`vcsh` was designed with [myrepos][myrepos], a tool to manage Multiple
Repositories, in mind and the two integrate very nicely. The myrepos tool
(`mr`) has native support for `vcsh` repositories and the configuration for
-myrepos is just another set of files that you cat track with `vcsh` like any
+myrepos is just another set of files that you can track with `vcsh` like any
other. This makes setting up any new machine a breeze. It can take literally
less than five minutes to go from standard installation to fully set up system.
vcsh will check if any file it would want to create exists. If it exists, vcsh
will throw a warning and exit. Move away your old config and try again.
Optionally, merge your local and your global configs afterwards and push with
-`vcsh foo push`.
+`vcsh repo_name push`.
## Moving into a New Host
And then create your own stuff:
- vcsh init foo
- vcsh foo add bar baz quux
- vcsh foo remote add origin git://quuux
- vcsh foo commit
- vcsh foo push
- cp $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mr/available.d/mr.vcsh $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mr/available.d/foo.vcsh
- vim $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mr/available.d/foo.vcsh # add your own repo
+ vcsh init repo_name
+ vcsh repo_name add bar baz quux
+ vcsh repo_name remote add origin git://quuux
+ vcsh repo_name commit
+ vcsh repo_name push
+
+ cp $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mr/available.d/mr.vcsh $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mr/available.d/repo_name.vcsh
+ vim $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mr/available.d/repo_name.vcsh # add your own repo
Done!
After you have made some changes, for which you would normally use `git add`
and `git commit`, use the vcsh wrapper (like above):
- vcsh foo add bar baz quux
- vcsh foo commit
- vcsh foo push
+ vcsh repo_name add bar baz quux
+ vcsh repo_name commit
+ vcsh repo_name push
### Using vcsh without myrepos