.. | ||
.mackup | ||
.mackup.cfg | ||
README.md |
Application Settings Backup
The command-line utility mackup
provides a decent starting point to enable Install Doctor to provide the capability of backing up personalized application settings. mackup
has a shortcoming though. It was not designed to accompany configurations that end up being stored in different places on different operating systems / package managers.
Mackup
For this reason, we use mackup
to handle the back-up and restore of the "golden" copy of application settings which will usually be stored in the ~/.config
directory. In some cases, we can get away with, for example, symlinking the ~/.config/ABC
to ~/Library/Application Settings/ABC
. But, in other cases like Flatpak, we need to keep the Flatpak configuration stored under ~/.var/com.abc.XYZ
synchronized with ~/.config/ABC
.
software.yml
Application Setting Definitions
The mackup
configurations will handle the backing up of the "golden" copy and the technical package manager specific linking / synchronization is handled by our CLI. If you browse through the software.yml
file, you will see something like the following which provides enough details to our CLI to handle the technical details:
google-chrome:
_name: Google Chrome
_app: Google Chrome.app
_link:cask:
- src: "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/google-chrome/Default"
target: "$HOME/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default"
_link:choco: 'TODO'
_link:flatpak:
- src: "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/google-chrome/Default"
target: "$HOME/.var/app/com.google.Chrome/config/google-chrome/Default"
cask: google-chrome
choco: googlechrome
flatpak: com.google.Chrome
yay: google-chrome
The keys that start with _link
add the instructions necessary to synchronize the configurations amongst the various possible locations in the most efficient manner. The cask
and flatpak
have their definitions in place. The choco
still needs some work. And the yay
option needs no definition because the configuration is already in the proper place by default for unrestricted system package managers.
It also is important to note that the mackup
configuration for each app (in the ~/.config/mackup/.mackup
folder) should be named using the object ID you can find for each application in the software.yml
file.
backup-apps
Script
On a side note, once the proper application definitions are in place in the software.yml
file and the proper configurations are made in this folder's .mackup
folder, then you can use our convienience script located at ~/.local/bin/backup-apps
to perform the backup. It was created to avoid having to leave a ~/.mackup
folder and a ~/.mackup.cfg
file in the home directory.
Example
This commit provides a clear example of the type of code that is necessary to adapt the software.yml
and ~/.config/mackup
configurations.
TODO
We need to go through the software.yml
file and figure out which applications would benefit from application setting synchronization. Basically, any application that has cask
and flatpak
options will need to be configured. It is possible that some settings might reside outside of ~/Library/Application Support
.
For now, the choco
definitions should use Unix style forward slash definitions along with %APPDATA%
to define the location of the settings.