.config | ||
.emacs.d/private | ||
.local/bin | ||
dev | ||
img | ||
private | ||
tmux@01c91ba523 | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitignore_global | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.nanorc | ||
.rustfmt.toml | ||
.signature | ||
.spacemacs | ||
.tmux.conf | ||
.tmux.conf.local | ||
.xinitrc | ||
.Xresources | ||
2019-09-21-172222_1366x768_scrot.png | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
README.org |
Phundrak’s dotfiles
- Presentation
- Features
- Screenshots
- Dependencies
- Installation
- Licence
Presentation
This is my collection of dotfiles for my daily GNU/Linux environment, tweaked to my liking. If you wish to get the same setup as mine, follow the instructions below.
As you can see, I personally use fish as my shell of choice, and Emacs using Spacemacs (still with Emacs keybinding) as my main text editor.
I also use Resloved’s fork of i3-gaps with two polybar bars and Tryone144’s fork of Compton. The colors scheme for rofi, Emacs and polybar are chosen from the wallpapers using pywal.
Features
- Emacs configuration perfectly tailored for my own use
- Beautiful and comfy i3 and polybar configuration
- And enough information below to get basically the same distro install as I have on my main computer and my travel laptop.
Screenshots
Dependencies
Of course, some dependencies are needed for my dotfiles to work well. Here is a non-exhaustive list of software needed by these configuration files:
-
GNU/Emacs >= 26.2
- Spacemacs (develop branch)
- My conlanging layer
- Venmos’ w3m layer
- The Fish shell, using fisher
- Luke Smith’s fork of st
- Resloved’s i3-gaps-rounded fork of Airblader’s i3-gaps, itself a fork of i3
- Compton, more specificaly Tryone’s fork
- pywal
- dmenu
- j4-dmenu-desktop
- Rofi
- minted
- Rust (stable and nightly)
- LaTeX and XeTeX (
texlive
packages on Arch Linux) - tmux, based on this repo’s configuration by Grégory Pakosz.
- And a bunch of other stuff, see below
And some other stuff scattered around in my dotfiles.
BTW, I use Arch.
Installation
Here will be presented what I do to get my system up and running on a fresh Arch Linux install. These installation instructions were written in order to get an Arch Linux distribution up and running with the same configuration as my main computer’s and my travelling laptop’s configuration.
Install Arch Linux
I usually install Arch from the vanilla ISO, however I began using archfi to
install easily the distro (I’ve done it so many times, I know how it works
now). Usually, my distros will be installed on at least two partitions, one
dedicated to /home
, the other to the root partition /
. When you boot into
the live ISO, execute the following command:
wget archfi.sf.net/archfi
# Or from matmoul.github.io/archfi if SourceForge is down
sh archfi
Then, follow the instructions and install Arch Linux.
Update the system
First of all, let’s make sure we have a sorted mirrorlist for pacman.
pacman -Sy reflector
reflector --country France --country Germany --latest 200 \
--protocol http --protocol httpqs --sort rate \
--save /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
Now, let’s update the system in order to be sure to have the latest version.
sudo pacman -Syu --noconfirm
sudo pacman -S git emacs --needed --noconfirm
Install yay
and all the official repos’ packages
Next step is to install the AUR helper yay
(DO NOT use yaourt
, it is
discontinued, seriously updated and represents a serious security flaw).
Let’s clone it in a folder fromGIT
that will be in our home folder. This is
also where we’ll download every other packages we’ll install from git.
mkdir -p fromGIT
cd fromGIT
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/yay.git
cd yay
makepkg -si --noconfirm
Now, we can install all the packages I usually have installed on my computer.
yay -S --needed --noconfirm asar ascii aspell-en aspell-fr assimp \
autoconf automake awesome-terminal-fonts bash bat biber binutils bison \
bleachbit bluez-firmware bluez-utils bookworm boost bzip2 chromium clisp \
compton-tryone-git coreutils cppcheck cppreference cppreference-devhelp \
cpupower cronie cryptsetup cups device-mapper dhcpcd diffutils\
discord-canary discount ditaa dmenu dmenu-lpass docker docker-compose \
doxygen dwarffortress e2fsprogs emacs exfat-utils fakeroot feh \
ffmpegthumbnailer file filesystem findutils fingerprint-gui firefox fish \
flake8 flex font-mathematica fontforge freeglut fzf gawk gcc gcc-libs gdb \
gettext gimp git glibc gnome-disk-utility gnome-epub-thumbnailer \
gnu-free-fonts gnuplot go-tools grep gzip htop i3-gaps i3lock-blur \
i3status icecat-bin igdm-bin inetutils intel-ucode iproute2 iputils \
j4-dmenu-desktop jfsutils lastpass-cli less libnewt libtool licenses \
light linux linux-firmware linux-headers lldb logrotate lsof lvm2 m4 make \
man-db man-pages mate-polkit mdadm meson minted mpc mpd \
mpd-rich-presence-discord-git mpv mupdf-tools nano nasm ncdu ncmpcpp \
nemo-fileroller nemo-preview neofetch netctl networkmanager \
networkmanager-openvpn nm-connection-editor nnn nomacs noto-fonts-emoji \
npm ntfs-3g openmp openssh p7zip pacman pacman-contrib pandoc-bin patch \
pavucontrol pciutils pcurses pdfpc perl pkgconf polybar procps-ng psmisc \
pulseaudio-bluetooth python-envtpl-git python-pip python-pywal qemu r \
raw-thumbnailer redshift refind-efi reflector reiserfsprogs rofi \
rofi-wifi-menu-git rsync rtv rustup s-nail samba scrot sdl2_gfx \
sdl2_image sdl2_mixer sdl2_ttf sed sent shadow siji-git \
simplescreenrecorder speedcrunch sshfs st-luke-git sudo sysfsutils \
systemd-sysvcompat tar texinfo texlive-bibtexextra texlive-bin \
texlive-core texlive-fontsextra texlive-formatsextra texlive-games \
texlive-humanities texlive-langchinese texlive-langcyrillic \
texlive-langextra texlive-langgreek texlive-langjapanese \
texlive-langkorean texlive-latexextra texlive-music texlive-pictures \
texlive-pstricks texlive-publishers texlive-science tmux tree \
ttf-arphic-uming ttf-baekmuk ttf-bitstream-vera ttf-dejavu \
ttf-google-fonts-opinionated-git ttf-joypixels ttf-liberation
ttf-material-design-icons-git ttf-ms-fonts ttf-symbola \
ttf-tibetan-machine ttf-twemoji-color ttf-unifont unicode unicode-emoji \
unrar usbutils util-linux valgrind vi vim vulkan-headers w3m wget which \
whois x11-ssh-askpass xclip xdg-user-dirs-gtk xf86-input-wacom \
xf86-video-intel xfce4-power-manager xfsprogs xorg-server xorg-xinit \
xss-lock yadm graphviz
Given how many packages will be install from the AUR, I’ll probably have to type my password a few times.
Set up yadm
yadm
is my dotfiles manager. It has some very interesting, including host
and machine-specific files and file content, as can be seen in
dotfiles/.config/i3/config##yadm.j2
.
Get the dotfiles
You should clone the dotfiles with the help of yadm
. For that purpose, you
can execute either of the two following commands.
-
From labs.phundrak.fr:
yadm clone https://labs.phundrak.fr/phundrak/dotfiles.git
-
From Github:
yadm clone https://gitlab.com/phundrak/dotfiles.git
Generate the alt dotfiles
yadm
will need to generate the host-specific dotfiles. To do so, you can
run the following command:
yadm alt
Set up Emacs
The first thing to do after setting up our system is setting up Emacs.
Download Spacemacs
First, let’s download Spacemacs.
git clone https://github.com/syl20bnr/spacemacs ~/.emacs.d
Let’s switch Spacemacs’ branch to develop
.
git checkout develop
Set the custom layers
As mentionned above, I use some custom layers. Let’s symlink these to the
private folder of our .emacs.d/
folder.
for d in ~/dotfiles/spacemacs-layers/*
ln -s $d
end
Symlink the Emacs config
Let’s not forget our Spacemacs/Emacs config, we’ll symlink it to our home directory.
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.spacemacs
Install the Fish shell
As mentionned above, I use the fish shell as my main shell. And I use some extensions too that I installed from fisher, and custom functions.
Install fisher
Let’s install fisher:
curl https://git.io/fisher --create-dirs -sLo \
~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish
Awesome! Now, onto the fisher packages:
fisher add edc/bass franciscolourenco/done jethrokuan/fzf jethrokuan/z \
jorgebucaran/fish-getopts laughedelic/pisces \
matchai/spacefish tuvistavie/fish-ssh-agent
Install the fish config and custom functions
I will be symlinking my fishfile to its location ~/.config
.
ln -s ~/dotfiles/config.fish
Now, in the functions
subdirectory, let’s symlink all of my custom
functions.
for f in ~/dotfiles/fishfunctions/*.fish
ln -s $f
end
Install the dotfiles
Update the submodules
Alright, let’s do something about all these dotfiles laying around. First, let’s symlink those that are in our home directory.
yadm submodule update
Update the remotes
Now, let’s make sure we have the correct remotes set up for the dotfiles.
yadm remote set-url origin "git@labs.phundrak.fr:phundrak/dotfiles.git"
yadm remote set-url github "git@github.com:phundrak/dotfiles.git"
Symlink the dotfiles
Let’s now symlink our dotfiles. First, we’ll take care of those that should be symlinked to our home directory.
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.Xresources
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.gitignore_global
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.nanorc
ln -s ~/dotfiles/rustfmt.toml
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.signature
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.tmux.conf.local
ln -s ~/dotfiles/tmux/.tmux.conf
ln -s ~/dotfiles/.config/i3 .i3
Finally, let’s symlink everything that belongs to the ~/.config
folder.
for elem in ~/dotfiles/.config/*
ln -s $elem
end
Install packages from git
Now, we move on to the installation of git-based packages.
Install i3-gaps-rounded
I know we already installed i3-gaps
from the AUR, why reinstall it? Well,
that is certainly bad practices, but this allowed me to already have the
needed dependencies for building i3
installed. Now, let’s clone it, build
it, and install it. It will required the password during the actual
installation.
git clone https://github.com/resloved/i3.git i3-gaps-rounded
cd i3-gaps-rounded
rm -rf build
autoreconf --force --install
mkdir build && cd build
../configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --disable-sanitizers
make
sudo make install
Install Polybar Battery
I use a custom tool for my battery indicator which also launches a warning when the battery is low. However, I need to build it, since it is not available in the repos nor the AUR.
git clone https://github.com/drdeimos/polybar_another_battery.git
cd polybar_another_battery
go get -u github.com/distatus/battery/cmd/battery
make build
Let’s also create the ~/.local/bin/
directory in which I will put some
custom executables, including the executable we just built.
Download Reveal.JS
Now, let’s download Reveal.JS. I use it for some of my Org presentations,
and I set it so it is found in ~/fromGIT
.
git clone https://github.com/hakimel/reveal.js.git
Install Rust
Install the toolchains
When using rust, I bounce between two toolchains, the stable
toolchain and
the nightly
toolchain. To install them, I will use rustup
which has
already been installed.
rustup default stable
This will both download the stable toolchain and set it as the default one. Now to install the nightly toolchain, let’s run this:
rustup toolchain install nightly
This one is updated about daily (hence the name), so we’ll often have to run the following command:
rustup update
Clean the pacman
and yay
cache
Finally, we are almost done! Let’s clean the cache of pacman
and yay
yay -Sc --noconfirm
Licence
All of my dotfiles (and my dotfiles only) are available under the GNU GPLv3 Licence. Please consult /phundrak/config.phundrak.com/src/commit/4e56d668b185f9d9ca014f4cdb7dd22542c3e624/LICENCE.md for more information. In short: you are free to access, edit and redistribute all of my dotfiles under the same licence and as allowed by the licence, and if you fuck up something, it’s your own responsibility.