| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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As of Alpine 3.8.0, rcm is available at the [community repository].
[community repository]: https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/packages?name=rcm&branch=v3.8
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With this change, Debian packages are downloaded over HTTPS. On Debian
stretch and earlier this requires installation of the
[apt-transport-https](https://packages.debian.org/stretch/apt-transport-https)
package. Debian buster and later provide apt≥1.5 which has built-in
support for HTTPS repositories.
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Replace OS X with macOS
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Big ups to Eric Collins for leading this charge.
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I need to automate this.
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Korora can make use of Fedora packages by specifying the version and
architecture explictly.
Rephrased by Mike Burns for consistency.
Closes #176.
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I just learned, when I upgraded a server that I share with mhoran, that
there is a FreeBSD package. And he didn't tell me!
Thanks to Leonardo for maintaining it and to mhoran for quietly
indicating that it exists.
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Since there are now packages available for newer Ubuntu dsitributions
than the ones specified in README.md, just remove the parentheses.
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Anton has stopped maintaining the rcm package for Gentoo, so remove
mention of them.
Thank you, Anton, for the work you had done, and best of luck to you in
the future!
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The old package was removed during the AUR migration to a git based
platform and now has a new maintainer and package url.
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References the `seeitcoming/rcm` COPR.
Closes #156.
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When installing using the default arguments to `configure`, root
privileges are required. Use a "sudo" prefix to notate this.
NB. root privileges are not needed when installing to a prefix under your
control.
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Add a SHA256 hash for the Debian and tarball downloads. Closes #127.
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We are now in the OpenBSD ports tree, so add pkg_add(1) instructions.
This only works on -current right now.
While here, re-arrange installation instructions to be alphabetical by
OS (or distribution) name.
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Add instructions for how to install rcm on Ubuntu using the
[~martin-frost/thoughtbot-rcm
PPA](https://launchpad.net/~martin-frost/+archive/ubuntu/thoughtbot-rcm)
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To give people a preview of the joy they will expect to find when they
start using rcm, link to the HTML manpages from the README.
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This is a thoughtbot project now, so assign copyright to thoughtbot.
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This project is now a part of openSUSE, which can provide easy-to-use
packages for RHEL and CentOS. Link to that.
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This test suite uses cram to run integration tests through `/bin/sh`.
The tests are all high-level acceptance tests; they should work
regardless of the implemention code.
To run them, you must first install cram:
sudo pip install cram
Then the `check` target will run them:
make check
Failure output should be printed clearly to stdout, but in general: full
test output is in `test/test-suite.log` and output specific to a test
named `foo.t` is in `foo.t.log`.
Tests are now encouraged in `CONTRIBUTING.md` as part of the normal pull
request process.
This is a TAP-enabled test suite.
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* Debian package has a -2 in its filename. Of course.
* Build HTML docs in the top-level gh-pages directory.
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This also ties up any loose ends, including where to find the tarball
and how to contribute.
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Add instruction how to install rcm on a Gentoo-based GNU/Linux
distribution. Currently the overlay is maintained by Anton Ilin
(bronislav).
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Having a single homebrew tap for all of thoughtbot's projects makes sense.
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Now that Mike (that's me) transfered this project to thoughtbot, move
all the URLs to thoughtbot-specific ones, too.
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I'll figure out `make release` someday.
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Currently the deb file is hosted on my personal server. Download it then
use `dpkg` to install it.
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SInce Arch users choose from different installation options for
themselves, just link to the AUR page and let them decide.
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This can be installed using Homebrew for OS X.
brew tap mike-burns/rcm
brew install rcm
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Replace the `Makefile` with a `configure.ac` and a set of `Makefile.am`.
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The `lsrc` command works just like the `rcup` command but instead of
making symlinks and directories, it just lists all the files that would
be symlinks. It prints the destination (e.g. `~/.foo`) and the source
(`~/.dotfiles/foo`), separated by a colon.
Re-write `rcup` in terms of `lsrc`.
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The `rcup` and `mkrc` commands now support multiple source directories.
This is useful for sharing dotfiles between friends, spliting dotfiles
into private and public ones, or other such situations.
In `mkrc` this support means that you can specify the destination
directory for your dotfile, either from the command-line or from you
`~/.rcrc` configuration.
In `rcup` this means that it will recur through all source directories,
in order, creating the symlinks as needed. This means that duplicated
files will not be overridden. The order can be specified by the `-d`
option, which can be repeated, or by the `DOTFILES_DIRS` option in your
`~/.rcrc` configuration. The `-d` option overrides the configuration.
For example, this configuration file will update from the two
directories in order:
DOTFILES_DIRS="/home/mike/.dotfiles/public /home/mike/.dotfiles/private"
Any source directories that don't exist are skipped.
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Introduce a README to describe the project, installation, support, and
license.
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