├── .github └── workflows │ └── upload.yml ├── .gitignore ├── FUNDING.yml ├── LICENSE ├── README.md ├── archetypes └── default.md ├── config.toml ├── content ├── _index.md ├── abook.md ├── dwm.md ├── dwmblocks.md ├── htop.md ├── lf.md ├── librewolf.md ├── mpv.md ├── ncmpcpp.md ├── neomutt.md ├── newsboat.md ├── st.md └── zsh.md ├── layouts └── _default │ └── baseof.html └── static ├── larbs-dwm.pdf ├── larbs.sh ├── pix ├── dwmblocks.png ├── htop.png ├── larbs.gif ├── larbs.png ├── lf.png ├── ncmpcpp-01.png ├── ncmpcpp-02.png ├── ncmpcpp-03.png ├── ncmpcpp-04.png ├── neomutt.png ├── st.png └── windows-htop.jpg ├── progs.csv └── style.css /.github/workflows/upload.yml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | name: CI 2 | 3 | # Controls when the action will run. 4 | on: 5 | # Triggers the workflow on push to master (including merged PRs) 6 | push: 7 | branches: [ master ] 8 | 9 | # Allows you to run this workflow manually from the Actions tab 10 | workflow_dispatch: 11 | 12 | # A workflow run is made up of one or more jobs that can run sequentially or in parallel 13 | jobs: 14 | # This workflow contains a single job called "build" 15 | update: 16 | # The type of runner that the job will run on 17 | runs-on: ubuntu-latest 18 | 19 | # Steps represent a sequence of tasks that will be executed as part of the job 20 | steps: 21 | - name: Updating website. 22 | uses: appleboy/ssh-action@master 23 | with: 24 | host: larbs.xyz 25 | username: larbs 26 | key: ${{ secrets.larbs_ssh }} 27 | passphrase: ${{ secrets.larbs_pass }} 28 | port: 22 29 | script: | 30 | cd larbs-src 31 | git stash 32 | git pull --force origin master 33 | hugo -s . -t /var/www/lugo -d ~/larbs --cacheDir ~/hugocache 34 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | .hugo_build.lock 2 | public 3 | themes 4 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /FUNDING.yml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | custom: ["https://lukesmith.xyz/donate.html"] 2 | github: lukesmithxyz 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 3 | 4 | Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies 6 | of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 7 | 8 | Preamble 9 | 10 | The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for 11 | software and other kinds of works. 12 | 13 | The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed 14 | to take away your freedom to share and change the works. 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Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16. 613 | 614 | If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided 615 | above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms, 616 | reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates 617 | an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the 618 | Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a 619 | copy of the Program in return for a fee. 620 | 621 | END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS 622 | 623 | How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs 624 | 625 | If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest 626 | possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it 627 | free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. 628 | 629 | To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest 630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively 631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least 632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. 633 | 634 | 635 | Copyright (C) 636 | 637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or 640 | (at your option) any later version. 641 | 642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 645 | GNU General Public License for more details. 646 | 647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 648 | along with this program. If not, see . 649 | 650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. 651 | 652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short 653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: 654 | 655 | Copyright (C) 656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. 657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it 658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. 659 | 660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate 661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands 662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". 663 | 664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, 665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. 666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see 667 | . 668 | 669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program 670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you 671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with 672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General 673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read 674 | . 675 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Luke's Auto-Rice Bootstrapping Scripts (LARBS) 2 | 3 | ## Installation: 4 | 5 | On an Arch-based distribution as root, run the following: 6 | 7 | ``` 8 | curl -LO larbs.xyz/larbs.sh 9 | sh larbs.sh 10 | ``` 11 | 12 | That's it. 13 | 14 | ## What is LARBS? 15 | 16 | LARBS is a script that autoinstalls and autoconfigures a fully-functioning 17 | and minimal terminal-and-vim-based Arch Linux environment. 18 | 19 | LARBS can be run on a fresh install of Arch or Artix Linux, and provides you 20 | with a fully configured diving-board for work or more customization. 21 | 22 | ## Customization 23 | 24 | By default, LARBS uses the programs [here in progs.csv](static/progs.csv) and installs 25 | [my dotfiles repo (voidrice) here](https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/voidrice), 26 | but you can easily change this by either modifying the default variables at the 27 | beginning of the script or giving the script one of these options: 28 | 29 | - `-r`: custom dotfiles repository (URL) 30 | - `-p`: custom programs list/dependencies (local file or URL) 31 | - `-a`: a custom AUR helper (must be able to install with `-S` unless you 32 | change the relevant line in the script 33 | 34 | ### The `progs.csv` list 35 | 36 | LARBS will parse the given programs list and install all given programs. Note 37 | that the programs file must be a three column `.csv`. 38 | 39 | The first column is a "tag" that determines how the program is installed, "" 40 | (blank) for the main repository, `A` for via the AUR or `G` if the program is a 41 | git repository that is meant to be `make && sudo make install`ed. 42 | 43 | The second column is the name of the program in the repository, or the link to 44 | the git repository, and the third column is a description (should be a verb 45 | phrase) that describes the program. During installation, LARBS will print out 46 | this information in a grammatical sentence. It also doubles as documentation 47 | for people who read the CSV and want to install my dotfiles manually. 48 | 49 | Depending on your own build, you may want to tactically order the programs in 50 | your programs file. LARBS will install from the top to the bottom. 51 | 52 | If you include commas in your program descriptions, be sure to include double 53 | quotes around the whole description to ensure correct parsing. 54 | 55 | ### The script itself 56 | 57 | The script is extensively divided into functions for easier readability and 58 | trouble-shooting. Most everything should be self-explanatory. 59 | 60 | The main work is done by the `installationloop` function, which iterates 61 | through the programs file and determines based on the tag of each program, 62 | which commands to run to install it. You can easily add new methods of 63 | installations and tags as well. 64 | 65 | Note that programs from the AUR can only be built by a non-root user. What 66 | LARBS does to bypass this by default is to temporarily allow the newly created 67 | user to use `sudo` without a password (so the user won't be prompted for a 68 | password multiple times in installation). This is done ad-hocly, but 69 | effectively with the `newperms` function. At the end of installation, 70 | `newperms` removes those settings, giving the user the ability to run only 71 | several basic sudo commands without a password (`shutdown`, `reboot`, 72 | `pacman -Syu`). 73 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /archetypes/default.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "{{ replace .Name "-" " " | title }}" 3 | date: {{ .Date }} 4 | draft: true 5 | --- 6 | 7 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config.toml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | baseURL = 'https://larbs.xyz/' 2 | languageCode = 'en-us' 3 | title = 'LARBS' 4 | 5 | theme = 'lugo' 6 | 7 | [params] 8 | taglist = false 9 | nextprev = false 10 | datesinlist = false 11 | authorsinlist = false 12 | 13 | [markup] 14 | [markup.goldmark] 15 | [markup.goldmark.renderer] 16 | unsafe = true 17 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/_index.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "LARBS" 3 | layout: single 4 | --- 5 | 6 | {{< img src="/pix/larbs.png" class=normal >}} 7 | 8 | LARBS is an efficient shell script that will install a fully-featured tiling window manager-based system on any Arch or [Artix](https://artixlinux.org) Linux-based system, without any of the routine of manual post-install processes and configuration. 9 | 10 | ## Two types of LARBS users 11 | 12 | Is LARBS for you? Probably yes. I don't know how else you would've found this site. The script is for two types of people: 13 | 14 | 1. People who already know their stuff and just want to automate installing a system without doing the boring stuff you've done a million times. 15 | 2. Novices who want to use and learn about a leet hackerman computer setup like those in the movies for either efficiency or looking cool. 16 | 17 | 18 | No actual phonies allowed though. 19 | The goal of the system for novices is helping you understand how a good Unix system works and how it is modified. 20 | I give huge amounts of documentation for this, but this is not a hand-holding distro that does things automatically for you. 21 | Instead, you realize how easy it is to set things up automatically yourself. 22 | 23 | ## Installation 24 | 25 | On a fresh installation of Arch Linux or Artix Linux, run the following: 26 | 27 | ```fish 28 | curl -LO larbs.xyz/larbs.sh 29 | sh larbs.sh 30 | ``` 31 | 32 | LARBS will then guide you through installation, which is typically relatively snappy. On my slow internet, it takes around 10 minutes. 33 | 34 | Note that the LARBS scripts will not partition any drives or wipe anything, **but** when it deploys the dotfiles, it will overwrite any preexisting files: e.g. the LARBS bashrc will replace your old bashrc, etc. To avoid even this risk, you can tell LARBS to install for a new username and nothing will be overwritten. 35 | 36 | ## No un-features 37 | 38 | - No proprietary software or spyware. 39 | - No snaps or flatpaks or Mac-lite garbage. GNU/Linux the way it's supposed to be. 40 | - No branding cringe. Once you run LARBS, you have **your own** system, not mine! 41 | 42 | ## Programs 43 | 44 | Here are the main programs, all with extra information here: 45 | 46 | - [dwm](/dwm) -- the main graphical environment 47 | - [st](/st) -- the terminal 48 | - [dwmblocks](/dwmblocks) -- statusbar 49 | - [zsh](zsh) -- the shell 50 | - [Librewolf](librewolf) with the Arkenfox.js -- browser 51 | - [lf](/lf) -- file manager 52 | - [neomutt](/neomutt) -- email 53 | - [abook](/abook) -- extensible address book 54 | - [ncmpcpp](/ncmpcpp) -- music 55 | - [newsboat](newsboat) -- RSS feeds and news 56 | - [htop](htop) -- to look cool in screencaps... err... system monitor 57 | - [mpv](/mpv) -- video player 58 | - nsxiv -- image viewer 59 | 60 | ## Learning the system is fun and easy! 61 | 62 | You can figure out about the system in a lot of different ways: 63 | 64 | - LARBS has a built-in readme document and list of all the many efficient keybindings that you can read [here](/larbs-dwm.pdf). By pressing super + F1 at any time while in the system you can read this document. 65 | - The many illustrative videos on [Luke's YouTube channel](https://youtube.com/lukesmithxyz), some of which are easily watchable in LARBS by pressing super + F2. 66 | - The documentation on the Github page. 67 | - By just installing it and diving in! 68 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/abook.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "Abook" 3 | date: 2023-01-17T11:54:20-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | The address book. 7 | 8 | Why let Google or Apple keep your contacts? Keep an archive on your computer and export them when you need them. 9 | Abook is a minimal and local store of your contacts, including emails, phone numbers, addressess and whatever you might need. 10 | Abook integrates with neomutt's autofill as well and you can script more functionality into it. 11 | 12 | ## Documentation 13 | 14 | `man abook` 15 | 16 | ## Running 17 | 18 | Press super + shift + e or run `abook` in the terminal. 19 | 20 | ## Bindings 21 | 22 | Thankfully, abook is self-documenting: press ? at any time to see its binds. Here are some of the most common: 23 | 24 | - a -- add a contact. 25 | - j/k -- move up and down. 26 | - enter -- enter a contact. 27 | - h/l -- (on a contact page) move from tab to tab. 28 | - 0-9 -- (on a contact page) edit/change contact information in a field. 29 | - d -- delete a contact. 30 | - D -- duplicate a contact. 31 | - S -- sort existing contacts. 32 | 33 | ## Extending 34 | 35 | Using with email 36 | : abook works out of the box with [neomutt](/neomutt). In neomutt, when you compose a new message, if you press tab, neomutt will automatically tab-complete from your abook contacts. 37 | 38 | Using telephone numbers 39 | : There are some services that offer computer-based calling. Since abook can export a list of contacts with data, you can use programs like dmenu to select one you want: 40 | ```fish 41 | abook --convert --infile ~/.abook/addressbook --outformatstr="\!{name} {mobile}" --outformat=custom | dmenu -i -l 30 42 | ``` 43 | This can easily be integrated into a script. 44 | 45 | 46 | ## Links 47 | 48 | - [website](https://abook.sourceforge.io/) 49 | - GPLv2 50 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/dwm.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "dwm" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T09:55:19-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | dwm (the dynamic window manager) is the backbones of LARBS and its graphical environment. 7 | 8 | ## Using 9 | 10 | LARBS has built-in documentation for dwm, which can be obtain by pressing `super + F1` or by clicking the small ❓ in the top right corner. 11 | 12 | If you're viewing this online, [click here to see the pdf](/larbs-dwm.pdf) which is a full guide to dwm. 13 | 14 | That should be your guide for upping your dwm power-level, but here are some generalities: 15 | 16 | - dwm automatically tiles windows by the pattern of your choosing, and most active windows are given visual preference. You can turn off tiling if you need, or float individual windows. 17 | - Everything is a keybinding, including all the main programs used in LARBS. The goal is to minimize the distance between mind and matter, so that computing becomes reflexive: you can think up an email to send, and have it sent in 10 seconds. 18 | 19 | ## Source code 20 | 21 | - [dwm for LARBS](https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/dwm) 22 | - [original build of dwm](https://dwm.suckless.org) 23 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/dwmblocks.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "dwmblocks" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T09:15:59-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | dwmblocks is the statusbar command which hosts many customizable and extensible modules. 7 | 8 | {{< img src="/pix/dwmblocks.png" class=normal link="/pix/dwmblocks.png" caption="dwmblocks and its weather forecast, doppler radar and Bitcoin price monitors open." >}} 9 | 10 | ## Using 11 | 12 | dwmblocks runs automatically when dwm starts, appearing as many modules in the top right, and will update as needed. 13 | 14 | Right click on the active modules for an informational message about them. 15 | 16 | Left and middle clicking, and sometime scrolling, often have some functional reaction, like bringing up a relevant program. 17 | 18 | ## Modules 19 | 20 | There are modules for time and date, laptop battery, internet and volume that should be self-explanatory. 21 | 22 | There are also modules a three-day weather forecast from [wttr.in](https://wttr.in) and the module with a 🌅 even allows you to view a Doppler RADAR of your chosen location. 23 | 24 | There are other user-submitted modules, for IP locations, keyboard selection, memory and CPU monitoring and more. 25 | 26 | ## Files 27 | 28 | - `~/.local/src/dwmblocks/` -- the source code. 29 | - `~/.local/src/dwmblocks/config.h` -- where modules can be added. You can open this file automatically by shift right clicking on the status bar. 30 | - `~/.local/bin/statusbar/` -- the scripts made for the statusbar. Note that not all are activated by default and you can add new ones as desired. You can also open an individual module's script by shift left clicking on the module. 31 | 32 | 33 | ## Signals and updating 34 | 35 | In the `config.h` file, you will notice that each statusbar module should have a unique "Update Signal." 36 | For modules that need to update at set events, you 37 | 38 | For example, the `sb-volume` module has the update signal `10` by default. If we manually run the command: 39 | 40 | ```fish 41 | wpctl set-volume @DEFAULT_AUDIO_SINK@ 3%+ 42 | ``` 43 | 44 | This happens to increase the volume, but the module *does not* update with the new volume by default. 45 | We also want to signal to dwmblocks to update this module by sending it signal `10`: 46 | 47 | ```fish 48 | pkill -RTMIN+10 dwmblocks 49 | ``` 50 | 51 | This will now update the module. 52 | Although, `pkill` is slightly slower than the command `kill`, which can make a big difference if we are making semi-frequent changes in a script. To signal with `kill`, we must send the value **plus 34**. 53 | Just remember 34. 54 | 55 | So `10 + 34 = 44`, so we use this command: 56 | 57 | ```fish 58 | kill -44 $(pidof dwmblocks) 59 | ``` 60 | 61 | (Note also we send the signal to the process ID of dwmblocks as well.) 62 | 63 | 64 | ## Source code 65 | 66 | - [The build for LARBS](https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/dwmblocks) 67 | - [the original dwmblocks](https://github.com/torrinfail/dwmblocks) 68 | - ISC License. 69 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/htop.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "htop" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T10:38:41-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | htop is an absolutely useless program. 7 | 8 | {{< img src="/pix/htop.png" link="/pix/htop.png" class=normal >}} 9 | 10 | ## What is htop? 11 | 12 | htop is theoretically a system-monitor program, but no one uses it for that. 13 | 14 | What it actually is is a program that produces a bunch of smart-looking and multicolor lines and shapes with important-seeming process names. 15 | 16 | This is the ultimate weapon against impressionable normies if you want to impress them by pretending to be some kind of hacker. 17 | 18 | htop is only found (1) in screencaps to show your "set-up" to other losers on the internet and (2) when a normie girl is nearby to hopefully goad her into a conversation you were otherwise too awkward to initiate yourself. 19 | 20 | ## You wouldn't do it in Windows. 21 | 22 | Look at how stupid this image looks. 23 | 24 | {{< img src="/pix/windows-htop.jpg" link="/pix/windows-htop.jpg" class=normal >}} 25 | 26 | "Oh what, he just pulled up some command prompts, a file browser and a system monitor? Why? Is he actually doing something with those empty prompts? Why does he need a system monitor filling up a third of his screen for this alleged work he's doing?" 27 | 28 | All sensible questions that a person naturally asks when he sees the familiar world of Windows. 29 | 30 | Yet for newfriends who HECKIN' LOVE GNU/LINUX, for what ever reason, they do the same stuff, take a screencap of it and post it. 31 | 32 | This is only possible because even of those people use use GNU/Linux, even in a fancy tiling window manager, so many of them are still struggling to figure things out, so a couple htop windows and a silly file manager open and the brain degrades to a lower, confusion-induced operating level which makes it fawn at the mystery of it. 33 | 34 | I mean really---obviously I think tiling window managers are useful, that's what LARBS is about, but when you are *actually working on something* do you *ever* have more than three windows tiled on the same workspace at one time? 35 | 36 | Seriously, for most things, I have one thing per workspace unless another prompt is strictly visually necessary. Three or *maybe* four is definitely the maximum. 37 | 38 | So it goes without saying that people who pull up seven windows and some pics of anime girls baking pancakes are not doing anything with their computers looking like that. 39 | 40 | ## Running 41 | 42 | Run `htop` by typing it in the terminal. 43 | I even bound it to super + shift + r just for fun because I wasn't using that key for anything important. 44 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/lf.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "lf" 3 | date: 2022-12-21T17:07:04-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | lf is the file manager used in LARBS. 7 | It was original inspired by the program ranger, but unlike ranger, lf is written in Go instead of Python, so is significantly snappier and adds better features for interaction between different lf instances. 8 | 9 | {{< img src="/pix/lf.png" class=normal caption="Note that lf uses ueberzug to produce previews of images, or here, a .pdf." >}} 10 | 11 | ## Running 12 | 13 | Run lf by pressing super + r, or type `lf` manually in the termianl. 14 | 15 | ## Bindings 16 | 17 | - h, j, k l (vim keys) to move around and enter directories and open files. 18 | - g, G, ctrl-d, ctrl-u -- movement like in vim. 19 | - w -- drop into a terminal in the current directory. If you `exit` or press ctrl-d in the termianl, you will return to `lf`. 20 | - ctrl-n -- new directory. 21 | - V -- new file with `nvim`. 22 | - space -- select files: 23 | - d -- cut files to lf's clipboard. 24 | - y -- yank files to lf's clipboard. 25 | - p -- paste/move copied/cut files. 26 | - C -- copy selected files to a bookmarked directory. 27 | - M -- move selected files to a bookmarked directory. 28 | - Y -- copy text names of selected files to the system clipboard. 29 | - Renaming files: 30 | - c -- rename the selected file. 31 | - A -- rename the selected file, starting at end. 32 | - a -- rename the selected file, starting after the extension. 33 | - I -- rename the selected file, starting at beginning. 34 | - i -- rename the selected file, starting before extension. 35 | - B -- **bulk rename**: use vidir to mass edit all files in the directory. 36 | - s -- sort files by a different metric. 37 | - z -- show extra data or hidden files. 38 | 39 | This list is not necessarily exhaustive. See `man lf` and the lf configuration file for more. 40 | 41 | ## lf's configuration files 42 | 43 | - `~/.confif/lf/lfrc` -- The main lf configuration. 44 | - `~/.config/lf/scope` -- The file that determines which commands generates previews for files. 45 | 46 | The other files in the `~/.config/lf/` directory are run automatically when needed. 47 | 48 | --- 49 | 50 | ## Notes 51 | 52 | Notice that `alias lf` will tell you that technically you are running the 53 | wrapper script `lfub` when you run `lf`. This has to do with `ueberzug`, the 54 | program that generates image previews. 55 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/librewolf.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "Librewolf" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T08:51:04-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | Librewolf is a version of Firefox with Mozilla's odious spyware removed. 7 | 8 | ## Running 9 | 10 | Press super + w or run `librewolf` in dmenu. 11 | 12 | ## Improvements to Librewolf in LARBS 13 | 14 | ### Arkenfox's user.js 15 | 16 | With LARBS, [Arkenfox's user.js](https://github.com/arkenfox/user.js) is installed by default. 17 | This is a set of default settings that set settings that increase user privacy and decrease the possibility of fingerprinting. 18 | 19 | ### Other tweaks 20 | 21 | Other annoying Firefox features have been disabled, such as push notifications and the pocket. 22 | 23 | With any of these settings or the Arkenfox ones, they can be changed in `about:config`. 24 | 25 | ### Add-ons 26 | 27 | Several add-ons come installed by default. 28 | Note that they can be immediately enabled by the user in the top right corner, but might not come enabled. 29 | 30 | - [uBlock Origin](https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/ublock-origin/) -- ad-blocker. 31 | - [Decentraleyes](https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/decentraleyes/) -- third-party tracking protection. 32 | - [I still don't care about cookies](https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/istilldontcareaboutcookies/) -- removes those stupid cookie notifications that the EU forced on us. 33 | - [Vim Vixen](https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/vim-vixen/) -- vim key-bindings. 34 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/mpv.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "mpv" 3 | date: 2023-01-17T11:39:29-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | mpv is a video-player so simple, it really just shows the video. 7 | It is controlled by the keyboard and only shows even the progress bar and other interfaces when needed. 8 | 9 | It is also used in LARBS to play single audio files if [mpd](/mpd) is not used. 10 | 11 | 12 | ## Documentation 13 | 14 | `man mpv` 15 | 16 | ## Running 17 | 18 | mpv is opened automatically when you select a video or audio file to open from [lf](/lf) or another program. 19 | Obviously you can run it from the command line by running `mpv filename.mp4`, etc. 20 | 21 | ## Bindings 22 | 23 | These are custom bindings for ease: 24 | 25 | - h/l -- jump back/foward 10 seconds. 26 | - j/k -- jump back/foward 60 seconds. 27 | - space -- toggle pause. 28 | - S -- toggle subtitles. 29 | - o -- briefly view progress bar and time. 30 | - O -- toggle time visibility. 31 | - i -- show file and video information. 32 | 33 | ## Configuration 34 | 35 | - `~/.config/mpv/input.conf` -- key bindings. 36 | - `~/.config/mpv/` -- many other plugins can be added to mpv. 37 | 38 | ## Other 39 | 40 | - If you download films, I recommend installing the program `subdl`, which you can run on a movie file and it will automatically check online for subtitle files. Give it the `-i` option to choose from the closest matches if the first result is slightly off. 41 | - The LARBS binding super + shift + P will not only pause you music played in `mpd`, but also all audio/video instances of `mpv`. 42 | - Press super + F11 to see your webcam. This uses an instance of `mpv` as well. 43 | 44 | GPLv2 45 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/ncmpcpp.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "Ncmpcpp" 3 | date: 2023-01-16T22:24:03-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | ncmpcpp is the main music player that interacts with the [music player daemon](/mpd). 7 | 8 | ncmpcpp stands for *NCurses Music Player Client ++*. 9 | Yes. I'm sorry it's unpronounceable, but it's the best at what it does... 10 | 11 | {{< img src="/pix/ncmpcpp-02.png" class=normal >}} 12 | 13 | ## Running 14 | 15 | Press super + m, or type `ncmpcpp` in the terminal. 16 | 17 | For ncmpcpp to run, you should have [mpd](/mpd) set up and have audio files in your mpd directory. 18 | 19 | ## Bindings 20 | 21 | Firstly, ncmpcpp has many different screens accessible through the number keys 1 to 8. The most important of these have also been mapped to mneumonic letter keys: 22 | 23 | - m -- main music library (press key again to alternate album/album artist views). 24 | - v -- visualizer. 25 | - f -- library by directory structure. 26 | - t -- tagger. 27 | - s -- detailed search. 28 | - 1 -- current playlist. 29 | 30 | {{< img src="/pix/ncmpcpp-03.png" class=normal >}} 31 | 32 | - h/j/k/l -- navigate the music library view or select directories and songs. 33 | - enter -- add selected to playlist and play now. 34 | - space -- add to end of playlist. 35 | 36 | 37 | - . -- show/download lyrics. 38 | 39 | ## Configuration 40 | 41 | - `~/.config/ncmpcpp/config` -- main file controlling formatting and colors and other details. 42 | - `~/.config/ncmpcpp/bindings` -- file customizing key bindings. 43 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/neomutt.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "Neomutt" 3 | date: 2023-01-16T16:15:58-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | Neomutt is a fast terminal-based email client. 7 | 8 | {{< img src="/pix/neomutt.png" class=normal >}} 9 | 10 | ## Setup with Mutt Wizard 11 | 12 | Use [mutt-wizard](https://muttwizard.com) (`mw`) to add mail accounts. This is already installed on LARBS. Added accounts will be accessible from neomutt. To add your first account, just run the following: 13 | 14 | ```fish 15 | mw -a your@email.com 16 | ``` 17 | 18 | Once you have installed accounts, sync them with the command `mailsync`, or by pressing super + F8. 19 | 20 | ## Running 21 | 22 | Press super + e or type `neomutt` manually in the terminal. 23 | 24 | 25 | ## Bindings 26 | 27 | Note also that neomutt automatically documents itself: you can press ? at any time in the program and you will see a list of all shortcuts for the screen you are on. 28 | 29 | ### In the mail index... 30 | 31 | - j, k -- move up and down in mail. 32 | - l or enter -- open mail, or return to index. 33 | - h or esc -- return from mail to index. 34 | - m -- compose new mail. 35 | - r -- reply to selected mail. 36 | - R -- reply all to selected mail. 37 | - ctrl-j/ctrl-k -- move up or down in the sidebar. 38 | - ctrl-o -- open the box highlighted in the sidebar. 39 | - space -- select mail. (See below). 40 | 41 | mutt-wizard automatically sets automatic binds to move to or move mail to other boxes. Press one of these keys: 42 | 43 | - g -- go to... 44 | - M -- move selected mail to... 45 | - C -- copy selected mail to... 46 | 47 | And then follow it with one of these keys: 48 | 49 | - i -- ...the inbox. 50 | - d -- ...drafts. 51 | - s -- ...the sent box. 52 | - a -- ...the archive. 53 | - j -- ...junk. 54 | 55 | ### With mail open... 56 | 57 | Some binds above are shared. 58 | 59 | - j/k -- scroll up and down. 60 | - J/K -- next or previous mail. 61 | - v -- view attachments. This can be used for opening annoying HTML ad emails in the browser. You can also save the selected attachment with s. 62 | 63 | ### On the compose screen... 64 | 65 | - a -- attach a file. 66 | - m -- edit highlighted attachment in text editor. 67 | - S -- choose to sign or encrypt mail (usually with PGP). 68 | - y -- send mail. 69 | 70 | ## Configuration 71 | 72 | - `~/.config/mutt/muttrc` -- main configuration file 73 | - `~/.config/mutt/accounts/` -- where mutt-wizard will put account-specific configuration files, named after your email addresses 74 | - `~/.local/share/mail/` -- where your mail is stored. 75 | 76 | ## Extending 77 | 78 | Neomutt is one of the most extensible programs on the planet. I am constantly surprised by what you can do with it. If you are ever bored, yet hungry for efficiency, check out the neomutt and neomuttrc manuals. 79 | 80 | One nice little thing is how widely aliases can be used. For example, we can add a line like this to our muttrc: 81 | 82 | ```muttrc 83 | alias besties luke@email.com, richard@email.com, linus@email.com 84 | ``` 85 | 86 | This aliases the sequence `besties` to the following text/email addresses. So we can just type `besties` as a recipient of a mail, and the other addresses will be filled in. 87 | 88 | Note also that neomutt is configured to tab complete contact information stored with [abook](/abook) automatically. 89 | 90 | ## Documentation 91 | 92 | `man neomutt` or `man neomuttrc`. 93 | 94 | [Mutt/Neomutt on the ArchWiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Mutt) 95 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/newsboat.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "Newsboat" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T11:37:10-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | Newsboat is an RSS-reader. 7 | 8 | A normal person asks: "What is an RSS reader?" 9 | 10 | It's a way to follow sites and social media updates without needing social media. 11 | 12 | ## Documentation 13 | 14 | `man newsboat` 15 | 16 | ## Running 17 | 18 | Press super + shift + n or run `newsboat` in the terminal. 19 | 20 | ## Bindings 21 | 22 | - j/k -- move up and down. 23 | - enter -- enter feed or article. 24 | - q -- return to previous screen or quit. 25 | - h/l -- open feed or return (same as q and enter). 26 | - a -- mark as read. 27 | - n -- go to next unread. 28 | - A -- mark all as read. 29 | - ,, -- open the main link of an article. (Usually opens in a browser, or if a video, will play the video in [mpv](mpv).) 30 | - u/d -- page up and down. 31 | - g/G -- go to top or bottom of screen. 32 | 33 | To follow a visible link, use the [st](st) binding alt + l, or to just copy it, alt + k. 34 | 35 | 36 | ## Files 37 | 38 | - `~/.config/newsboat/urls` -- the file holding your RSS feeds. Add URLs here to make them appear in newsboat. Open itquickly by typing `cfu` in the terminal. 39 | - `~/.config/newsboat/config` -- the general newsboat config. Type `cfn` in the terminal. You can set granulated coloring and effects here, as well as change key bindings. 40 | - `~/.local/bin/linkhandler` -- the opener file used by newsboat for dealing with URLs with the ,, binding. This can be modified as needed. By default, it opens normal URLs in a browser, opens videos with [mpv](mpv), downloads audio/podcast files and downloads and opens images with [sxiv](sxiv), etc. 41 | 42 | ## Links 43 | 44 | - [newsboat website](https://newsboat.org/) 45 | - MIT License 46 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/st.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "st" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T10:02:07-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | st (the simple terminal) is a simple terminal. 7 | 8 | {{< img src=/pix/st.png link=/pix/st.png caption="Doesn't get simpler than this." class=normal >}} 9 | 10 | ## Running 11 | 12 | Press super + enter for a basic terminal window. 13 | 14 | ## Documentation 15 | 16 | `man st` 17 | 18 | ## Bindings 19 | 20 | - alt + j/k/alt + Up/Down/alt + mouse wheel -- scroll up or down in the terminal history. 21 | - alt + u/d/alt + pageup/pagedown -- faster scroll. 22 | - alt + shift + j/k -- decrease or increase font size. 23 | - alt + c -- copy selected text to clipboard. 24 | - shift + insert -- paste clipboard contents. 25 | - alt + l -- **open a link/URL**: pulls all URLs from terminal and allows you to pick one to open via dmenu. 26 | - alt + y -- copy a link/URL: same as above, but copies the URL. 27 | - alt + o -- **copy the output from a recent command.** 28 | - alt + a/s -- decrease/increase transparency. 29 | 30 | ## Readline 31 | 32 | Note that readline will use vim bindings by default. 33 | Technically this is not part of `st`, but people get it confused. 34 | If you don't like it, remove the `bindkey -v` line from the [zsh](/zsh) configuration. 35 | 36 | ## Source Code 37 | 38 | - [st for LARBS](https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/st) 39 | - [original st at suckless's website](https://st.suckless.org) 40 | - MIT License 41 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /content/zsh.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | --- 2 | title: "Zsh" 3 | date: 2023-01-19T10:24:07-05:00 4 | --- 5 | 6 | zsh is the shell used by LARBS. 7 | 8 | ## Files 9 | 10 | - `~/.config/zsh/.zshrc` -- the main zshrc file. Run `cfz` in the terminal for quick access. 11 | - `~/.config/shell/aliasrc` -- a separate file called by the zshrc for loading aliases that might be shared in common with bash or other shells. This is kept separate merely for organizational purposes. You can add aliases to this file or the zsh file. Run `cfa` for quick access. By default, it mostly sets aliases that will yield more colorful output and verbosity in interactive shells. 12 | - `~/.zprofile` -- the profile file, where environmental variables are set. This is only run on login. Do not put your custom settings here unless you know what you are doing. 13 | - `~/.config/shell/inputrc` -- This file shouldn't be edited, but contains special settings for the vi-mode in zsh that allow you to clear the screen with ctrl + l and also to have a different cursor for each mode: a thick bar for normal mode and a thin line for insert. 14 | 15 | ## Little features 16 | 17 | - Press ctrl + o to open a special instance of [lf](/lf). It works like normal lf, but if you press q to quit, zsh will automatically change directory to the directory you ended up in. Useful to quickly navigate directories without typing. 18 | - ctrl + f -- use `fzf` to search for a file deep in this directory structure. Selecting it will change the directory to where it is. 19 | - ctrl + a -- open an instance of `bc` to do some arithmetic if needed. Press ctrl + d to exit. 20 | 21 | ## Source code 22 | 23 | - [website](https://zsh.sourceforge.io/) 24 | - Permissive license with copyleft components 25 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /layouts/_default/baseof.html: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | {{ if not .IsHome }}{{ .Title }} | {{ end }}{{ .Site.Title }} 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | {{ with .Site.Params.favicon }} 9 | {{ end -}} 10 | 11 | {{ if isset .Params "tags" }} 12 | {{ end -}} 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | {{ if .Site.Menus.main }}{{ partial "nav.html" . }}{{ end -}} 19 |
20 |
21 |

{{ block "title" . }}{{ end }}

22 | {{- with .Param "subtitle" }} 23 |

{{ . }}

24 | {{- end }} 25 |
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27 | {{ block "main" . -}} 28 | {{- .Content -}} 29 | {{ end -}} 30 | {{ if .Param "taglist" }}{{ partial "taglist.html" . }}{{ end -}} 31 | {{ if .Param "nextprev" }}{{ partial "nextprev.html" . -}}{{ end -}} 32 |
33 |
34 | {{ block "footer" . -}} 35 |
36 |
37 | 38 |
39 | official larbs donation fund: 40 |
    41 |
  • xmr: 8A2cBbmN9p9Ruz8e1526Nscz28gfPS1GveitMY3V7RnpLwdExmQNddY4a49Hi7wNbM2yV8vrBZF8zcKCTHMqRUb82CUMEJj
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  • btc: bc1qhx0elzzpyxy5fvz0x662zh9efghcxgt4knc7w4
  • 43 |
44 | {{- if .Param "showrss" }}

RSS Feed{{ end }} 45 | 46 |
47 | {{ end -}} 48 | 49 | 50 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/larbs-dwm.pdf: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/larbs-dwm.pdf -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/larbs.sh: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/bin/sh 2 | 3 | # Luke's Auto Rice Bootstrapping Script (LARBS) 4 | # by Luke Smith 5 | # License: GNU GPLv3 6 | 7 | ### OPTIONS AND VARIABLES ### 8 | 9 | dotfilesrepo="https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/voidrice.git" 10 | progsfile="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/master/static/progs.csv" 11 | aurhelper="yay" 12 | repobranch="master" 13 | export TERM=ansi 14 | 15 | rssurls="https://lukesmith.xyz/rss.xml 16 | https://videos.lukesmith.xyz/feeds/videos.xml?videoChannelId=2 \"~Luke Smith (Videos)\" 17 | https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UC2eYFnH61tmytImy1mTYvhA \"~Luke Smith (YouTube)\" 18 | https://lindypress.net/rss 19 | https://notrelated.xyz/rss 20 | https://landchad.net/rss.xml 21 | https://based.cooking/index.xml 22 | https://artixlinux.org/feed.php \"tech\" 23 | https://www.archlinux.org/feeds/news/ \"tech\" 24 | https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/voidrice/commits/master.atom \"~LARBS dotfiles\"" 25 | 26 | ### FUNCTIONS ### 27 | 28 | installpkg() { 29 | pacman --noconfirm --needed -S "$1" >/dev/null 2>&1 30 | } 31 | 32 | error() { 33 | # Log to stderr and exit with failure. 34 | printf "%s\n" "$1" >&2 35 | exit 1 36 | } 37 | 38 | welcomemsg() { 39 | whiptail --title "Welcome!" \ 40 | --msgbox "Welcome to Luke's Auto-Rice Bootstrapping Script!\\n\\nThis script will automatically install a fully-featured Linux desktop, which I use as my main machine.\\n\\n-Luke" 10 60 41 | 42 | whiptail --title "Important Note!" --yes-button "All ready!" \ 43 | --no-button "Return..." \ 44 | --yesno "Be sure the computer you are using has current pacman updates and refreshed Arch keyrings.\\n\\nIf it does not, the installation of some programs might fail." 8 70 45 | } 46 | 47 | getuserandpass() { 48 | # Prompts user for new username and password. 49 | name=$(whiptail --inputbox "First, please enter a name for the user account." 10 60 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&1) || exit 1 50 | while ! echo "$name" | grep -q "^[a-z_][a-z0-9_-]*$"; do 51 | name=$(whiptail --nocancel --inputbox "Username not valid. Give a username beginning with a letter, with only lowercase letters, - or _." 10 60 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&1) 52 | done 53 | pass1=$(whiptail --nocancel --passwordbox "Enter a password for that user." 10 60 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&1) 54 | pass2=$(whiptail --nocancel --passwordbox "Retype password." 10 60 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&1) 55 | while ! [ "$pass1" = "$pass2" ]; do 56 | unset pass2 57 | pass1=$(whiptail --nocancel --passwordbox "Passwords do not match.\\n\\nEnter password again." 10 60 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&1) 58 | pass2=$(whiptail --nocancel --passwordbox "Retype password." 10 60 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&1) 59 | done 60 | } 61 | 62 | usercheck() { 63 | ! { id -u "$name" >/dev/null 2>&1; } || 64 | whiptail --title "WARNING" --yes-button "CONTINUE" \ 65 | --no-button "No wait..." \ 66 | --yesno "The user \`$name\` already exists on this system. LARBS can install for a user already existing, but it will OVERWRITE any conflicting settings/dotfiles on the user account.\\n\\nLARBS will NOT overwrite your user files, documents, videos, etc., so don't worry about that, but only click if you don't mind your settings being overwritten.\\n\\nNote also that LARBS will change $name's password to the one you just gave." 14 70 67 | } 68 | 69 | preinstallmsg() { 70 | whiptail --title "Let's get this party started!" --yes-button "Let's go!" \ 71 | --no-button "No, nevermind!" \ 72 | --yesno "The rest of the installation will now be totally automated, so you can sit back and relax.\\n\\nIt will take some time, but when done, you can relax even more with your complete system.\\n\\nNow just press and the system will begin installation!" 13 60 || { 73 | clear 74 | exit 1 75 | } 76 | } 77 | 78 | adduserandpass() { 79 | # Adds user `$name` with password $pass1. 80 | whiptail --infobox "Adding user \"$name\"..." 7 50 81 | useradd -m -g wheel -s /bin/zsh "$name" >/dev/null 2>&1 || 82 | usermod -a -G wheel "$name" && mkdir -p /home/"$name" && chown "$name":wheel /home/"$name" 83 | export repodir="/home/$name/.local/src" 84 | mkdir -p "$repodir" 85 | chown -R "$name":wheel "$(dirname "$repodir")" 86 | echo "$name:$pass1" | chpasswd 87 | unset pass1 pass2 88 | } 89 | 90 | refreshkeys() { 91 | case "$(readlink -f /sbin/init)" in 92 | *systemd*) 93 | whiptail --infobox "Refreshing Arch Keyring..." 7 40 94 | pacman --noconfirm -S archlinux-keyring >/dev/null 2>&1 95 | ;; 96 | *) 97 | whiptail --infobox "Enabling Arch Repositories for more a more extensive software collection..." 7 40 98 | pacman --noconfirm --needed -S \ 99 | artix-keyring artix-archlinux-support >/dev/null 2>&1 100 | grep -q "^\[extra\]" /etc/pacman.conf || 101 | echo "[extra] 102 | Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist-arch" >>/etc/pacman.conf 103 | pacman -Sy --noconfirm >/dev/null 2>&1 104 | pacman-key --populate archlinux >/dev/null 2>&1 105 | ;; 106 | esac 107 | } 108 | 109 | manualinstall() { 110 | # Installs $1 manually. Used only for AUR helper here. 111 | # Should be run after repodir is created and var is set. 112 | pacman -Qq "$1" && return 0 113 | whiptail --infobox "Installing \"$1\" manually." 7 50 114 | sudo -u "$name" mkdir -p "$repodir/$1" 115 | sudo -u "$name" git -C "$repodir" clone --depth 1 --single-branch \ 116 | --no-tags -q "https://aur.archlinux.org/$1.git" "$repodir/$1" || 117 | { 118 | cd "$repodir/$1" || return 1 119 | sudo -u "$name" git pull --force origin master 120 | } 121 | cd "$repodir/$1" || exit 1 122 | sudo -u "$name" \ 123 | makepkg --noconfirm -si >/dev/null 2>&1 || return 1 124 | } 125 | 126 | maininstall() { 127 | # Installs all needed programs from main repo. 128 | whiptail --title "LARBS Installation" --infobox "Installing \`$1\` ($n of $total). $1 $2" 9 70 129 | installpkg "$1" 130 | } 131 | 132 | gitmakeinstall() { 133 | progname="${1##*/}" 134 | progname="${progname%.git}" 135 | dir="$repodir/$progname" 136 | whiptail --title "LARBS Installation" \ 137 | --infobox "Installing \`$progname\` ($n of $total) via \`git\` and \`make\`. $(basename "$1") $2" 8 70 138 | sudo -u "$name" git -C "$repodir" clone --depth 1 --single-branch \ 139 | --no-tags -q "$1" "$dir" || 140 | { 141 | cd "$dir" || return 1 142 | sudo -u "$name" git pull --force origin master 143 | } 144 | cd "$dir" || exit 1 145 | make >/dev/null 2>&1 146 | make install >/dev/null 2>&1 147 | cd /tmp || return 1 148 | } 149 | 150 | aurinstall() { 151 | whiptail --title "LARBS Installation" \ 152 | --infobox "Installing \`$1\` ($n of $total) from the AUR. $1 $2" 9 70 153 | echo "$aurinstalled" | grep -q "^$1$" && return 1 154 | sudo -u "$name" $aurhelper -S --noconfirm "$1" >/dev/null 2>&1 155 | } 156 | 157 | pipinstall() { 158 | whiptail --title "LARBS Installation" \ 159 | --infobox "Installing the Python package \`$1\` ($n of $total). $1 $2" 9 70 160 | [ -x "$(command -v "pip")" ] || installpkg python-pip >/dev/null 2>&1 161 | yes | pip install "$1" 162 | } 163 | 164 | installationloop() { 165 | ([ -f "$progsfile" ] && cp "$progsfile" /tmp/progs.csv) || 166 | curl -Ls "$progsfile" | sed '/^#/d' >/tmp/progs.csv 167 | total=$(wc -l "/home/$name/.config/nvim/autoload/plug.vim" 200 | chown -R "$name:wheel" "/home/$name/.config/nvim" 201 | sudo -u "$name" nvim -c "PlugInstall|q|q" 202 | } 203 | 204 | makeuserjs(){ 205 | # Get the Arkenfox user.js and prepare it. 206 | arkenfox="$pdir/arkenfox.js" 207 | overrides="$pdir/user-overrides.js" 208 | userjs="$pdir/user.js" 209 | ln -fs "/home/$name/.config/firefox/larbs.js" "$overrides" 210 | [ ! -f "$arkenfox" ] && curl -sL "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/arkenfox/user.js/master/user.js" > "$arkenfox" 211 | cat "$arkenfox" "$overrides" > "$userjs" 212 | chown "$name:wheel" "$arkenfox" "$userjs" 213 | } 214 | 215 | finalize() { 216 | whiptail --title "All done!" \ 217 | --msgbox "Congrats! Provided there were no hidden errors, the script completed successfully and all the programs and configuration files should be in place.\\n\\nTo run the new graphical environment, log out and log back in as your new user, then run the command \"startx\" to start the graphical environment (it will start automatically in tty1).\\n\\n.t Luke" 13 80 218 | } 219 | 220 | ### THE ACTUAL SCRIPT ### 221 | 222 | ### This is how everything happens in an intuitive format and order. 223 | 224 | # Check if user is root on Arch distro. Install whiptail. 225 | pacman --noconfirm --needed -Sy libnewt || 226 | error "Are you sure you're running this as the root user, are on an Arch-based distribution and have an internet connection?" 227 | 228 | # Welcome user and pick dotfiles. 229 | welcomemsg || error "User exited." 230 | 231 | # Get and verify username and password. 232 | getuserandpass || error "User exited." 233 | 234 | # Give warning if user already exists. 235 | usercheck || error "User exited." 236 | 237 | # Last chance for user to back out before install. 238 | preinstallmsg || error "User exited." 239 | 240 | ### The rest of the script requires no user input. 241 | 242 | # Refresh Arch keyrings. 243 | refreshkeys || 244 | error "Error automatically refreshing Arch keyring. Consider doing so manually." 245 | 246 | for x in curl ca-certificates base-devel git ntp zsh dash; do 247 | whiptail --title "LARBS Installation" \ 248 | --infobox "Installing \`$x\` which is required to install and configure other programs." 8 70 249 | installpkg "$x" 250 | done 251 | 252 | whiptail --title "LARBS Installation" \ 253 | --infobox "Synchronizing system time to ensure successful and secure installation of software..." 8 70 254 | ntpd -q -g >/dev/null 2>&1 255 | 256 | adduserandpass || error "Error adding username and/or password." 257 | 258 | [ -f /etc/sudoers.pacnew ] && cp /etc/sudoers.pacnew /etc/sudoers # Just in case 259 | 260 | # Allow user to run sudo without password. Since AUR programs must be installed 261 | # in a fakeroot environment, this is required for all builds with AUR. 262 | trap 'rm -f /etc/sudoers.d/larbs-temp' HUP INT QUIT TERM PWR EXIT 263 | echo "%wheel ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL 264 | Defaults:%wheel,root runcwd=*" >/etc/sudoers.d/larbs-temp 265 | 266 | # Make pacman colorful, concurrent downloads and Pacman eye-candy. 267 | grep -q "ILoveCandy" /etc/pacman.conf || sed -i "/#VerbosePkgLists/a ILoveCandy" /etc/pacman.conf 268 | sed -Ei "s/^#(ParallelDownloads).*/\1 = 5/;/^#Color$/s/#//" /etc/pacman.conf 269 | 270 | # Use all cores for compilation. 271 | sed -i "s/-j2/-j$(nproc)/;/^#MAKEFLAGS/s/^#//" /etc/makepkg.conf 272 | 273 | manualinstall $aurhelper || error "Failed to install AUR helper." 274 | 275 | # Make sure .*-git AUR packages get updated automatically. 276 | $aurhelper -Y --save --devel 277 | 278 | # The command that does all the installing. Reads the progs.csv file and 279 | # installs each needed program the way required. Be sure to run this only after 280 | # the user has been created and has priviledges to run sudo without a password 281 | # and all build dependencies are installed. 282 | installationloop 283 | 284 | # Install the dotfiles in the user's home directory, but remove .git dir and 285 | # other unnecessary files. 286 | putgitrepo "$dotfilesrepo" "/home/$name" "$repobranch" 287 | rm -rf "/home/$name/.git/" "/home/$name/README.md" "/home/$name/LICENSE" "/home/$name/FUNDING.yml" 288 | 289 | # Write urls for newsboat if it doesn't already exist 290 | [ -s "/home/$name/.config/newsboat/urls" ] || 291 | echo "$rssurls" | sudo -u "$name" tee "/home/$name/.config/newsboat/urls" >/dev/null 292 | 293 | # Install vim plugins if not alread present. 294 | [ ! -f "/home/$name/.config/nvim/autoload/plug.vim" ] && vimplugininstall 295 | 296 | # Most important command! Get rid of the beep! 297 | rmmod pcspkr 298 | echo "blacklist pcspkr" >/etc/modprobe.d/nobeep.conf 299 | 300 | # Make zsh the default shell for the user. 301 | chsh -s /bin/zsh "$name" >/dev/null 2>&1 302 | sudo -u "$name" mkdir -p "/home/$name/.cache/zsh/" 303 | sudo -u "$name" mkdir -p "/home/$name/.config/abook/" 304 | sudo -u "$name" mkdir -p "/home/$name/.config/mpd/playlists/" 305 | 306 | # Make dash the default #!/bin/sh symlink. 307 | ln -sfT /bin/dash /bin/sh >/dev/null 2>&1 308 | 309 | # dbus UUID must be generated for Artix runit. 310 | dbus-uuidgen >/var/lib/dbus/machine-id 311 | 312 | # Use system notifications for Brave on Artix 313 | # Only do it when systemd is not present 314 | [ "$(readlink -f /sbin/init)" != "/usr/lib/systemd/systemd" ] && echo "export \$(dbus-launch)" >/etc/profile.d/dbus.sh 315 | 316 | # Enable tap to click 317 | [ ! -f /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/40-libinput.conf ] && printf 'Section "InputClass" 318 | Identifier "libinput touchpad catchall" 319 | MatchIsTouchpad "on" 320 | MatchDevicePath "/dev/input/event*" 321 | Driver "libinput" 322 | # Enable left mouse button by tapping 323 | Option "Tapping" "on" 324 | EndSection' >/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/40-libinput.conf 325 | 326 | # All this below to get Librewolf installed with add-ons and non-bad settings. 327 | 328 | whiptail --infobox "Setting browser privacy settings and add-ons..." 7 60 329 | 330 | browserdir="/home/$name/.librewolf" 331 | profilesini="$browserdir/profiles.ini" 332 | 333 | # Start librewolf headless so it generates a profile. Then get that profile in a variable. 334 | sudo -u "$name" librewolf --headless >/dev/null 2>&1 & 335 | sleep 1 336 | profile="$(sed -n "/Default=.*.default-default/ s/.*=//p" "$profilesini")" 337 | pdir="$browserdir/$profile" 338 | 339 | [ -d "$pdir" ] && makeuserjs 340 | 341 | # Kill the now unnecessary librewolf instance. 342 | pkill -u "$name" librewolf 343 | 344 | # Allow wheel users to sudo with password and allow several system commands 345 | # (like `shutdown` to run without password). 346 | echo "%wheel ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL" >/etc/sudoers.d/00-larbs-wheel-can-sudo 347 | echo "%wheel ALL=(ALL:ALL) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/shutdown,/usr/bin/reboot,/usr/bin/systemctl suspend,/usr/bin/wifi-menu,/usr/bin/mount,/usr/bin/umount,/usr/bin/pacman -Syu,/usr/bin/pacman -Syyu,/usr/bin/pacman -Syyu --noconfirm,/usr/bin/loadkeys,/usr/bin/pacman -Syyuw --noconfirm,/usr/bin/pacman -S -y --config /etc/pacman.conf --,/usr/bin/pacman -S -y -u --config /etc/pacman.conf --" >/etc/sudoers.d/01-larbs-cmds-without-password 348 | echo "Defaults editor=/usr/bin/nvim" >/etc/sudoers.d/02-larbs-visudo-editor 349 | mkdir -p /etc/sysctl.d 350 | echo "kernel.dmesg_restrict = 0" > /etc/sysctl.d/dmesg.conf 351 | 352 | # Cleanup 353 | rm -f /etc/sudoers.d/larbs-temp 354 | 355 | # Last message! Install complete! 356 | finalize 357 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/dwmblocks.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/dwmblocks.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/htop.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/htop.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/larbs.gif: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/larbs.gif -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/larbs.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/larbs.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/lf.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/lf.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/ncmpcpp-01.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/ncmpcpp-01.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/ncmpcpp-02.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/ncmpcpp-02.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/ncmpcpp-03.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/ncmpcpp-03.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/ncmpcpp-04.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/ncmpcpp-04.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/neomutt.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/neomutt.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/st.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/st.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/pix/windows-htop.jpg: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/8167485b114c181666fb1e98529a527f692fbf01/static/pix/windows-htop.jpg -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/progs.csv: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #TAG,NAME IN REPO (or git url),PURPOSE (should be a verb phrase to sound right while installing) 2 | ,xorg-server,"is the graphical server. This first one may take a while as it pulls many other dependencies first on clean installs." 3 | ,xorg-xwininfo,"allows querying information about windows." 4 | ,xorg-xinit,"starts the graphical server." 5 | ,xorg-xset,"utility for configuring and ajusting X server" 6 | ,polkit,"manages user policies." 7 | ,otf-libertinus,"provides the sans and serif fonts for LARBS." 8 | ,ttf-font-awesome,"provides extended glyph support." 9 | ,ttf-dejavu,"properly displays emojis." 10 | A,lf-git,"is an extensive terminal file manager that everyone likes." 11 | ,ueberzugpp,"enables previews in the lf file manager." 12 | ,bc,"is a mathematics language used for the dropdown calculator." 13 | ,xcompmgr,"is for transparency and removing screen-tearing." 14 | ,xorg-xprop,"is a tool for detecting window properties." 15 | ,arandr,"allows the user to customize monitor arrangements." 16 | ,dosfstools,"allows your computer to access dos-like filesystems." 17 | ,libnotify,"allows desktop notifications." 18 | ,dunst,"is a suckless notification system." 19 | ,calcurse,"terminal-based organizer for interactive and command line use" 20 | ,exfat-utils,"allows management of FAT drives." 21 | ,nsxiv,"is a minimalist image viewer." 22 | ,xwallpaper,"sets the wallpaper." 23 | ,ffmpeg,"can record and splice video and audio on the command line." 24 | ,ffmpegthumbnailer,"creates thumbnail previews of video files." 25 | ,gnome-keyring,"serves as the system keyring." 26 | A,gtk-theme-arc-gruvbox-git,"gives the dark GTK theme used in LARBS." 27 | ,python-qdarkstyle,"provides a dark Qt theme." 28 | ,neovim,"a tidier vim with some useful features" 29 | ,mpd,"is a lightweight music daemon." 30 | ,mpc,"is a terminal interface for mpd." 31 | ,mpv,"is the patrician's choice video player." 32 | ,man-db,"lets you read man pages of programs." 33 | ,ncmpcpp,"a ncurses interface for music with multiple formats and a powerful tag editor." 34 | ,newsboat,"is a terminal RSS client." 35 | A,librewolf-bin,"is the default browser of LARBS which also comes with ad-blocking and other sensible and necessary features by default." 36 | A,librewolf-extension-localcdn-bin,"local emulation of Content Delivery Networks." 37 | A,librewolf-extension-istilldontcareaboutcookies-bin,"removes annoying cookie banners" 38 | A,librewolf-extension-tridactyl-bin,"vim bindings in your browser." 39 | A,librewolf-extension-ublock-origin-bin,"the best ad blocker in town." 40 | A,arkenfox-user.js,"provides hardened security settings for Firefox and Librewolf to avoid Mozilla spyware and general web fingerprinting." 41 | ,noto-fonts,"is an expansive font package." 42 | ,noto-fonts-emoji,"is an emoji font." 43 | ,ntfs-3g,"allows accessing NTFS partitions." 44 | ,wireplumber,"is the audio system." 45 | ,pipewire-pulse,"gives pipewire compatibility with PulseAudio programs." 46 | ,pulsemixer,"is an audio controller." 47 | A,sc-im,"is an Excel-like terminal spreadsheet manager." 48 | ,maim,"can take quick screenshots at your request." 49 | A,abook,"is an offline addressbook usable by neomutt." 50 | ,unclutter,"hides an inactive mouse." 51 | ,unzip,"unzips zips." 52 | ,lynx,"is a terminal browser also used in LARBS for generating in-terminal previews of websites, emails and HTML files." 53 | ,xcape,"gives the special escape/super mappings of LARBS." 54 | ,xclip,"allows for copying and pasting from the command line." 55 | ,xdotool,"provides window action utilities on the command line." 56 | ,yt-dlp,"can download any YouTube video (or playlist or channel) when given the link." 57 | ,zathura,"is a pdf viewer with vim-like bindings." 58 | ,zathura-pdf-mupdf,"allows mupdf pdf compatibility in zathura." 59 | ,poppler,"manipulates .pdfs and gives .pdf previews and other .pdf functions." 60 | ,mediainfo,"shows audio and video information and is used in the file browser." 61 | ,atool,"manages and gives information about archives." 62 | ,fzf,"is a fuzzy finder tool used for easy selection and location of files." 63 | ,bat,"can highlight code output and display files and is used to generate previews in the file browser." 64 | ,xorg-xbacklight,"enables changing screen brightness levels." 65 | A,zsh-fast-syntax-highlighting-git,"provides syntax highlighting in the shell." 66 | A,task-spooler,"queues commands or files for download." 67 | A,simple-mtpfs,"enables the mounting of cell phones." 68 | A,htop-vim,"is a graphical and colorful system monitor." 69 | G,https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/dwmblocks.git,"serves as the modular status bar." 70 | G,https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/dmenu.git,"runs commands and provides a UI for selection." 71 | G,https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/st.git,"is my custom build of suckless's terminal emulator." 72 | G,https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/dwm.git,"is the window manager." 73 | A,mutt-wizard-git,"is a light-weight terminal-based email system." 74 | ,slock,"allows you to lock your computer, and quickly unlock with your password." 75 | ,socat,"is a utility which establishes two byte streams and transfers data between them." 76 | ,moreutils,"is a collection of useful unix tools." 77 | ,tesseract,"command-line OCR engine for advance maimpick" 78 | ,tesseract-data-eng,"english language pack for OCR" 79 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /static/style.css: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | html { 2 | background: black ; 3 | padding-bottom: 400px; 4 | } 5 | body { 6 | max-width: 750px; 7 | margin-left: auto; 8 | margin-right: auto; 9 | margin-top: 30px; 10 | background: #011 ; 11 | color: #eee; 12 | border-style: solid; 13 | border-width: 5px; 14 | border-color: #555; 15 | } 16 | 17 | 18 | main { 19 | padding: 1em ; 20 | } 21 | 22 | h1,h2,h3,h4 { 23 | text-align: center; 24 | } 25 | h1 { 26 | font-size: 48px; 27 | text-shadow: 3px 0 black, 3px 3px black, 0 3px black; 28 | color: #00ccff ; 29 | } 30 | 31 | h2 { 32 | color: #00bbdd ; 33 | } 34 | 35 | h3 { 36 | color: #00aabb ; 37 | } 38 | 39 | a { color: lightblue; } 40 | 41 | .image { 42 | margin: auto; 43 | } 44 | 45 | .qr { max-width: 150px ; padding: 10px } 46 | 47 | p img, li img, h1 img, h2 img, h3 img, h4 img { 48 | max-height: 1em; 49 | max-width: 1em; 50 | } 51 | 52 | pre { 53 | border: 1px solid lime ; 54 | border-radius: 20px ; 55 | padding: 1em ; 56 | margin: 1em ; 57 | white-space: pre-wrap; 58 | } 59 | 60 | code { 61 | border-radius: 5px ; 62 | overflow-wrap: break-word ; 63 | } 64 | 65 | code:not(pre code) { 66 | color: lime ; 67 | } 68 | 69 | aside { 70 | color: gray ; 71 | font-style: italic ; 72 | font-size: small ; 73 | } 74 | 75 | footer { 76 | text-align: center ; 77 | } 78 | 79 | 80 | .normal { 81 | align: center ; 82 | } 83 | 84 | .normal img { 85 | margin: auto ; 86 | max-width: 90% ; 87 | max-height: 400px ; 88 | display: block ; 89 | } 90 | 91 | figcaption { 92 | text-align: center ; 93 | display: block ; 94 | font-style: italic ; 95 | } 96 | 97 | kbd { 98 | border-radius: 5px; 99 | padding: 1px 2px ; 100 | min-width: 1em ; 101 | border: 1px solid black ; 102 | background: #222 ; 103 | color: white ; 104 | } 105 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------