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Dotfiles and Environment Setup

This repository contains my dotfiles, as well as a method for setting up (arbitrary) environments on freshly-provisioned machines, whether they're local development machines or remote servers shared by many users. The setup methodology ensures that each user's environment doesn't interfere with any other user's environment.

Most of the gruntwork is done by the setup-environment.sh script. It can be used on its own, though it is meant to be used with the start-remote-env wrapper in shared-shell-scripts/auto-start-remote-env. When used in this manner, remote-to-local copy/paste functionality is setup automatically using SSH tunneling.

Features

The files in this repo contain some very useful features, especially if you work with multiple remote machines:

  • Automatically source specific configuration files based on:
    • whether we're running locally or remotely
    • the "environment" that we've told the shell we're using
  • Automatically set up remote->local copying, so you can seamlessly copy from a remote tmux session to your local tmux session and X clipboard
  • Seamless window/pane management -- whether you're running a single tmux session, tmux-inside-tmux, or vim-inside-tmux-inside-tmux, the same hotkeys are used to create and navigate window splits
  • Seamless buffer management -- prefix PgUp and prefix [ operate on the most nested tmux

Setup Script

The setup script takes care of installing and activating a complete environment for you, as well as keeping it up to date with a remote repository.

Invocation

[ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES] bash setup-environment.sh <remote_user> [shell_to_launch]

Parameters and Environment Variables

The setup-environment script should be called with a remote user and an optional shell_to_launch that is called when the environment has been set up.

Several environment variables also affect the functionality of the script. With the exception of REPO, they are all exported for use by the shell and other programs. They are:

  • REPO: The repository to clone from, and any options you want passed to git. If not given, defaults to my own repo.
  • LOOPBACK_PORT: The local port on which reverse SSH tunneling to the source has been established. This is for setting up automatic remote->local copy/paste functionality. If this is given, the script will attempt to use the tunnel, authenticating using keys (so that you don't have to give your password each time). If this fails, the script exits with error code 13 so that you may automatically pull the public key from the remote machine and install it locally (cuz you obviously store your public key in your repo, right?).
  • POWERLINE_FONT: Whether powerline fonts should be used; value of 1 enables.
  • ENVIRONMENT: The environment to be used for the launched shell.
  • LOCAL_DISPLAY: Your local X display (e.g. :0).

If REMOTE_USER is the special value LOCAL, the environment will be installed and activated locally. NOTE THAT THIS MAY OVERWRITE YOUR EXISTING DOTFILES. In every other case, the dotfiles are installed in a namespaced way that does not affect any currently existing dotfiles (except for vim, cuz it sucks).

Exported Environment Variables

In addition to the environment variables listed above, the following variables are also exported:

  • DOTFILES: The relative folder under which the dotfiles have been installed. Note that needs to used as $HOME/$DOTFILES if you want the full system path.
  • INSTALLER: The system's installer (currently limited to apt-get or yum).
  • SUDO: Has value sudo if sudo is needed for running priveleged commands, blank otherwise.
  • CUSTOM_SHELL_OPTS: If the $SHELL of the system the setup script is running on is /bin/bash, this will be the option required to run bash with your customized .bashrc.
  • ZDOTDIR: If the $SHELL of the system the setup script is running on is /bin/zsh, this will be $HOME/$DOTFILES/zsh.

Adding Functionality

Any additional stuff that you want performed to setup your environment can be dropped into the file required.sh in the base of your $REPO, which will be executed by bash on setup. Note that all non-shell-specific environment variables are exported at the time this file is run, so you can do things in this file like $SUDO $INSTALLER -y <some_program> to do distro-independent installation.

Steps

For sake of verbosity, here are the steps the script performs when installing the environment:

  1. Detect and export ($INSTALLER) the system installer (i.e. apt-get versus yum)
  2. Detect and export ($SUDO) whether we need sudo to execute priveleged commands
  3. Install git if it's needed
  4. Pull $REPO and all of its submodules
  5. Make links to dotfiles in $HOME, namespaced if appropriate
  6. Copy over any custom termcaps
  7. Append a line to $HOME/.vimrc if it doesn't exist
  8. Install any public keys in $REPO/keys to $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys
  9. Generate a (non-passphrase-protected) SSH key if one doesn't already exist
  10. Execute $REPO/required.sh if it exists
  11. Pip install anything in requirements.txt
  12. If $LOOPBACK_PORT is provided, try to establish SSH connection back without password authentication; fail with code 13 if it doesn't work

If the dotfiles directory exists, the script simply pulls from the $REPO.

In all cases, it launches the shell_to_launch.

Autoloading

As it is currently configured, the programs contained in the repo autoload configuration files based on the value of the environment variable $ENVIRONMENT, as well as whether the machine is local or remote. The autoloading structure works by sourcing all files in the program's directory whose name matches certain globs:

  • auto*: The file is always sourced.
  • local*: The file is sourced if the program is running on the local machine.
  • remote*: The file is sourced if the program is running in a shell that has been accessed through an SSH connection.
  • <environment>/auto*: The file is sourced when $ENVIRONMENT=<environment>.
  • <environment>/local*: The file is sourced when $ENVIRONMENT=<environment> and the program is running on the local machine.
  • <environment>/remote*: The file is sourced when $ENVIRONMENT=<environment> and the program is running in a shell that has been accessed through an SSH connection.

Useful Hotkeys

Here are some helpful non-standard keybindings:

  • Tmux: prefix | -- split the window vertically
  • Tmux: prefix - -- split the window horizontally
  • Tmux: prefix C-c -- force window creation rather than sending new-window command along to embedded thing
  • Vim: <leader> in Vim for me is \.
  • Vim: <leader>y -- yank to X clipboard, and your local tmux session if there is one
  • Vim: <leader>p -- paste from tmux buffer

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