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| author | Craig Jennings <c@cjennings.net> | 2026-05-11 13:45:12 -0500 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Craig Jennings <c@cjennings.net> | 2026-05-11 13:45:12 -0500 |
| commit | 028f144801fa37390a04b2ccd8188225decbfe33 (patch) | |
| tree | f2ef2e7520f6a342811426bce225bfcc64f89be2 | |
| parent | 1b2af8e6fc84e13be71213042ee194aab192d857 (diff) | |
| download | archsetup-028f144801fa37390a04b2ccd8188225decbfe33.tar.gz archsetup-028f144801fa37390a04b2ccd8188225decbfe33.zip | |
docs: add GPL-3.0 LICENSE and initial README
Initial README. Personal values (emails, URLs, repo names, the temporary root password) are placeholders for the eventual public release. LICENSE is the canonical GPL-3.0 license text.
| -rw-r--r-- | LICENSE | 674 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 163 |
2 files changed, 837 insertions, 0 deletions
@@ -0,0 +1,674 @@ + GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE + Version 3, 29 June 2007 + + Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <https://fsf.org/> + Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies + of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. + + Preamble + + The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for +software and other kinds of works. + + The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed +to take away your freedom to share and change the works. By contrast, +the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to +share and change all versions of a program--to make sure it remains free +software for all its users. We, the Free Software Foundation, use the +GNU General Public License for most of our software; it applies also to +any other work released this way by its authors. You can apply it to +your programs, too. + + When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not +price. 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Of course, your program's commands +might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". + + You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, +if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. +For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see +<https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. + + The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program +into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you +may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with +the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General +Public License instead of this License. But first, please read +<https://www.gnu.org/licenses/why-not-lgpl.html>. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4a25f89 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,163 @@ +# archsetup + +Automated Arch Linux installation, dotfile management, and machine maintenance for a personal workstation, driven by a single Bash script, GNU Stow, and a handful of helper utilities. + +[Overview](#overview) | [Features](#features) | [Requirements](#requirements) | [Installation](#installation) | [Configuration](#configuration) | [Dotfile Management](#dotfile-management) | [Desktop Environments](#desktop-environments) | [Testing](#testing) | [Contributing](#contributing) | [License](#license) + +> **Note:** This is one person's personal Arch setup. It works as-is on that machine; if you fork it, change the hardcoded repositories and account details first (see [Configuration](#configuration)). + +## Overview + +archsetup turns a freshly installed Arch Linux box into a working desktop. It does three things: + +1. **Provisions the system.** The `archsetup` script installs packages, creates the primary user, builds suckless tools and an Emacs config from source, enables systemd services, sets up an AUR helper, configures the firewall, and installs a desktop environment (DWM on Xorg, or Hyprland on Wayland). +2. **Manages dotfiles.** Configuration lives under `dotfiles/`, symlinked into `$HOME` by GNU Stow. A `Makefile` wraps the common Stow operations and adds an `fzf`-driven importer for new app configs. +3. **Provides maintenance scripts.** Small utilities under `scripts/` and `dotfiles/*/.local/bin/` for VPN setup, post-install repo cloning, disk wiping, ZFS replication, and similar chores. + +The provisioning step is resumable: it records progress as marker files, so an interrupted run picks up where it left off. `archsetup --status` shows what's done; `archsetup --fresh` starts over. + +## Features + +- One-script system provisioning with per-step state tracking and resume +- Pre-flight checks (root, disk space, network) before anything is touched +- Interactive or fully unattended install (via a config file) +- Choice of desktop environment: `dwm` (Xorg + DWM), `hyprland` (Wayland + Hyprland), or `none` (headless/server) +- GPU driver auto-detection (skippable) +- Optional automatic console login for encrypted-root systems +- Builds suckless tools (dwm, dmenu, st, slock) and an Emacs config from configurable Git repos, compiled on a tmpfs RAM disk +- Stow-managed dotfiles split into `common/`, `dwm/`, and `hyprland/` trees +- `Makefile` targets for stow / restow / reset / unstow / import +- Two-theme system (`dupre`, `hudson`) switchable with the `set-theme` script +- VM-based integration test harness (QEMU/KVM) that installs into a throwaway VM and validates the result +- Logs everything to `/var/log/archsetup-*.log` + +## Requirements + +- A booted Arch Linux live ISO (for the initial OS install), or an already-installed Arch system (to run `archsetup`) +- UEFI firmware (the test harness and typical installs assume UEFI) +- A network connection +- `git`, `make`, `stow`, and `fzf` for the dotfile workflow (`make deps` installs these) +- For the test harness: `qemu-full`, `sshpass`, OVMF firmware, `socat`, and KVM support (`make deps` or `scripts/testing/setup-testing-env.sh`) + +## Installation + +### 1. Install Arch (live ISO bootstrap) + +Boot any Arch Linux ISO from a USB stick and run the bootstrap script: + +```sh +curl -s https://<your-domain>/archsetup/init | sh +``` + +`init` installs `git` and `tmux`, sets a temporary `root` password, and starts `sshd` so you can finish the install remotely. Then it launches `archinstall` to partition the disk and install the base system. (You can also do the base install by hand; `init` is just a convenience.) + +### 2. Run archsetup on the installed system + +Boot into the new install, clone this repo, and run the provisioning script as root: + +```sh +git clone https://github.com/yourusername/archsetup.git +cd archsetup +sudo ./archsetup +``` + +The script prompts for the username, password, locale, and (on encrypted systems) autologin, unless you supply them via a config file. + +#### `archsetup` options + +``` +Usage: ./archsetup [OPTIONS] + + --config-file PATH Use a config file for unattended installation + --fresh Start fresh, ignore previous progress + --status Show installation progress and exit + --no-gpu-drivers Skip GPU driver detection/installation + --autologin Enable automatic console login + --no-autologin Disable automatic console login + --help, -h Show this help message +``` + +### 3. Link the dotfiles + +```sh +make stow dwm # Xorg + DWM +# or +make stow hyprland # Wayland + Hyprland +``` + +## Configuration + +For an unattended install, copy the template and edit it: + +```sh +cp archsetup.conf.example archsetup.conf +./archsetup --config-file archsetup.conf +``` + +Every field has a default. Set only what you want to change. The config covers: + +- `USERNAME` / `PASSWORD`: primary user account (prompted if unset) +- `AUTOLOGIN`: `yes`/`no`, automatic console login (only relevant with encrypted root) +- `NO_GPU_DRIVERS`: `yes` to skip GPU driver auto-detection +- `LOCALE`: e.g. `en_US.UTF-8` +- `DESKTOP_ENV`: `dwm`, `hyprland`, or `none` +- `DWM_REPO`, `DMENU_REPO`, `ST_REPO`, `SLOCK_REPO`, `DOTEMACS_REPO`, `ARCHSETUP_REPO`: Git URLs for the suckless tools, the Emacs config, and this repo + +> **Forking note:** The upstream defaults point at the original author's personal Git server and assume a particular username. If you're adapting this for yourself, override the `*_REPO` variables in `archsetup.conf` to point at your own forks. Also review `scripts/post-install.sh` and `scripts/gitrepos.sh` — they clone personal repositories you won't want. The `archsetup` header, `init`'s temporary root password, and a handful of dotfiles (`.gitconfig`, `.ssh/config`, etc.) also carry author-specific values. + +## Dotfile Management + +Dotfiles live under `dotfiles/` and are stowed into `$HOME` with GNU Stow. The tree splits three ways: + +- `dotfiles/common/` — shared by every setup (shell config, `~/.local/bin` scripts, app configs that don't depend on the display server) +- `dotfiles/dwm/` — Xorg/DWM-specific configs and scripts +- `dotfiles/hyprland/` — Wayland/Hyprland-specific configs and scripts + +`make stow <de>` links `common` plus the chosen DE tree. The `Makefile` drives all of it: + +``` +make stow dwm # Fresh install: link common + dwm +make stow hyprland # Fresh install: link common + hyprland +make restow dwm # Refresh links after a git pull (prompts on conflicts) +make reset hyprland # Resolve conflicts by keeping the repo version +make unstow dwm # Remove all symlinks +make import common # fzf-pick app configs and import them into dotfiles/common/ +make import dwm # ...into dotfiles/dwm/ +make import hyprland # ...into dotfiles/hyprland/ +make deps # Install stow, fzf, and the VM-test toolchain +make help # Full target list +``` + +`make import` scans `~`, `~/.config`, and `~/.local` for config directories not yet in the repo, lets you multi-select with `fzf`, moves them into the chosen tree, and re-stows so the originals become symlinks. It reminds you to commit afterwards. + +### Theme system + +Two themes ship in the repo, `dupre` (default) and `hudson`. Switch with the `set-theme` script (installed via the `common` dotfiles). Theme files live under `dotfiles/hyprland/.config/themes/<theme>/` and cover foot, fuzzel, waybar, dunst, hyprlock, and Xresources. + +## Desktop Environments + +- **DWM (Xorg).** The `dwm` desktop env builds dwm, dmenu, st, and slock from the configured Git repos and links the `dwm` dotfile tree. DWM keybindings live in that fork's `config.def.h`. +- **Hyprland (Wayland).** The `hyprland` desktop env installs Hyprland and links the `hyprland` dotfile tree, including a waybar/foot/fuzzel/dunst/hyprlock stack themed to match. + +Pick the desktop env at install time with `DESKTOP_ENV` in the config file (or accept the prompt/default), then link the matching dotfiles with `make stow dwm` or `make stow hyprland`. + +## Testing + +archsetup ships a VM-based integration test harness under `scripts/testing/`. It uses QEMU/KVM directly (no libvirt) to install Arch into a throwaway VM, run `archsetup` inside it, and validate the result: user creation, stowed dotfiles, AUR helper, desktop environment, services, firewall, and package set. + +```sh +make deps # Install qemu-full, sshpass, OVMF, socat (one-time) +make test # Create the base VM if needed, then run the full test +make test-keep # Same, but leave the VM running for manual inspection +make test-vm-base # (Re)create the base VM only +``` + +Results land in `test-results/<timestamp>/` (logs, a summary report, and package lists). See `scripts/testing/README.org` for the full workflow, the cleanup and debug helpers, and the validation checks. + +## Contributing + +This is a personal setup, but bug reports and pull requests are welcome, especially fixes that make it easier to fork. If you're sending a change, keep the `common` / `dwm` / `hyprland` dotfile split intact and run `make test` (or at least `bash -n archsetup`) before opening a PR. + +## License + +[GPL-3.0](LICENSE) |
