Major fixes: - Fix path nesting by preserving original relative paths - Resolve metadata timestamp serialization issues - Complete stash -> restore workflow now working - Clean directory structure: files/config/app/file.yml (no nesting) - Proper symlink creation and restoration - Enhanced metadata tracking with readable timestamps The GNU Stow replacement is now fully functional with: - Intelligent file/directory level stashing - Clean path structure preservation - Complete restoration capabilities - Metadata-driven path reconstruction |
||
|---|---|---|
| .guix-channel | ||
| modules/stash | ||
| test-source | ||
| .dev-notes.md | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| DEVLOG.md | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README.md | ||
| USER_GUIDE.md | ||
| channels.scm.example | ||
| minimal-package.scm | ||
| stash | ||
| stash-enhanced.scm | ||
| stash.log | ||
| stash.scm | ||
README.md
Stash
stash is a command-line utility written in Guile Scheme that helps organize your files by moving them to a target location and creating symbolic links (symlinks) in their original location. While it's great for managing dotfiles, it works with any directories you want to organize.
Installation
There are two ways to install Stash:
Method 1: Using Guix (Recommended)
# Install from the local package definition
guix package --install-from-file=minimal-package.scm
# Configure your shell environment:
# For Fish shell (add to ~/.config/fish/config.fish):
set -gx GUIX_PROFILE $HOME/.guix-profile
set -gx PATH $GUIX_PROFILE/bin $PATH
# For Bash (add to ~/.bashrc):
export GUIX_PROFILE="$HOME/.guix-profile"
. "$GUIX_PROFILE/etc/profile"
# For Zsh (add to ~/.zshrc):
export GUIX_PROFILE="$HOME/.guix-profile"
. "$GUIX_PROFILE/etc/profile"
Method 2: Manual Installation
-
Prerequisites:
- Guile Scheme 3.0.9 or later
- A Unix-like environment (Linux/macOS)
-
Installation Steps:
# Clone the repository git clone https://github.com/yourusername/stash.git cd stash # Add to your ~/.guile load path mkdir -p ~/.guile.d/site/3.0 ln -s $(pwd)/modules/stash ~/.guile.d/site/3.0/ # Optional: Add a convenient alias to your shell config (~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc) echo 'alias stash="guile -L $(pwd) $(pwd)/stash.scm"' >> ~/.bashrc source ~/.bashrc -
Verify Installation:
# Test if stash works stash --help
Shell Integration
After installation, you might want to ensure the stash command is easily accessible:
-
Using Guix Installation:
- The command should be available after setting up your shell environment as shown above
- If not, create a symbolic link:
ln -sf ~/.guix-profile/bin/stash ~/.local/bin/stash
-
Using Manual Installation:
-
Add an alias to your shell config:
# For Fish (in ~/.config/fish/config.fish): alias stash="guile -L /path/to/stash /path/to/stash/stash.scm" # For Bash/Zsh: alias stash='guile -L /path/to/stash /path/to/stash/stash.scm'
-
Key Features
- Flexible Usage: Works with any directories, not just config files
- Interactive Mode: Option to interactively specify target directory
- Recursive Processing: Can process entire directory trees
- Advanced Path Handling: Supports home directory expansion and relative paths
- Symlink Management: Creates and manages symlinks while maintaining directory structure
- Ignore Patterns: Supports local and global ignore patterns
Usage
Stash offers several ways to organize your files:
-
Interactive Mode (easiest for beginners):
# Move Pictures directory to a backup location guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/Pictures --interactive -
Explicit Paths:
# Move Documents to backup while keeping symlink guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/Documents/notes --target ~/backup/notes # Move project to code archive guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/projects/webapp --target ~/code/archive/webapp -
Recursive Mode (for entire directory trees):
# Archive entire projects directory guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/projects --target ~/archive/projects --recursive -
Dot Syntax (after files are stashed):
# Recreate symlink for previously stashed directory cd ~/backup/notes guile -L . stash.scm .
Common Use Cases
-
Organizing Dotfiles:
# Move config files to dotfiles repo guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/.config --target ~/.dotfiles/config --recursive -
Backing Up Documents:
# Move documents to external drive guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/Documents --target /media/backup/docs --recursive -
Project Organization:
# Archive old project while keeping it accessible guile -L . stash.scm --source ~/projects/old-app --target ~/archive/projects/old-app
Path Handling
Stash handles various path formats:
- Absolute paths:
/home/user/documents - Relative paths:
../documents,./notes - Home directory:
~/documents - Dot notation:
.,..
Ignore Patterns
Stash supports two types of ignore files:
.stash-local-ignore: Directory-specific ignore patterns.stash-global-ignore: Global ignore patterns
Default ignore patterns:
.gitdirectories.stash-local-ignorefiles.DS_Storefiles
Project Structure
stash/
├── stash.scm # Main entry point
├── modules/
│ └── stash/
│ ├── paths.scm # Path handling
│ ├── tree.scm # Tree operations
│ ├── package.scm # Package management
│ ├── file-ops.scm # File operations
│ ├── log.scm # Logging
│ ├── conflict.scm # Conflict resolution
│ ├── colors.scm # Terminal colors
│ └── help.scm # Help messages
├── README.md # Project overview
├── USER-GUIDE.md # Comprehensive user documentation
├── DEVLOG.md # Development log
└── LICENSE # GNU GPL v3
Dependencies
- Guile Scheme 3.0.9
- Standard Guile libraries
Development
See DEVLOG.md for detailed development history and recent changes.
License
stash is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3. See the LICENSE file for more information.