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222 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
222 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
# Templating
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Dotdrop leverages the power of [Jinja2](https://palletsprojects.com/p/jinja/) to handle the
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templating of dotfiles. See [the Jinja2 templates docs](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/)
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or the below sections for more information on how to template your dotfiles.
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## Templating or not templating
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The dotfile config entry [template](config-format.md#dotfiles-entry)
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and the global config entry [template_dotfile_default](config-format.md#config-entry)
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allow you to control whether a dotfile is processed by the templating engine.
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Obviously, if the dotfile uses template directives, it needs to be templated. However, if it
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is not, disabling templating will speed up its installation (since it won't have to be
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processed by the engine).
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For dotfiles being symlinked (`link` or `link_children`), see
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[the dedicated doc](howto/symlink-dotfiles.md#templating-symlinked-dotfiles).
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## Delimiters
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Dotdrop uses different delimiters than
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[Jinja2](https://palletsprojects.com/p/jinja/)'s defaults:
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* Block/statement start = `{%@@`
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* Block/statement end = `@@%}`
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* Variable/expression start = `{{@@`
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* Variable/expression end = `@@}}`
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* Comment start = `{#@@`
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* Comment end = `@@#}`
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More info in [Jinja2 templating docs](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/?highlight=delimiter)
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## Template variables
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The following variables are available in templates:
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* `{{@@ profile @@}}` contains the profile provided to dotdrop.
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* `{{@@ env['MY_VAR'] @@}}` contains environment variables (see [Environment variables](#environment-variables)).
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* `{{@@ header() @@}}` contains the dotdrop header (see [Dotdrop header](#dotdrop-header)).
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* `{{@@ _dotdrop_dotpath @@}}` contains the [dotpath](config-format.md) absolute path.
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* `{{@@ _dotdrop_cfgpath @@}}` contains the absolute path to the [config file](config.md).
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* `{{@@ _dotdrop_workdir @@}}` contains the [workdir](config-format.md) absolute path.
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* Dotfile specific variables (see [Dotfile variables](#dotfile-variables))
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* All defined config variables (see [Variables](config.md#variables))
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* All defined config interpreted variables (see [Interpreted variables](config-details.md#dynvariables-entry))
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## Dotfile variables
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When a dotfile is handled by dotdrop, the following variables are added:
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* `{{@@ _dotfile_abs_src @@}}` contains the processed dotfile absolute source path.
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* `{{@@ _dotfile_abs_dst @@}}` contains the processed dotfile absolute destination path.
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* `{{@@ _dotfile_key @@}}` contains the processed dotfile key.
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* `{{@@ _dotfile_link @@}}` contains the processed dotfile `link` string value.
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In addition to the above, the following variables are set in each file processed by dotdrop:
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* `{{@@ _dotfile_sub_abs_src @@}}` contains the absolute source path of each file when handled by dotdrop.
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* `{{@@ _dotfile_sub_abs_dst @@}}` contains the absolute destination path of each file when handled by dotdrop.
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For example, a directory dotfile (like `~/.ssh`) would process several files
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(`~/.ssh/config` and `~/.ssh/authorized_keys`, for example). In `~/.ssh/config`:
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* `_dotfile_abs_dst` would be `/home/user/.ssh`
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* `_dotfile_sub_abs_dst` would be `/home/user/.ssh/config`
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## Environment variables
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It's possible to access environment variables inside the templates:
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```
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{{@@ env['MY_VAR'] @@}}
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```
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This allows for storing host-specific properties and/or secrets in environment variables.
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It is recommended to use `variables` (see [config variables](config.md#variables))
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instead of environment variables unless these contain sensitive information that
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shouldn't be versioned in Git.
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For example, you can have an `.env` file in the directory where your `config.yaml` lies:
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```
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## Some secrets
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pass="verysecurepassword"
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```
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If this file contains secrets that should not be tracked by Git,
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put it in your `.gitignore`.
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You can then invoke dotdrop with the help of an alias
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```bash
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# when dotdrop is installed as a submodule
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alias dotdrop='eval $(grep -v "^#" ~/dotfiles/.env) ~/dotfiles/dotdrop.sh'
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# when dotdrop is installed from pypi or aur
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alias dotdrop='eval $(grep -v "^#" ~/dotfiles/.env) /usr/bin/dotdrop --cfg=~/dotfiles/config.yaml'
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```
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The above aliases load all the variables from `~/dotfiles/.env`
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(while omitting lines starting with `#`) before calling dotdrop.
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## Template methods
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Besides [Jinja2 global functions](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#list-of-global-functions),
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the following methods can be used within templates:
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* `exists(path)`: returns true when path exists
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```
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{%@@ if exists('/dev/null') @@%}
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it does exist
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{%@@ endif @@%}
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```
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* `exists_in_path(name, path=None)`: returns true when executable exists in `$PATH`
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```
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{%@@ if exists_in_path('exa') @@%}
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alias ls='exa --git --color=always'
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{%@@ endif @@%}
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```
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* `basename(path)`: returns the `basename` of the path argument
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```
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{%@@ set dotfile_filename = basename( _dotfile_abs_dst ) @@%}
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dotfile dst filename: {{@@ dotfile_filename @@}}
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```
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* `dirname(path)`: returns the `dirname` of the path argument
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```
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{%@@ set dotfile_dirname = dirname( _dotfile_abs_dst ) @@%}
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dotfile dst dirname: {{@@ dotfile_dirname @@}}
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```
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Custom user-defined functions can be loaded with the help of the
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config entry `func_file`.
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Example:
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The config file:
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```yaml
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config:
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func_file:
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- /tmp/myfuncs_file.py
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```
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The python function under `/tmp/myfuncs_file.py`:
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```python
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def myfunc(arg):
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return not arg
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```
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The dotfile content:
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```
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{%@@ if myfunc(False) @@%}
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this should exist
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{%@@ endif @@%}
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```
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## Template filters
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Besides [Jinja2 builtin filters](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#builtin-filters),
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custom user-defined filter functions can be loaded using the config entry `filter_file`:
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Example:
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The config file:
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```yaml
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config:
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filter_file:
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- /tmp/myfilter_file.py
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```
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The python filter under `/tmp/myfilter_file.py`:
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```python
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def myfilter(arg1):
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return str(int(arg1) - 10)
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```
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The dotfile content:
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```
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{{@@ "13" | myfilter() @@}}
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```
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For more information on how to create filters,
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see [the Jinja2 official docs](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/api/#writing-filters).
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## Importing macros
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Macros must be imported `with context` in order to have access to the variables:
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```
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{%@@ from 'macro_file' import macro with context @@%}
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```
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For more information, see the [dedicated Jinja2 docs](https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#macros).
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## Dotdrop header
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Dotdrop is able to insert a header in the generated dotfiles. This allows you
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to remind anyone opening the file for editing that this file is managed by dotdrop.
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Here's what it looks like:
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```none
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This dotfile is managed using dotdrop
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```
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The header can be automatically added with:
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```none
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{{@@ header() @@}}
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```
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Properly commenting the header in templates is the responsibility of the user,
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as [Jinja2](https://palletsprojects.com/p/jinja/) has no way of knowing what is the proper char(s) used for comments.
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Either prepend the directive with the commenting char(s) used in the dotfile
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(for example `# {{@@ header() @@}}`) or provide it as an argument `{{@@ header('# ') @@}}`.
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The results are equivalent.
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## Debugging templates
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To debug the result of a template, one can install the dotfiles to a temporary
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directory with the `install` command and the `-t` switch:
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```bash
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$ dotdrop install -t
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Installed to tmp /tmp/dotdrop-6ajz7565
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```
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