On an Arch based distribution as root, run the following:
curl -LO larbs.xyz/larbs.sh
sh larbs.sh
That's it.
LARBS is a script that autoinstalls and autoconfigures a fully-functioning and minimal terminal-and-vim-based Arch Linux environment.
LARBS was originally intended to be run on a fresh install of Arch Linux, and provides you with a fully configured diving-board for work or more customization. But LARBS also works on already configured systems and other Arch-based distros such as Manjaro and Parabola (although Parabola, which uses slightly different repositories might miss one or two minor programs).
By default, LARBS uses the programs here in progs.csv and installs my dotfiles repo (voidrice) here, but you can easily change this by either modifying the default variables at the beginning of the script or giving the script one of these options:
-r
: custom dotfiles repository (URL)-p
: custom programs list/dependencies (local file or URL)-a
: a custom AUR helper (must be able to install with-S
unless you change the relevant line in the script
LARBS will parse the given programs list and install all given programs. Note
that the programs file must be a three column .csv
.
The first column is a "tag" that determines how the program is installed, ""
(blank) for the main repository, A
for via the AUR or G
if the program is a
git repository that is meant to be make && sudo make install
ed. V
if it's for
the void linux distribution's xbps package manager.
The second column is the name of the program in the repository, or the link to the git repository, and the third comment is a description (should be a verb phrase) that describes the program. During installation, LARBS will print out this information in a grammatical sentence. It also doubles as documentation for people who read the csv or who want to install my dotfiles manually.
Depending on your own build, you may want to tactically order the programs in your programs file. LARBS will install from the top to the bottom.
If you include commas in your program descriptions, be sure to include double quotes around the whole description to ensure correct parsing.
The script is extensively divided into functions for easier readability and trouble-shooting. Most everything should be self-explanatory.
The main work is done by the installationloop
function, which iterates
through the programs file and determines based on the tag of each program,
which commands to run to install it. You can easily add new methods of
installations and tags as well.
Note that programs from the AUR can only be built by a non-root user. What
LARBS does to bypass this by default is to temporarily allow the newly created
user to use sudo
without a password (so the user won't be prompted for a
password multiple times in installation). This is done ad-hocly, but
effectively with the newperms
function. At the end of installation,
newperms
removes those settings, giving the user the ability to run only
several basic sudo commands without a password (shutdown
, reboot
,
pacman -Syu
).
Use following commands to keep the progs.csv up to date with current setup:
pacman -Qqe
: list all packages explicitly installedpacman -Qqm
: list all foreign (including AUR) packages explicitly installedINPUT | grep -v PATTERN
: return all lines of INPUT not matched by PATTERN
combining above commands:
# list foreign packages not part of progs.csv:
pacman -Qqm | grep -v "$(cat progs.csv | tail --lines=+2 | awk -F',' '{print($2)}')"