parchlinux global dotfiles
Find a file
2011-12-07 18:35:29 -05:00
vim switch to github vim color scheme 2011-12-04 14:51:53 -05:00
zsh/completion zsh config 2011-01-13 17:26:04 -05:00
aliases don't require heroku to be in your project's bundle 2011-12-04 18:30:18 -05:00
gitconfig adding a global .gitconfig that by default tracks branches (so you can 'git push' from a branch it only pushes to the tracking branch you're in) and also provides a tighter, more colorful git log 2011-10-24 10:30:50 -04:00
gvimrc Vim configuration 2011-01-13 17:54:08 -05:00
install.sh Now posix compatible and I have removed the use of tail -r 2011-10-15 18:33:17 +11:00
README.md improve documentation to make suggestions about where to put your own customizations 2011-12-07 18:35:29 -05:00
tmux.conf use screen-256-color for tmux so that certain color schemes in vim look breathtakingly vibrant 2011-09-06 16:25:06 -04:00
vimrc switch to github vim color scheme 2011-12-04 14:51:53 -05:00
zlogin zsh config 2011-01-13 17:26:04 -05:00
zshrc add in zshkit fun stuff 2011-04-04 10:27:03 -04:00

thoughtbot dotfiles

Install

First, fork this repo on Github.

Then, clone your Github fork (replace "your-github-name" with your Github name) onto your laptop and install it:

git clone git@github.com:your-github-name/dotfiles.git
cd dotfiles
./install.sh

This will create symlinks for all config files in your home directory. You can safely run this file multiple times to update.

There is configuration for zsh so switch your shell from the default bash to zsh on OS X:

chsh -s /bin/zsh

Why fork?

dotfiles are fairly personal. You should be able to modify your dotfiles, and save them in version control in your fork.

However, the thoughtbot folks are often tweaking these dotfiles and you want to be able to get those updates.

So, your master branch is meant for your customizations and use the upstream branch to get thoughtbot's updates.

Set up the upstream branch

You only have to do this once:

git remote add upstream git@github.com:thoughtbot/dotfiles.git
git fetch upstream
git checkout -b upstream upstream/master

Update thoughtbot's changes into your customizations

You will want to customize your environment. We suggest making changes in files that are not in thoughtbot's files.

For example, to customize your zsh config, make your changes in ~/.zshenv:

# RVM
[[ -s '/Users/croaky/.rvm/scripts/rvm' ]] && source '/Users/croaky/.rvm/scripts/rvm'

# recommended by brew doctor
export PATH="/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:$PATH"

Commit those kinds of things in your master branch.

Then, each time you want to update thoughtbot's changes.

git checkout upstream
git pull
git checkout master
git rebase upstream