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Merge pull request #38 from ParaplegicRacehorse/patch-1

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Tim Byrne 2017-01-11 23:18:21 -06:00
commit 2c6696a2c2
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@ -69,10 +69,60 @@ yaourt -S yadm
emerge -atv app-admin/yadm
```
## Other
## Download
You *can* simply download the **yadm** script and put it into your `$PATH`. Something like this:
```
curl -fLo /usr/local/bin/yadm https://github.com/TheLocehiliosan/yadm/raw/master/yadm && chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/yadm
```
Of course, you can change the file paths above to be appropriate for your `$PATH` and situation.
## Clone
You might wish to clone the **yadm** project and symlink `yadm` into your
`$PATH`.
```
git clone https://github.com/TheLocehiliosan/yadm.git ~/.yadm-project
ln -s ~/.yadm-project/yadm ~/bin/yadm
```
Now you can pull the latest updates to **yadm** using Git. Again, adjust the
file paths above to be appropriate for your `$PATH` and situation.
## Submodule
If you are comfortable with how Git submodules work, another option is to add
the **yadm** project as a submodule and symlink `yadm` into your `$PATH`.
```
cd ~
yadm submodule add https://github.com/TheLocehiliosan/yadm.git .yadm-project
yadm submodule update --init --recursive
ln -s ~/.yadm-project/yadm ~/bin/yadm
yadm add .yadm-project .gitmodules bin/yadm
yadm commit
```
When using submodules, you need to initialize them each time you do a fresh
`clone` of your dotfiles.
```
yadm submodule update --init --recursive
```
Updating to a newer version of **yadm** would use commands similar to this.
```
cd ~/.yadm-project
git pull
yadm add ~/.yadm-project
yadm commit
```
Again, adjust the file paths above to be appropriate for your `$PATH` and
situation.
You can find more information about Git submodules by reading the [git-submodule](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-submodule)
man page.