Provided by: rcm_1.3.4-1_all bug

NAME

       rcup — update and install dotfiles managed by rcm

SYNOPSIS

       rcup  [-CfhiKkqVv]  [-B  hostname]  [-d  dir]  [-g]  [-I  excl_pat]  [-S excl_pat] [-s excl_pat] [-t tag]
            [-U excl_pat] [-u excl_pat] [-x excl_pat] [files ...]

DESCRIPTION

       This is a program to update and install personal dotfiles. These  dotfiles  are  managed  in  a  separate
       directory.  Use  rcup  to  install  files  from  your  dotfiles directories or from host- or tag-specific
       directories within.

       See “DIRECTORY LAYOUT” for details on the directory layout.

       It supports these options:

       -B HOSTNAME  treat host-HOSTNAME as the host-specific directory instead of computing it

       -C           copy the files instead of symlinking them

       -d DIR       install dotfiles from the DIR.  This can be specified multiple times.

       -f           if the rc file already exists in your home directory but does not match  the  file  in  your
                    dotfiles directory, remove the rc file then create the symlink

       -g           print  to  stdout  a  standalone  shell  script that will run the rcup command as specified.
                    Nothing on your filesystem will be modified by rcup when this flag is passed.

       -h           show usage instructions.

       -I EXCL_PAT  install rc files that match EXCL_PAT despite being excluded by the -x flag or a  setting  in
                    rcrc(5).  This can be repeated with additional patterns. See lsrc(1), “EXCLUDE PATTERN”, for
                    more details.

       -i           if  the  rc  file  already exists in your home directory but does not match the file in your
                    dotfiles directory, prompt for how to handle it. This is the default

       -K           skip pre- and post-hooks

       -k           run pre- and post-hooks (see “DIRECTORY LAYOUT” for more details  on  hooks).  This  is  the
                    default.

       -S EXCL_PAT  any  rc  file  that  matches  EXCL_PAT  is  installed as if it were a file (using a symlink)
                    instead of as if it were a directory (by making a directory). This option can be repeated.

       -s EXCL_PAT  any file that matches EXCL_PAT is installed as normal, in accordance  with  the  “ALGORITHM”
                    section below. This is the opposite of -S.  This option can be repeated.

       -t TAG       install dotfiles according to TAG

       -U EXCL_PAT  any  rc  file  that  matches EXCL_PAT is installed without a leading dot. This option can be
                    repeated. See the documentation of the -U option in lsrc(1) for more information.

       -u EXCL_PAT  any rc file that matches EXCL_PAT is installed with a leading dot. This is the  opposite  of
                    -U.   This  option  can  be  repeated.  This is the default. See the documentation of the -u
                    option in lsrc(1) for more information.

       -q           decrease verbosity

       -V           show the version number.

       -v           increase verbosity.  This can be repeated for extra verbosity.  Verbose messages are printed
                    to stderr.

       -x EXCL_PAT  do not install rc files that match EXCL_PAT.  This can be repeated with additional patterns.
                    See lsrc(1), “EXCLUDE PATTERN”, for more details.

       files        only install the specified file(s)

DIRECTORY LAYOUT

       Any non-dot non-meta file or directory under your dotfiles directory will be installed as a dotfile.  For
       example, .dotfiles/zshrc will be installed into ~/.zshrc .

       Files  are  installed  as  symlinks.  Directories are installed by making directories. The -C flag causes
       files to be installed as copies instead of symlinks. The COPY_ALWAYS option in rcrc(5)  can  be  used  to
       list files that must only be copied.

       Three meta files are supported: host-specific files, tagged files, hooks.

       Host-specific  files  go  in  a  directory  named  for  the  host,  prefixed  with  host-.   For example,
       .dotfiles/host-scarlett contains files specific to the computer with hostname scarlett, and  these  files
       will only be installed on the computer with hostname scarlett.

       Tagged  files  go  in  a  directory  named  for  the  tag,  prefixed  with  tag-.  Therefore, files under
       .dotfiles/tag-git are only installed when installing using the git tag.

       Hooks go in a directory named hooks.  Two hooks are supported by rcup: pre-up and post-up.  These  go  in
       files  or  directories with predictable filenames: .dotfiles/hooks/pre-up and .dotfiles/hooks/post-up, or
       .dotfiles/hooks/pre-up/* and .dotfiles/hooks/post-up/*.  These files must be  executable.  They  are  run
       every time rcup is run, and therefore must be idempotent.

       Hooks  will be executed one at a time, sorted alphabetically. For instance, hooks/pre-up/animals will run
       before      hooks/pre-up/aquariums,       and       hooks/pre-up/4-eyes       will       run       before
       hooks/post-up/2-u-nothing-compares.

ALGORITHM

       It is instructive to understand the process rcup uses when synchronizing your rc files:

       1.   The pre-up hook is run.

       2.   All  non-host,  non-tag files without a dot prefix are symlinked to the dotted filename in your home
            directory. So, .dotfiles/tigrc is symlinked to ~/.tigrc.

       3.   All non-host, non-tag directories have their structure copied to your home directory,  then  a  non-
            dotted  symlink  is  created  within.  So for example, .dotfiles/vim/autoload/haskell.vim causes the
            ~/.vim/autoload directory to be created, then haskell.vim is symlinked within.

       4.   Steps (2) and (3) are applied to host-specific files.  These  are  files  under  a  directory  named
            host-$HOSTNAME.

       5.   Steps  (2)  and  (3)  are  applied  to  tag-specific  files. These are files under directories named
            tag-$TAG_NAME, where $TAG_NAME is the name of each specified tag in turn,  taken  from  the  command
            line or from rcrc(5).

       6.   The post-up hook is run.

ENVIRONMENT

       RCRC  User configuration file. Defaults to ~/.rcrc.

FILES

       ~/.dotfiles ~/.rcrc

SEE ALSO

       lsrc(1), mkrc(1), rcdn(1), rcrc(5), rcm(7)

AUTHORS

       rcup is maintained by Mike Burns <mburns@thoughtbot.com> and thoughtbot: http://thoughtbot.se

Debian                                            July 28, 2013                                          RCUP(1)