From 75e67b7714fe5e58033467767f8b0c415ce068a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Ryder Date: Sun, 3 May 2020 21:49:37 +1200 Subject: Update recommended path in documentation --- README.md | 20 ++++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 774031a0..f8201416 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -11,8 +11,8 @@ into a personal suite of custom Unix tools. Installation ------------ - $ git clone https://sanctum.geek.nz/code/dotfiles.git ~/.dotfiles - $ cd ~/.dotfiles + $ git clone https://sanctum.geek.nz/code/dotfiles.git ~/.local/share/dotfiles + $ cd ~/.local/share/dotfiles $ git submodule init $ git submodule update $ make @@ -56,16 +56,16 @@ The remaining files can be installed with the other `install-*` targets. Try ### Configuration To save a set of `make` targets useful for a specific user or host, you can -save them in a newline-separated file `~/.dotfiles.conf`, and install using +save them in a newline-separated file `~/.local/share/dotfiles.conf`, and install using that with the special `install-conf` target. This can include variable settings, too: $ cd - $ cat .dotfiles.conf + $ cat .local/share/dotfiles.conf install-bash install-bin EMAIL=you@example.com - $ make -C .dotfiles install-conf + $ make -C .local/share/dotfiles install-conf Tools ----- @@ -156,16 +156,16 @@ testing `BASH_VERSINFO` appropriately. A terminal session with my prompt looks something like this: ~$ ssh remote - remote:~$ cd .dotfiles - remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!)$ git status + remote:~$ cd .local/share/dotfiles + remote:~/.local/share/dotfiles(master+!)$ git status M README.md M bash/bashrc.d/prompt.bash A init - remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!)$ foobar + remote:~/.local/share/dotfiles(master+!)$ foobar foobar: command not found - remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!)<127>$ sleep 5 & + remote:~/.local/share/dotfiles(master+!)<127>$ sleep 5 & [1] 28937 - remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!){1}$ + remote:~/.local/share/dotfiles(master+!){1}$ The hostname is elided if not connected via SSH. The working directory with tilde abbreviation for `$HOME` is always shown. The rest of the prompt expands -- cgit v1.2.3