.cache/wget | ||
.config | ||
.cron | ||
.local/bin | ||
.vim | ||
.w3m | ||
Library/Application Support/iTerm2/DynamicProfiles | ||
.bash_profile | ||
.bashrc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.vimrc | ||
.zshrc | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
Dot Files for onboardme
These started as my personal dot files, but then they became the sensible defaults for
onboardme
, which started out as a script
to manage my dot files. Funny how these things work. 🤷
These directories/files are installed to your home directory.
Sections for each config directory/file
.config
asciinema
File:
~/.config/asciinema/config
Config file for
asciinema
, a lightweight, purely text-based approach to terminal recording. Currently it just sets the shell command to be/bin/bash --login
, which loads your bash variables. This could be changed to a different shell and their equivilent.
bat
File:
~/.config/bat/config
Config file for
bat
bat, acat
replacement with sytax highlighting and git support. Currently the config file:
- sets a default theme
- enable italic text
- maps Chart.lock files to YAML syntax (this is for the helm charts for k8s)
The goal is to have a spacechalk-like theme soon :)
bash
Files
~/.config/bash/alias.sh
~/.config/bash/completion.sh
~/.config/bash/history.sh
~/.config/bash/iterm2_shell_integration.sh
~/.config/bash/k8s.sh
~/.config/bash/path.sh
~/.config/bash/minimal.sh
~/.config/bash/text_editing.sh
~/.config/bash/alias.sh
a config file to organize all our BASH aliases
~/.config/bash/completion.sh
enable tab completion
~/.config/bash/history.sh
- sets history to be in
~/.local/state/bash/history
- sets default history size
- don't log duplicate history lines
iterm2_shell_integration.sh
sets up iterm2 shell stuff
~/.config/bash/text_editing.sh
sets either neovim or vim as your text editor
~/.config/bash/k8s.sh
kubernetes defaults:
- set pathing for
krew
, a plugin manager forkubectl
.- helpful sensible aliases such as:
kg
forkubectl get
~/.config/bash/path.sh
- set XDG base directory spec
- set pathing for golang and python
- set pathing for home brew
~/.config/bash/text_editing.sh
- fix how less handles non-text input files
- change the default colors for less used in man pages
- changes default pagers used when file is too long for catting
gh
File:
~/.config/gh/config.yml
Config file for
gh
, the GitHub CLI. There's not a ton in there, but it uses rich-cli as a prettier pager, and firefox as a browser, and setting vim as an editor. The rest is stock, and subject to change.
glab-cli
File:
~/.config/glab-cli/config.yml
Config file for
glab
, an open source GitLab CLI tool. There's not a ton in there, but it uses a dark theme, firefox as a browser, and vim as an editor. The rest is stock, and subject to change.
git
File:
~/.config/git/config
Default git config file. We set the following parameters:
- Default branch for new repos is
main
- Push up to remote automatically if it's a new branch
- color is always on
- set specific terminal colors for:
git branch
git status
git diff
We also include this block, which allows you to have a personal gitconfig file:
[includeIf "gitdit:~/"] path = ~/.config/git/personal
You can create a
~/.config/git/personal
file and store info such as:[user] email = fido@coolemailproviderfordogs.com name = Fido Good-dog signingkey = gooddoggpgsigningkey [commit] gpgsign = true
hyper
File:
~/.config/hyper/.hyper.js
Sensible defaults for the hyper terminal emulator.
iterm2
iterm2 is a terminal emulator for macOS.
Symlinked File: [
~/.config/iterm2/Profiles.json -> ~/Library/Application\ Support/iTerm2/DynamicProfiles/Profiles.json
](Library/Application\ Support/iTerm2/DynamicProfiles/Profiles.json)Profiles.json
Sets some basic profiles:
- default - profile with spacechalk colorscheme,
- minimal - profile with basically nothing special and a plain
.bash_profile
.
karabiner
File:
~/.config/karabiner/karabiner.json
Config file for karabiner, which is used to map capslock to control on macOS and other key remapping that can be really useful.
kitty
Files:
Config files related to kitty, a terminal emulator. Cute open source kitty icon image by DinkDonk, as well as a basic
kitty.conf
to use some nerdfonts, and set up look and feel on macOS.
lsd
File:
~/.config/lsd/config.yaml
Config file for
lsd
, anls
alternative with icons and pretty colors. There's an intension to write and release a spacechalk theme for lsd eventually.
lsimg
File:
~/.config/lsimg/config.yaml
This is a local project that I'm working on to rewrite a bash script in python, to do basic checking of images in the terminal. I might remove it though, because after discovering ranger, it might not be really needed 🤷
neofetch
File:
~/.config/neofetch/config.conf
Config file for neofetch, a command-line system information tool written in bash 3.2+. The intension is to pair down information to only what's needed, and maybe have a cute image :)
neomutt
Files:
~/.config/neomutt/mailcap
~/.config/neomutt/neomuttrc
~/.config/neomutt/themes/spacechalk/neomutt_spacechalk_colors.muttrc
~/.config/neomutt/themes/spacechalk/powerline.neomuttrc
Config files for NeoMutt, a terminal based email client. Config includes:
- sets spacechalk theme, based on the neonwolf colorscheme and neomutt powerline
- sets character set to be utf-8 (emojis 🧑💻)
- sets basic IMAP and SMTP settings
- sets tls by default
- sets header_cache and message_cachedir to be
~/.cache/mutt
(must be a directory, NOT a file)- sets navigation keys similar to vim
- set a key binding for
V
to be opening html attachments- removes the prompt of hitting enter after viewing an attachment
You'll still need to create
~/.config/neomutt/keys
with the following info:set my_user=you@youremail.com set my_name="Your Name" # if you're using protonmail this is the password from protonmail-bridge, # after you login, not your actual email password set my_pass="areallycoolpasswordfordogs"
Config file for NeoMutt's MIME Support, which is how NeoMutt, a TUI email client, handles attachments e.g. html in an email body, PDFs, images...
We currently open these applications for these file types:
file type application html w3m PDFs macOS preview images img2sixel
nvim
Config files for neovim is a hyperextensible Vim-based text editor, which is in some ways a sucessor to vim. It's a lot faster, for one, and there's more support for more languages, which means more plugins. Uses packer to manager neovim plugins.
Each file explained below:
init.lua
The main global configuration changes are:
- turning off mouse scrolling
- enabling line numbers
- adding a cursorline
- setting column 80 to be a different color for tidy code
- enabling gui colors so you aren't limited to like 8 colors
- uses the spacechalk colorscheme
- sources all the files in ~/.config/nvim/lua, including packer, plugins, and local plugin configs.
~/.config/nvim/packerinit.vim
This is a quick and dirty lua function to print " ♥ ♥ ♥ " if neovim is running in an interactive session and packer completes an action, and to exit if we're running headless, meaning we're running in a script.
~/.config/nvim/lua/plugins.lua
This is the configuration for packer, our plugin manager for neovim. It installs packer, and then all of our plugins. You can check out all the plugins that are installed, or called from vim plugins starting on line 15.
~/.config/nvim/lua/user/airline.lua
sets defaults for airline, a status line for vim and neovim. The configurations are:
- use spacechalk theme
- enables powerline fonts (fun icons)
- disables empty sections of the status line
- enables the ale extension to work with airline for linting
- changes the default dividers to be and '
- sets a line number percentage function for a slimmer ln segment
~/.config/nvim/lua/user/ale.lua
sets defaults for ale such as:
- enable ale by default
- error icons are now and warn icons are now
- don't lint on text changes, only on mode changes
- use lints for python such as ruff and flake8
- run autofixers on save
- move between errors
~/.config/nvim/lua/user/dashboard.lua
config for a starting screen dashboard for neovim. You should just check out the file to see what's being done. It's cute ascii art, and utilizes telescope to check out your files and previously opened files.
~/.config/nvim/lua/user/folding.lua
config file to enable folding, which is just vim speak for collapsing blocks of code. Sets some defaults.
~/.config/nvim/lua/user/nvim-tree.lua
config file for nvim-tree, a neovim file explorer written in lua, with icons.
Opens on opening of any file, and auto-adjusts its window size.
~/.config/nvim/lua/user/tree-sitter.lua
config file for the nvim tree-sitter plugin, which helps with syntax highlighting of various languages.
currently installing syntax for: "lua", "yaml", "bash", "hcl"
Powerline
Configuration files for powerline, a status line for BASH and tmux. We enable a spacechalk color theme as well as:
- local IP address
- hostname
- current working directory
- git status info
- unread mail count
- kubernetes info
- laptop battery information
- the time
- status of last run command (only appears if exit code is not 0)
Currently working on getting mail notifications working.
Files for colors:
~/.config/powerline/colors.json
~/.config/powerline/colorschemes/default.json
~/.config/powerline/colorschemes/shell/default.json
Files for configuring powerline for a login shell, and the console shell:
~/.config/powerline/themes/shell/default.json
~/.config/powerline/themes/powerline.json
~/.config/powerline/themes/powerline_terminus.json
~/.config/powerline/themes/unicode_terminus.json
File for configuring tmux status line:
Ranger
Files:
ranger is a TUI file manager. Current configurations:
- enable file previews using iterm2
- enable video previews using ffmpegthumbnailer
- enable svg previews.
terminator
File:
~/.config/terminator
Default config for my favorite terminal from my starting days in tech, [terminator]. We set some basic spacechalk-esk colors, transparency, and mononoki fonts.
tmux
File:
~/.config/tmux/tmux.conf
Config file for tmux. Currently, it will:
- Sets 256 colors
- enable the powerline tmux status line
.cron
local cron jobs for alarms, and package manager updates
.local/bin
Files:
This is just where we throw a few really simple scripts like:
Command Description utc
for ease of use printing the time in UTC w3m-splits
open split in iterm2 and send a website or HTML file to w3m
w3m-splits
is mostly useful for NeoMutt, but anything is possible 🤷Directories:
iterm2
Directory:
Everything in there are files written and provided by iTerm2 for integrating iterm2 magic into your terminal. The only custom one is the following:
Command Description it2split
open split in iterm2 with your default profile
.vim*
Configuration for vim, a text editor, and it's plugins, installed via vim-plug.
~/.vimrc
is the main file for the global vim configuration. We set a lot of defaults, including:
- setting window width to 82 characters
- enabling line numbers
- enabling highlighting of column cursor is on
- add a colored column on column 80 for tidy python
- sets a nerd font for vim
- enable syntax highlighting
- use spacechalk colorscheme
- configure icons for VimDevicons, and NERDTree
- ale icons changed, ale linters and fixers set for python
- gitgutter icons
- folding defaults
- sets backups
- allow backspace in insert mode
- default tabbing
- set search history
- installs all the plugins here
- uses template files below
Auto-install vim-plug:
Files for syntax highlighting for python, ssh_known_hosts, and .toml files:
Files for default values in a python or markdown file:
.w3m
Files:
Files for the w3m terminal based web browser. This config sets:
- set default mailcap for MIME types
- always display images
- quit without asking if we hit
- use vim like key bindings
.bash_profile, .bashrc
Configuration files for BASH. The
.bash_profile
just sources the.bashrc
, since macOS default looks for.bash_profile
instead of.bashrc
.The
.bashrc
sets the following defaults:
- turns off bells
- enables 256 colors
- sources all the files in
~/.config/bash
(see above under config > bash )- sources person file in
~/.config/bash/path/bashrc
- runs neofetch when you source it
.gitignore
Git ignore file for all sorts of things in your home directory that should never get committed if this repo is used as your home directory dot files.
.zshrc
Recently started giving this some TLC, but still in it's infancy to be match the .bash configs. Currently we:
- set some useful aliases
- set the same powerline prompt as bash
Please feel free to fork this repo and make it your own.
You can still use onboardme
, but you'll want to pass in your git URL and branch. Example:
# this uses your personal git URL and makes sure to always pull from main
# if you want to overwrite your existing dot files, you can also add --overwrite to this command
onboardme --git_url https://github.com/your_username/dot_files --git_branch main
RoadMap
- Get screenshots
- Sort out neovim idiosyncrasies to start using neovim full time (remove plugins that don't work with neovim)
- tidy vim and remove neovim references
- migrate some of the themeing to a spacechalk org to unify it all
- more in the GitHub Issues