYADM maintains a list of files and directories for automatic tracking. All children of tracked directories will be tracked, including newly created, previously untracked files. For example, if you add your Neovim configuration at ~/.config/nvim
to tracking, then any new files you create inside that folder will automatically be added and committed by AutoYADM.
Both scripts and the
tracked
file must be in the same directory.
Important: Symlinks are not added; this is to avoid conflicts with
yadm alt
The tracking file contains the paths to tracked files & directories relative to $HOME. For example:
.bashrc
.config/nvim
To add paths to be tracked, you may use yadmadd.sh
. Any valid absolute or relative path should work.
$ yadmadd ~/.bashrc
$ yadmadd /home/username/.bashrc
# Relative paths work too.
$ yadmadd ../../.bashrc
# You may supply any number of paths as arguments.
$ yadmadd .bashrc .zshrc .config/nvim
To remove a target from tracking, simply delete it from the tracked
file.
Note:
tracked
is in the.gitignore
of this repository. If you want to add it to tracking, you will need to remove thetracked
entry from.gitignore
. Removing.git
is not sufficient because YADM respects any.gitignore
file it encounters.
To automatically add and commit your tracking targets, use autoyadm.sh
:
$ autoyadm
By default, automatic pushing is disabled. You can enable it with an environment variable:
$ export AUTOYADMPUSH=1
$ autoyadm
# Or you can combine these into one line:
$ AUTOYADMPUSH=1 autoyadm
Note: For auto push to work, ssh-agent must be enabled, and the environment file needs to exist inside
~/.ssh
. Furthermore, you must have SSH setup with your git host.
By default, AutoYADM only runs when the user calls it explicitly. If you want to automate this process, you are responsible for setting it up yourself. You may consider configuring a cron job for this. The following example will run AutoYADM every 15 minutes, with automatic push enabled, appending its output to a log file:
*/15 * * * * AUTOYADMPUSH=1 /path/to/autoyadm/audoyadm.sh >> /path/to/log/file.log
If you are on Arch Linux, you can follow these instructions to set up the cron job:
# Install a cron daemon if you
# don't already have one.
$ sudo pacman -S cronie
# This command will open your $EDITOR,
# you may paste the above cron job configuration here
# and save the file to apply your changes.
$ crontab -e
# Don't forget to enable cronie.service:
$ systemctl enable cronie
$ systemctl start cronie
- Allow custom
tracked
file location & name - Optionally allow symlinks only if they are explicitly added to tracking
Contributions are very welcome. This is a very small and simple script, but if you have some improvements or new features, please feel free to submit a PR. Bug reports welcome, too.