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-rw-r--r--README.rst69
1 files changed, 65 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/README.rst b/README.rst
index f8b9f9d..132ad2b 100644
--- a/README.rst
+++ b/README.rst
@@ -2,14 +2,33 @@ Dotfile management made easy
============================
``dotfiles`` is a tool to make managing your dotfile symlinks in ``$HOME``
-easy, allowing you to keep all your dotfiles in a single directory.
+easy, allowing you to keep all your dotfiles in a single directory.
Hosting is left to you. Yes, I've seen `<http://dotfiles.org>`_ but I don't
-like that model. If you're advanced enough to need dotfile management, then you
-probably already know how you want to host them. Using whatever VCS you
+like that model. If you're advanced enough to need dotfile management, then
+you probably already know how you want to host them. Using whatever VCS you
prefer, or even rsync, you can easily distribute your dotfiles repository
across multiple hosts.
+Interface
+---------
+
+``-a, --add <file...>``
+ Add dotfile(s) to the repository.
+
+``-c, --check``
+ Check for missing or unmanged dotfiles.
+
+``-l, --list``
+ List currently managed dotfiles, one per line.
+
+``-r, --remove <file...>``
+ Remove dotfile(s) from the repository.
+
+``-s, --sync``
+ Update dotfile symlinks. You can overwrite unmanaged files with ``-f`` or
+ ``--force``.
+
Installation
------------
@@ -49,7 +68,7 @@ To make it available to all your hosts: ::
$ git commit -m "Added vimrc, welcome aboard!"
$ git push
-You get the idea.
+You get the idea. Type ``dotfiles --help`` to see the available options.
Configuration
-------------
@@ -67,6 +86,48 @@ example configuration file might look like: ::
'.bzr.log': '/dev/null',
'.uml': '/tmp'}
+Prefixes
+--------
+
+Dotfiles are stored in the repository with no prefix by default. So,
+``~/.bashrc`` will link to ``~/Dotfiles/bashrc``. If your files already have a
+prefix, ``.`` is common, but I've also seen ``_``, then you can specify this
+in the configuration file and ``dotfiles`` will do the right thing. An example
+configuration in ``~/.dotfilesrc`` might look like: ::
+
+ [dotfiles]
+ prefix = .
+
+Externals
+---------
+
+You may want to link some dotfiles to external locations. For example, ``bzr``
+writes debug information to ``~/.bzr.log`` and there is no easy way to disable
+it. For that, I link ``~/.bzr.log`` to ``/dev/null``. Since ``/dev/null`` is
+not within the repository, this is called an external. You can have as many of
+these as you like. The list of externals is specified in the configuration
+file: ::
+
+ [dotfiles]
+ externals = {
+ '.bzr.log': '/dev/null',
+ '.adobe': '/tmp',
+ '.macromedia': '/tmp'}
+
+Ignores
+-------
+
+If you're using a VCS to manage your repository of dotfiles, you'll want to
+tell ``dotfiles`` to ignore VCS-related files. For example, I use ``git``, so
+I have the following in my ``~/.dotfilesrc``: ::
+
+ [dotfiles]
+ ignore = [
+ '.git',
+ '.gitignore']
+
+Any file you list in ``ignore`` will be skipped.
+
License
-------