No description
This repository has been archived on 2024-04-30. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues or pull requests.
Find a file
2023-01-21 15:45:50 +01:00
inventory simplify script invocation 2023-01-16 22:04:27 +01:00
library increase fault tolerancy for the master playbook 2022-12-27 16:49:55 +01:00
playbooks simplify script invocation 2023-01-16 22:04:27 +01:00
roles add neo-tree 2023-01-21 15:45:50 +01:00
.gitignore remove Makefile 2023-01-16 21:22:16 +01:00
ansible.cfg remove Makefile 2023-01-16 21:22:16 +01:00
Makefile simplify script invocation 2023-01-16 22:04:27 +01:00
README.md add neovim package manager and dial.nvim 2023-01-20 00:16:35 +01:00

Personal Linux Setup

My current setup is Regolith OS which is basically Ubuntu + i3.

Before installing

TODO

  • Telegram (maybe only possible to download)
  • thunderbird config
  • some kind of tag setup with: bootstrap, update, etc.
  • i3 app shortcuts
  • Configuration for desktop at uni. It should be really similar, except syncthing should have a new keypair. Also some applications are not necessary, e.g. nicotine+ and virtualbox.

Would like Ansible Vault to check in keypair for syncthing. However, then I would need a password to unlock the vault. As it is publicly available, password needs to be long and strong. I can just put it in my keepass, but can be annoying to copy every time. Therefore, I could make this available using Secret Service and write a script to fetch it. However, keepass cannot run secret service as Ubuntu already runs one. But if I disable that, my SSH agent does not work anymore. As an intermediate solution, I can just put the password in keepass...

Neovim

  • More cool plugins :)
  • How to configure dial.nvim?

Long-term TODO

  • Move away from GNOME because it is quite slow and configuration is pretty bad. This would also mean moving away from Regolith unfortunately. I would probably move to KDE with i3. Maybe there is some distro that does this OOTB?
  • Move away from systemd. Not sure how feasibly that is nowadays, but I just get annoyed by some systemd "features" such as resolved.