Time Machine.

On Saturday, June 18, 2016 at 12:11:42 PM UTC-7, Lewis Butler wrote:
>
> I know that I can setup BBEdit to talk to a git repository. Or at least I 
> know that in theory. 
>
> What I would like to do is setup a git repository for all of the “Unix” 
> files that I edit. things like /etc/hosts /etc/postfix/* /Users/*/.bashrc 
> /usr/local/bin/* and others so that when I edit my bashrc or a shell script 
> or postfix configurations I have a way to roll back to previous versions. 
>
> OK. 
>
> BUT. I don’t always edit these files with BBEdit. Sometimes it’s because 
> I’m already in the shell and “this will only take a second” and others it 
> is because I am logged in via ssh. 
>
> So, is there a way to setup git so that it basically automatically watches 
> an arbitrary list of files and directories and just does its magic in the 
> background that would work regardless of if I use BBEdit, vim, text 
> wrangler, TextEdit, or whatever? 
>
> A bit off-topic, perhaps, but I figure if anyone knows it will be you lot. 
>
> Of course, in 10.13 this will all happen automagically through the power 
> of APFS, but until then… 
>
> -- 
> 'Somewhere, A Crime Is Happening,' said Dorfl. --Feet of Clay 
>
>

-- 
This is the BBEdit Talk public discussion group. If you have a 
feature request or would like to report a problem, please email
"[email protected]" rather than posting to the group.
Follow @bbedit on Twitter: <http://www.twitter.com/bbedit>

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"BBEdit Talk" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].

Reply via email to