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yadm/_docs/050_bootstrap.md

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---
title: "Bootstrap"
permalink: /docs/bootstrap
---
Often there is more to set up once your dotfiles repository has been cloned. For
example, if your repository has submodules, you may wish to initialize them. On
MacOS, you may wish to install Homebrew and process a `.Brewfile`. These types
of additional steps are generally referred to as "bootstrapping".
Though everyone may have a different set of bootstrap operations they need to
perform, yadm has a standard command for executing them.
yadm bootstrap
This command will execute the program named `$HOME/.config/yadm/bootstrap`. You must
provide this program yourself, and it must be made executable. But those are the
only constraints.
After yadm successfully clones a repository, if there is a bootstrap program
available, it will offer to run it for you.
Found .config/yadm/bootstrap
It appears that a bootstrap program exists.
Would you like to execute it now? (y/n)
You can prevent this prompting by using the `--bootstrap` or `--no-bootstrap`
options when cloning.
It is best to make the logic of your bootstrap idempotent—allowing it to be
re-run in the future when you merge changes made on other hosts.
## Examples
Curious about the possibilities? See some examples below. These are all written
in Bash, but you can use any executable file as a bootstrap.
### Initialize submodules
If you've added repositories as submodules for the yadm repository, you can
initialize them after a successful clone.
```bash
#!/bin/sh
# Because Git submodule commands cannot operate without a work tree, they must
# be run from within $HOME (assuming this is the root of your dotfiles)
cd "$HOME"
echo "Init submodules"
yadm submodule update --recursive --init
```
### Install [Homebrew](http://brew.sh/) and a bundle of recipes
```bash
#!/bin/sh
system_type=$(uname -s)
if [ "$system_type" = "Darwin" ]; then
# install homebrew if it's missing
if ! command -v brew >/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Installing homebrew"
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
fi
if [ -f "$HOME/.Brewfile" ]; then
echo "Updating homebrew bundle"
brew bundle --global
fi
fi
```
### Configure [iTerm2](http://www.iterm2.com/) to use your configuration
```bash
#!/bin/sh
system_type=$(uname -s)
if [ "$system_type" = "Darwin" ]; then
# possibly add something here to ensure iTerm2 is installed using Homebrew
# cask like in the previous example
if [ -d "$HOME/.iterm2" ]; then
echo "Setting iTerm preference folder"
defaults write com.googlecode.iterm2 PrefsCustomFolder "$HOME/.iterm2"
fi
fi
```
### Compile a custom terminfo file
```bash
#!/bin/sh
if [ -f "$HOME/.terminfo/custom.terminfo" ]; then
echo "Updating terminfo"
tic "$HOME/.terminfo/custom.terminfo"
fi
```
### Update the yadm repo origin URL
You might initially clone your repo using `https`, but ssh configurations may be
available after cloning. If so, you could update the yadm repo origin to use
`ssh` instead.
```bash
#!/bin/sh
echo "Updating the yadm repo origin URL"
yadm remote set-url origin "git@github.com:MyUser/dotfiles.git"
```
### Install [vim](http://www.vim.org/) plugins managed with [vim-plug](https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug)
vim-plug can be used in your `.vimrc` to enable plugins. The example here will
automatically download vim-plug and run the `:PlugInstall` command if
vim-plug is missing when vim starts.
```vim
" download vim-plug if missing
if empty(glob("~/.vim/autoload/plug.vim"))
silent! execute '!curl --create-dirs -fsSLo ~/.vim/autoload/plug.vim https://raw.github.com/junegunn/vim-plug/master/plug.vim'
autocmd VimEnter * silent! PlugInstall
endif
" declare plugins
silent! if plug#begin()
Plug 'airblade/vim-gitgutter'
Plug 'c9s/perlomni.vim', { 'for': 'perl' }
Plug 'ctrlpvim/ctrlp.vim'
Plug 'vim-syntastic/syntastic'
Plug 'yggdroot/indentLine'
" ignore these on older versions of vim
if v:version >= 703
Plug 'gorodinskiy/vim-coloresque'
Plug 'jamessan/vim-gnupg'
endif
if v:version >= 704
Plug 'vim-pandoc/vim-pandoc-syntax'
endif
call plug#end()
endif
```
You can enhance this scheme by having your bootstrap program initialize
vim-plug when you clone, instead of when you first run vim. This example
will install any new plugins, and also remove any plugins now deleted from your
`.vimrc`.
```bash
#!/bin/sh
if command -v vim >/dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Bootstraping Vim"
vim '+PlugUpdate' '+PlugClean!' '+PlugUpdate' '+qall'
fi
```
---
_If you have suggestions for useful bootstrapping logic, let me know..._