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A while ago, I got the suggestion to set up
alias config='/usr/bin/git --git-dir=$HOME/.cfg/ --work-tree=$HOME'
so I could use config to save dotfiles and such without every app believing that my entire home directory is a git repository.
I can clone the dotfiles from elsewhere with git clone ~/.cfg, but in the directory I instead call config, like config add, config
commit etc.
I’ve also seen other names proposed for this repo dir, like .myconf or .dotfiles.git.
But since apps don’t believe that my entire home directory is a git repository, that includes magit and I sometimes wanna use magit to restore files or partially stage hunks or whatever. Things that are too time-consuming to do by hand.
So here’s a script that temporarily actually does make the home directory into that git repository, waits for you to be done with Magit, and then restores things.
This does clobber the ~/.git file or even breaks if that pathname is a directory or such, so don’t have that.
#!/bin/sh echo "gitdir: $(realpath "$1")" > ~/.git cd "$(realpath "$1")" git config --unset core.bare git config core.worktree ../ echo "Do your magit stuff! Then hit RET here when you're done." read nothing git config --unset core.worktree git config core.bare true rm ~/.git cd -
Call it with your conf repo dir as an argument, in my case I’d call:
cfgmagit ~/.cfg
For a repo,
git clone https://idiomdrottning.org/cfgmagit