VCSH(1) | VCSH(1) |
vcsh - Version Control System for $HOME - multiple Git repositories in $HOME
vcsh [options] command
vcsh clone [-b branch] url [repo]
vcsh delete repo
vcsh enter repo
vcsh foreach [-g] git command
vcsh help
vcsh init repo
vcsh list
vcsh list-tracked [repo]
vcsh list-untracked [-a] [-r] [repo]
vcsh pull
vcsh push
vcsh rename repo newname
vcsh run repo shell command
vcsh status [repo]
vcsh upgrade repo
vcsh version
vcsh which substring
vcsh write-gitignore repo
vcsh repo git command
vcsh repo
vcsh allows you to have several git(1) repositories, all maintaining their working trees in $HOME without clobbering each other. That, in turn, means you can have one repository per config set (zsh, vim, ssh, etc), picking and choosing which configs you want to use on which machine.
vcsh is using a technique called fake bare Git repositories, keeping $GIT_DIR in a different directory from $GIT_WORK_TREE which is pointed to $HOME.
The use of symlinks is not needed in this setup, making for a cleaner setup.
vcsh was designed with mr(1) in mind so you might want to install it alongside vcsh. That being said, you can easily use vcsh without mr if you prefer.
A sample configuration for vcsh and mr can be found at https://github.com/RichiH/vcsh_mr_template and used with vcsh clone https://github.com/RichiH/vcsh_mr_template mr.
Please note that you can always use a path instead of a name for repo. This is needed to support mr and other scripts properly and of no concern to an interactive user.
As noted earlier, vcsh will set $GIT_DIR and $GIT_WORK_TREE to the appropriate values for fake bare Git repositories.
There are several ways to turn the various knobs on vcsh. In order of ascending precedence, they are:
Please note that those files are sourced. Any and all commands will be executed in the context of your shell.
Interesting knobs you can turn:
Less interesting knobs you could turn:
vcsh provides a hook system. Hook scripts must be executable and should be placed in <$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/vcsh/hooks-available>. From there, they can be soft-linked into <$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/vcsh/hooks-enabled>; vcsh will only execute hooks that are in this directory.
Hooks follow a simple format. pre-run will be run before anything is run. If you want to have more than one script for a certain hook, just append any kind of string to order them. A system of pre-run, <pre-run.10>, <pre-run.20> etc is suggested; other options would be pre-run-10 or <pre-run.sh>. A dot after the hook name is optional.
If you want to create hooks for a specific vcsh repository, simply prepend the repository´s name, followed by a dot, i.e. <zsh.pre-run>. Otherwise, the same rules as above apply. The dot between the repository´s name and the hook is mandatory, though.
Available hooks are pre-clone, post-clone, post-clone-retired, pre-command, post-command, pre-enter, post-enter, pre-init, post-init, pre-pull, post-pull, pre-push, post-push, pre-run, post-run, pre-upgrade, and post-upgrade. If you need more, vcsh is trivial to patch, but please let upstream know so we can ship them by default.
vcsh also provides an overlay system. Similar to hooks, the recommended locations are <$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/vcsh/overlays-available> and <$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/vcsh/overlays-enabled>.
Overlays follow the same rules as hooks and you are free to overwrite any and all functions. Same as hooks, you can use global or repository-specific overlays by using either <$VCSH_OVERLAY_D/$VCSH_COMMAND> or <$VCSH_OVERLAY_D/$VCSH_REPO_NAME.$VCSH_COMMAND>.
Please note that nothing stops you from, e.g. overwriting status() in <$VCSH_OVERLAY_D/commit>. As the overlays will be sourced and you are replacing arbitrary functions, any and all features may stop working, or you may even lose data.
You have been warned.
Manpages are often short and sometimes useless to glean best practices from. While the author tried to avoid this in this case, manpages can not cover detailed howtos.
This software also comes with a file called <README.md>. It contains various approaches to setting up and using vcsh. You can view the file it as plain text or render it into various other formats via Markdown.
On Debian-based systems, this file can be found in </usr/share/doc/vcsh>.
vcsh allows you to execute arbitrary commands via vcsh run. For example, adding a sudo(8) rule for vcsh would be pretty stupid.
Additionally, vcsh will source, i.e. execute, all files listed in CONFIG. You can put any and all commands into these config files and they will be executed.
None are known at this time, but reports and/or patches are more than welcome.
If you rely on git submodule use git 1.7.12 or later. Earlier versions do not clean internal variables properly before descending into submodules, resulting in unhappy end users.
Like most people, the author initially made do with a single repository for all config files, all of which were soft-linked into $HOME.
Martin F. Krafft aka madduck came up with the concept of fake bare Git repositories.
vcsh was initally written by madduck. This version is a re-implementation from scratch with a lot more features. madduck graciously agreed to let the author take over the name.
This manpage and vcsh itself were written by Richard "RichiH" Hartmann.
Copyright 2011-2015 Richard Hartmann richih@debian.org
Licensed under the GNU GPL version 2 or higher.
https://github.com/RichiH/vcsh
December 2015 |