This repo is heavily influenced by TechDufus's repo. Go check it out!
This Ansible playbook only supports MacOS (Darwin)
distribution. This is by design to provide a consistent development experience across hosts.
The vault.secret
file allows you to encrypt values with Ansible vault
and store them securely in source control.
To then encrypt values with your vault password use the following:
$ ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-password-file $HOME/.ansible-vault/vault.secret "mynewsecret" --name "MY_SECRET_VAR"
$ cat myfile.conf | ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-password-file $HOME/.ansible-vault/vault.secret --stdin-name "myfile"
NOTE: This file will automatically be detected by the playbook when running
dotfiles
command to decrypt values. Read more on Ansible Vault here.
This playbook includes a custom shell script located at bin/dotfiles
. This script is added to your $PATH after installation and can be run multiple times while making sure any Ansible dependencies are installed and updated.
NOTE: You must follow required steps before running this command or things may become unusable until fixed.
bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/matthiashamacher/dotfiles/main/bin/dotfiles)"
If you want to run only a specific role, you can specify the following bash command:
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/matthiashamacher/dotfiles/main/bin/dotfiles | bash -s -- --tags comma,seperated,tags
This repository is continuously updated with new features and settings which become available to you when updating.
To update your environment run the dotfiles
command in your shell:
dotfiles
This will handle the following tasks:
- Verify Ansible is up-to-date
- Clone this repository locally to
~/.dotfiles
- Verify any
ansible-galaxy
plugins are updated - Run this playbook with the values in
~/.config/dotfiles/group_vars/all.yaml
This dotfiles
command is available to you after the first use of this repo, as it adds this repo's bin
directory to your path, allowing you to call dotfiles
from anywhere.
Any flags or arguments you pass to the dotfiles
command are passed as-is to the ansible-playbook
command.
For Example: Running the tmux tag with verbosity
dotfiles -t tmux -vvv