My preferred starting configuration. Currently using Ubuntu 22.04 + Pop_OS! Shell for tiling.
The installation script (scripts/install.sh
) will install a suggested serving of programs and applications using scripts in the scripts/programs/
directory. Please verify that you want these before running the script.
Add or delete programs in scripts/install.sh
and scripts/programs/
to modify your installation.
After installing your fresh OS:
-
Create any SSH keys you need to access GitHub. See copy-able commands for doing this below. If not generating new keys, place the ones you need in
.ssh/
. Remember to runssh-add
as well aschmod 600 <key_name>
. -
Then clone this repository:
git clone [email protected]:victoriadrake/dotfiles.git # Or use HTTPS git clone https://github.com/victoriadrake/dotfiles.git
You may optionally like to pass the
--depth
argument to clone only a few of the most recent commits. -
Close Firefox if it's open, then run the installation script. (Read it first so you know what it does!)
cd dotfiles/scripts/ ./install.sh
To install the Pop_OS! Shell for window tiling, see Installation in their repo.
Given a list of repository URLs, gh-repos.txt
, run:
xargs -n1 git clone < gh-repos.txt
Use the firewood
Bash alias (see .bashrc
) to collect remote branches.
See How to write Bash one-liners for cloning and managing GitHub and GitLab repositories for more.
There are plenty of themes for Gnome terminal at Mayccoll/Gogh.
For the Gogh script to work, you may need to have an existing terminal profile named Default
. This will get overwritten.
Print a 256-color test pattern in your terminal:
for i in {0..255} ; do
printf "\x1b[48;5;%sm%3d\e[0m " "$i" "$i"
if (( i == 15 )) || (( i > 15 )) && (( (i-15) % 6 == 0 )); then
printf "\n";
fi
done
Where SETTINGS_BACKUP
is wherever you backed up/want to back up your settings (aptly named, isn't it?), load settings.dconf
with:
dconf load /org/gnome/ < $(SETTINGS_BACKUP)/.config/dconf/settings.dconf
Back up new settings with:
dconf dump /org/gnome/ > $(SETTINGS_BACKUP)/.config/dconf/settings.dconf
Run man dconf
on your machine for more.
Commands for setting up a new SSH key.
-
Generate the key:
ssh-keygen -t ed25519
-
Add it to the ssh-agent:
eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
-
Set appropriate permissions:
chmod 600 ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
-
Show the public key so you can copy it to the service, e.g. GitHub:
cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub
See the Makefile in this repository for some helpful command aliases. Read about self-documenting Makefiles on my blog.