# Getting started ## Repository setup Either create a Git repository on your prefered platform and clone it or create one locally. This repository will contain two main elements, dotdrop's config file (`config.yaml`) and a directory containing all your dotfiles managed by dotdrop. ```bash ## clone your repository (my-dotfiles) $ git clone /my-dotfiles $ cd my-dotfiles ## within the repository create a directory to store your dotfiles ## (refered by "dotpath" in the config, which defaults to "dotfiles") $ mkdir dotfiles ``` Then add a config file. You can get a [minimal config file](https://github.com/deadc0de6/dotdrop/blob/master/config.yaml) from dotdrop's repository with: ```bash $ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/deadc0de6/dotdrop/master/config.yaml ``` It is recommended to store your config file directly within your repository (*my-dotfiles* in the example above), but you could save it in different places if you wish; see [config location](config-file.md#location) for more. ```bash $ tree my-dotfiles my-dotfiles ├── config.yaml └── dotfiles ``` If your config file is in an exotic location, you can add an alias in your preferred shell to call dotdrop with the config file path argument. ``` alias dotdrop='dotdrop --cfg=' ``` For more info on the config file format, see [the config file doc](config-file.md). ## Basic usage The basic use of dotdrop is: * Import a file/directory to manage (this will copy the files from the filesystem to your `dotpath`): `dotdrop import ` * Install the dotfiles (this will *copy/link* them from your `dotpath` to the filesystem): `dotdrop install` Then if you happen to update the file/directory directly on the filesystem (add a new file/dir, edit content, etc.) you can use the `update` command to mirror back those changes in dotdrop. For more advanced uses: * `dotdrop --help` for the CLI usage. * [The usage doc](usage.md) * [The example](https://github.com/deadc0de6/dotdrop#getting-started) * [The howto](howto/howto.md)