* Giacomo M wrote:
>
> Dear all,
> I would like to clean up my Linux setup to be easily replicable. I am
> considering keeping everything in one org file, and then tangling files
> (e.g. exec scripts, systemd service unit files) and executing bash snippets
> (e.g. for
On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 9:22 AM, Giacomo M wrote:
> Dear Stefan,
>
> thanks for the hints, I wasn't aware of these projects. While they sound
> appealing, I would like to stick to my current distribution (archlinux), for
> a variety of reasons (e.g. Im updating my raspberry
On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 6:44 AM, Giacomo M wrote:
>
> Does anybody have experience with this?
Yes. Here is my top level provisioning document at the correct headline:
https://github.com/grettke/osx-provision/blob/master/El-Capitan/provisioning.md#provisioning
And here are
On 3 November 2016, Giacomo M wrote:
I would like to clean up my Linux setup to be easily replicable. I am
considering keeping everything in one org file, and then tangling files
(e.g. exec scripts, systemd service unit files) and executing bash snippets
(e.g. for installing packages and
you can have a look at here
https://propellor.branchable.com/
It should be possible to use emacs to edit the config.hs file.
Now you need to extend it for arch .
Cheers
Frederic
Dear Stefan,
thanks for the hints, I wasn't aware of these projects. While they sound
appealing, I would like to stick to my current distribution (archlinux),
for a variety of reasons (e.g. Im updating my raspberry which seems more
supported by arch than nixos, I'm more familiar with it, I like
Giacomo M writes:
> Dear all,
> I would like to clean up my Linux setup to be easily replicable. I am
> considering keeping everything in one org file, and then tangling
> files (e.g. exec scripts, systemd service unit files) and executing
> bash snippets (e.g. for
Dear all,
I would like to clean up my Linux setup to be easily replicable. I am
considering keeping everything in one org file, and then tangling files
(e.g. exec scripts, systemd service unit files) and executing bash snippets
(e.g. for installing packages and sed'ing config files). Then one