You can clone the repository wherever you want. (I like to keep it in ~/Documents/Projects/dotfiles
, with ~/dotfiles
as a symlink.) The bootstrapper script will pull in the latest version and copy the files to your home folder.
git clone https://github.com/stefanaxelsson/dotfiles.git && cd dotfiles && source install.sh
To update, cd
into your local dotfiles
repository and then:
source install.sh
Alternatively, to update while avoiding the confirmation prompt:
set -- -f; source install.sh
To install these dotfiles without Git:
cd; curl -#L https://github.com/stefanaxelsson/dotfiles/tarball/master | tar -xzv --strip-components 1 --exclude={README.md,install.sh,LICENSE}
To update later on, just run that command again.
If ~/.path
exists, it will be sourced along with the other files, before any feature testing takes place.
Here’s an example ~/.path
file that adds /usr/local/bin
to the $PATH
:
export PATH="/usr/local/bin:$PATH"
If ~/.extra
exists, it will be sourced along with the other files. You can use this to add a few custom commands without the need to fork this entire repository, or to add commands you don’t want to commit to a public repository.
You could also use ~/.extra
to override settings, functions and aliases from my dotfiles repository. It’s probably better to fork instead, though.
When setting up a new Mac, you may want to set some sensible OS X defaults:
./.osx