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* ck *The Config Keeper* * build it ** requirements - clang (llvm) or gcc (gnu) - cmake - sqlite3-dev ** compiler #+BEGIN_SRC sh > export CC=clang # or > export CC=gcc #+END_SRC ** make #+BEGIN_SRC sh # clone the repo > cd ~/code; git clone https://gitlab.com/grm-grm/ck # make a build directory and enter it > mkdir ~/ck_build; cd ~/ck_build; # run cmake > cmake ~/code/ck # run make > make # run ck > ./ck #+END_SRC * for devs ** CMake options cmake accepts the following options: #+BEGIN_SRC cmake option(CK_ASAN "Build with asan") option(CK_DEBUG "Build with debug symbols") option(CK_TESTS "Make the tests") option(CK_SHARED "Build with shared lib") #+END_SRC To use any one of them append it after the cmake command like so: #+BEGIN_SRC sh cmake -DCK_ASAN=1 -DCK_DEBUG=1 -DCK_TESTS=1 ~/code/ck #+END_SRC Just build with address sanitizer enabled like so: llvm has better asan than gcc, so I use that. #+BEGIN_SRC sh # clone the repo > cd ~/code; git clone https://gitlab.com/grm-grm/ck # make a build directory and enter it > mkdir ~/ck_build; cd ~/ck_build; # run cmake > cmake -DCK_ASAN=1 -DCK_DEBUG=1 -DCK_TESTS=1 ~/code/ck # run make > make # run ck > ./ck #+END_SRC ** tests The testing "suite" is a bash script that runs regression and unit tests. Regression tests are under the =tests/= directory and are bash scripts that test =ck= functionality. Unit tests reside under =unit/= directory and test the code. *** run tests Simply go to the build dir and type. #+BEGIN_SRC sh $ ./check_ck #+END_SRC *** test suite #+BEGIN_SRC sh $ ./check_ck -h ck test suite use without flags to run all tests flags: -u, --unit run only the unit tests -r, --regression run only the regression tests -c, --clear remove test files use it if the tests fail -h, --help, * print this #+END_SRC * manual ck's goal is to assist with the configuration file management. To that end it tries to provides a cli interface that is pretty straight-forward and intuitive. Example usage: #+BEGIN_SRC sh # initialize new ck $ ck init /path_to/where_you_want/your_configs/to_be \ /path_to/the_secret/directory # add emacs configs ## primary config $ ck add emacs ~/.emacs.d/orgconf.org -p ## secret config, with passwords and naughty words $ ck add emacs ~/.emacs.d/accounts.org -s ## and another one for emacs $ ck add emacs ~/.emacs.d/init.el # add tmux config $ ck add tmux ~/.tmux.conf -p # list the configs $ ck list tree $ ck list paths -t lisp $ ck list programs -t python # search the configs $ ck search search-term $ ck search "\"search term with spaces\"" $ ck search "\(" #escape symbols #+END_SRC The first command after typing *ck* is the action you wish to perform. Actions are a very important concept of ck. With an action you can initialize *ck*, add/move/delete configuration files to it, edit them, list them in various ways and search in their content. Actions expect their arguments in the order specified below. This is done to reduce the amount of flags one has to pass to ck. ** ck configuration ck uses sqlite to index the configuration files. The init action creates a *.ck* directory (under $HOME) in witch the *ckrc* and the *ckdb* reside. The first one contains the two directories described above while the other one is the sqlite db. One can have multiple config directories with different configurations each. Using the special keyword *config* (or *conf* or *c* or *-c*) you can set the path in which ck will search for the *.ck* directory. You can prefix every action with this and ck will use the configuration directory of your choice. Usage: #+BEGIN_SRC sh $ ck config ~/ ... # the default behaviour # /someplace/else must exist or # the action following it must be init $ ck conf /someplace/else ... # same thing $ ck c /someplace/else ... $ ck -c /someplace/else ... #+END_SRC ** Actions *** init or i or -i init takes exactly 2 arguments. - *config_dir*: where all the configs will live - *secret_dir*: where all the secret configs will live Use init to initialize a new ck database. Usage: #+BEGIN_SRC sh # initialize new ck $ ck init /path_to/where_you_want/your_configs/to_be \ /path_to/the_secret/directory #+END_SRC *** add or a or -a Adds a configuration to the ck database. Add takes 2 to 4 arguments. - *program_name*: the name of the program you add a config to - *config_path*: the path to the config - Optional: (order doesn't matter) + *-p*: the config will be the primary (relevant on edit below) + *-s*: the config will be stored in the secret_dir Keep in mind: - The config has to exist. - If you are adding a config to a program already existing in ckdb make sure to use the same name. - Each program can have only one primary config. Usage: #+BEGIN_SRC sh # add config to ck $ ck add program_name config_path [-s] [-p] #+END_SRC *** list or ls or l or -l List can show the *paths* or the *programs* that ck keeps track of. With the flag *-t* and then one of the follwing types one can change the way the list is printed: - *plain*: simple listing (default) - *python*: print like a python list - *lisp*: print like a lisp list Using the keyword *tree* ck can list the configurations under their corresponding program. Passing the *-a* flag will enable the listing of config attributes (secret or primary). It is best used with tree or plain paths. Usage: #+BEGIN_SRC sh # list tree structure, with attributes $ ck list tree -a # list paths in python $ ck l paths -t python # list programs in lisp $ ck ls programs -t lisp #+END_SRC *** search or s or -s Perform infile grep in all the configurations ck keeps track of. Takes one argument, the *search-term*. To search for terms with spaces you have to put them in escaped quotes. To search for special symbols you have to enclose them in quotes and escape them. Usage: #+BEGIN_SRC sh # search for parenthesis $ ck search "\(" # search term with spaces $ ck search "\"This is a space\"" # both $ ck search "\"(add 2 4)\"" # and a normal one $ ck search alias #+END_SRC *** edit or e or -e ==--WIP--== Currently edit can only edit the primary config of a program. To do it use: #+BEGIN_SRC sh $ ck edit program_name #+END_SRC