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chezmoi frequently asked questions

How can I quickly check for problems with chezmoi on my machine?

Run:

$ chezmoi doctor

Anything ok is fine, anything warning is only a problem if you want to use the related feature, and anything error indicates a definite problem.

How do I edit my dotfiles with chezmoi?

There are four popular approaches:

  1. Use chezmoi edit $FILE. This will open the source file for $FILE in your editor, including . For extra ease, use chezmoi edit --apply $FILE to apply the changes when you quit your editor.
  2. Use chezmoi cd and edit the files in the source directory directly. Run chezmoi diff to see what changes would be made, and chezmoi apply to make the changes.
  3. If your editor supports opening directories, run chezmoi edit with no arguments to open the source directory.
  4. Edit the file in your home directory, and then either re-add it by running chezmoi add $FILE or chezmoi re-add. Note that re-add doesn't work with templates.

Do I have to use chezmoi edit to edit my dotfiles?

No. chezmoi edit is a convenience command that has a couple of useful features, but you don't have to use it. You can also run chezmoi cd and then just edit the files in the source state directly. After saving an edited file you can run chezmoi diff to check what effect the changes would have, and run chezmoi apply if you're happy with them.

chezmoi edit provides the following useful features:

  • It opens the correct file in the source state for you, so you don't have to know anything about source state attributes.
  • If the dotfile is encrypted in the source state, then chezmoi edit will decrypt it to a private directory, open that file in your $EDITOR, and then re-encrypt the file when you quit your editor. That makes encryption more transparent to the user. With the --diff and --apply options you can see what would change and apply those changes without having to run chezmoi diff or chezmoi apply. Note also that the arguments to chezmoi edit are the files in their target location.

What are the consequences of "bare" modifications to the target files? If my .zshrc is managed by chezmoi and I edit ~/.zshrc without using chezmoi edit, what happens?

Until you run chezmoi apply your modified ~/.zshrc will remain in place. When you run chezmoi apply chezmoi will detect that ~/.zshrc has changed since chezmoi last wrote it and prompt you what to do. You can resolve differences with a merge tool by running chezmoi merge ~/.zshrc.

How can I tell what dotfiles in my home directory aren't managed by chezmoi? Is there an easy way to have chezmoi manage a subset of them?

chezmoi unmanaged will list everything not managed by chezmoi. You can add entire directories with chezmoi add.

How can I tell what dotfiles in my home directory are currently managed by chezmoi?

chezmoi managed will list everything managed by chezmoi.

If there's a mechanism in place for the above, is there also a way to tell chezmoi to ignore specific files or groups of files (e.g. by directory name or by glob)?

By default, chezmoi ignores everything that you haven't explicitly added. If you have files in your source directory that you don't want added to your destination directory when you run chezmoi apply add their names to a file called .chezmoiignore in the source state.

Patterns are supported, and you can change what's ignored from machine to machine. The full usage and syntax is described in the reference manual.

If the target already exists, but is "behind" the source, can chezmoi be configured to preserve the target version before replacing it with one derived from the source?

Yes. Run chezmoi add will update the source state with the target. To see diffs of what would change, without actually changing anything, use chezmoi diff.

Once I've made a change to the source directory, how do I commit it?

You have several options:

  • chezmoi cd opens a shell in the source directory, where you can run your usual version control commands, like git add and git commit.
  • chezmoi git runs git in the source directory and pass extra arguments to the command. If you're passing any flags, you'll need to use -- to prevent chezmoi from consuming them, for example chezmoi git -- commit -m "Update dotfiles".
  • You can configure chezmoi to automatically commit and push changes to your source state, as described in the how-to guide.

I've made changes to both the destination state and the source state that I want to keep. How can I keep them both?

chezmoi merge will open a merge tool to resolve differences between the source state, target state, and destination state. Copy the changes you want to keep in to the source state.

Why does chezmoi convert all my template variables to lowercase?

This is due to a feature in github.com/spf13/viper, the library that chezmoi uses to read its configuration file. For more information see this GitHub issue.

chezmoi makes ~/.ssh/config group writeable. How do I stop this?

By default, chezmoi uses your system's umask when creating files. On most systems the default umask is 022 but some systems use 002, which means that files and directories are group writeable by default.

You can override this for chezmoi by setting the umask configuration variable in your configuration file, for example:

umask = 0o022

Note that this will apply to all files and directories that chezmoi manages and will ensure that none of them are group writeable. It is not currently possible to control group write permissions for individual files or directories. Please open an issue on GitHub if you need this.

Why does chezmoi cd spawn a shell instead of just changing directory?

chezmoi cd spawns a shell because it is not possible for a program to change the working directory of its parent process. You can add a shell function instead:

chezmoi-cd() {
    cd $(chezmoi source-path)
}

Typing chezmoi-cd will then change the directory of your current shell to chezmoi's source directory.

Why doesn't chezmoi use symlinks like GNU Stow?

Symlinks are first class citizens in chezmoi: chezmoi supports creating them, updating them, removing them, and even more advanced features not found elsewhere like having the same symlink point to different targets on different machines by using a template.

With chezmoi, you only use a symlink where you really need a symlink, in contrast to some other dotfile managers (e.g. GNU Stow) which require the use of symlinks as a layer of indirection between a dotfile's location (which can be anywhere in your home directory) and a dotfile's content (which needs to be in a centralized directory that you manage with version control). chezmoi solves this problem in a different way.

Instead of using a symlink to redirect from the dotfile's location to the centralized directory, chezmoi generates the dotfile as a regular file in its final location from the contents of the centralized directory. This approach allows chezmoi to provide features that are not possible when using symlinks, for example having files that encrypted, executable, private, or templates.

There's nothing special about dotfiles managed by chezmoi, whereas dotfiles managed with GNU Stow are special because they're actually symlinks to somewhere else.

The only advantage to using GNU Stow-style symlinks is that changes that you make to the dotfile's contents in the centralized directory are immediately visible, whereas chezmoi currently requires you to run chezmoi apply or chezmoi edit --apply. chezmoi will likely get an alternative solution to this too, see #752.

If you really want to use symlinks, then chezmoi provides a symlink mode which uses symlinks where possible.

You can configure chezmoi to work like GNU Stow and have it create a set of symlinks back to a central directory, but this currently requires a bit of manual work (as described in #167). chezmoi might get some automation to help (see #886 for example) but it does need some convincing use cases that demonstrate that a symlink from a dotfile's location to its contents in a central directory is better than just having the correct dotfile contents.

What are the limitations of chezmoi's symlink mode?

In symlink mode chezmoi replaces targets with symlinks to the source directory if the the target is a regular file and is not encrypted, executable, private, or a template.

Symlinks cannot be used for encrypted files because the source state contains the ciphertext, not the plaintext.

Symlinks cannot be used for executable files as the executable bit would need to be set on the file in the source directory and chezmoi uses only regular files and directories in its source state for portability across operating systems. This may change in the future.

Symlinks cannot be used for private files because git does not persist group and world permission bits.

Symlinks cannot be used for templated files because the source state contains the template, not the result of executing the template.

Symlinks cannot be used for entire directories because of chezmoi's use of attributes in the filename mangles entries in the directory, directories might have the exact_ attribute and contain empty files, and the directory's entries might not be usable with symlinks.

In symlink mode, running chezmoi add does not immediately replace the targets with a symlink. You must run chezmoi apply to create the symlinks.

Can I change how chezmoi's source state is represented on disk?

There are a number of criticisms of how chezmoi's source state is represented on disk:

  1. Not all possible file permissions can be represented.
  2. The long source file names are weird and verbose.
  3. Everything is in a single directory, which can end up containing many entries.

chezmoi's source state representation is a deliberate, practical compromise.

The dot_ attribute makes it transparent which dotfiles are managed by chezmoi and which files are ignored by chezmoi. chezmoi ignores all files and directories that start with . so no special whitelists are needed for version control systems and their control files (e.g. .git and .gitignore).

chezmoi needs per-file metadata to know how to interpret the source file's contents, for example to know when the source file is a template or if the file's contents are encrypted. By storing this metadata in the filename, the metadata is unambiguously associated with a single file and adding, updating, or removing a single file touches only a single file in the source state. Changes to the metadata (e.g. chezmoi chattr +template *target*) are simple file renames and isolated to the affected file.

If chezmoi were to, say, use a common configuration file listing which files were templates and/or encrypted, then changes to any file would require updates to the common configuration file. Automating updates to configuration files requires a round trip (read config file, update config, write config) and it is not always possible preserve comments and formatting.

chezmoi's attributes of executable_ and private_ only allow a the file permissions 0o644, 0o755, 0o600, and 0o700 to be represented. Directories can only have permissions 0o755 or 0o700. In practice, these cover all permissions typically used for dotfiles. If this does cause a genuine problem for you, please open an issue on GitHub.

File permissions and modes like executable_, private_, and symlink_ could also be stored in the filesystem, rather than in the filename. However, this requires the permissions to be preserved and handled by the underlying version control system and filesystem. chezmoi provides first-class support for Windows, where the executable_ and private_ attributes have no direct equivalents and symbolic links are not always permitted. By using regular files and directories, chezmoi avoids variations in the operating system, version control system, and filesystem making it both more robust and more portable.

chezmoi uses a 1:1 mapping between entries in the source state and entries in the target state. This mapping is bi-directional and unambiguous.

However, this also means that dotfiles that in the same directory in the target state must be in the same directory in the source state. In particular, every entry managed by chezmoi in the root of your home directory has a corresponding entry in the root of your source directory, which can mean that you end up with a lot of entries in the root of your source directory.

If chezmoi were to permit, say, multiple separate source directories (so you could, say, put dot_bashrc in a bash/ subdirectory, and dot_vimrc in a vim/ subdirectory, but have chezmoi apply map these to ~/.bashrc and ~/.vimrc in the root of your home directory) then the mapping between source and target states is no longer bidirectional nor unambiguous, which significantly increases complexity and requires more user interaction. For example, if both bash/dot_bashrc and vim/dot_bashrc exist, what should be the contents of ~/.bashrc? If you run chezmoi add ~/.zshrc, should dot_zshrc be stored in the source bash/ directory, the source vim/ directory, or somewhere else? How does the user communicate their preferences?

chezmoi has many users and any changes to the source state representation must be backwards-compatible.

In summary, chezmoi's source state representation is a compromise with both advantages and disadvantages. Changes to the representation will be considered, but must meet the following criteria, in order of importance:

  1. Be fully backwards-compatible for existing users.
  2. Fix a genuine problem encountered in practice.
  3. Be independent of the underlying operating system, version control system, and filesystem.
  4. Not add significant extra complexity to the user interface or underlying implementation.

gpg encryption fails. What could be wrong?

The gpg.recipient key should be ultimately trusted, otherwise encryption will fail because gpg will prompt for input, which chezmoi does not handle. You can check the trust level by running:

$ gpg --export-ownertrust

The trust level for the recipient's key should be 6. If it is not, you can change the trust level by running:

$ gpg --edit-key $recipient

Enter trust at the prompt and chose 5 = I trust ultimately.

chezmoi reports chezmoi: user: lookup userid NNNNN: input/output error

This is likely because the chezmoi binary you are using was statically compiled with musl and the machine you are running on uses LDAP or NIS.

The immediate fix is to use a package built for your distribution (e.g a .deb or .rpm) which is linked against glibc and includes LDAP/NIS support instead of the statically-compiled binary.

If the problem still persists, then please open an issue on GitHub.

chezmoi reports chezmoi: timeout or chezmoi: timeout obtaining persistent state lock

chezmoi will report this when it is unable to lock its persistent state (~/.config/chezmoi/chezmoistate.boltdb), typically because another instance of chezmoi is currently running and holding the lock.

This can happen, for example, if you have a run_ script that invokes chezmoi, or are running chezmoi in another window.

Under the hood, chezmoi uses bbolt which permits multiple simultaneous readers, but only one writer (with no readers).

Commands that take a write lock include add, apply, edit, forget, import, init, state, unmanage, and update. Commands that take a read lock include diff, status, and verify.

I'm getting errors trying to build chezmoi from source

chezmoi requires Go version 1.17 or later. You can check the version of Go with:

$ go version

For more details on building chezmoi, see the Contributing Guide.

What inspired chezmoi?

chezmoi was inspired by Puppet, but was created because Puppet is an overkill for managing your personal configuration files. The focus of chezmoi will always be personal home directory management. If your needs grow beyond that, switch to a whole system configuration management tool.

Why not use Ansible/Chef/Puppet/Salt, or similar to manage my dotfiles instead?

Whole system management tools are more than capable of managing your dotfiles, but are large systems that entail several disadvantages. Compared to whole system management tools, chezmoi offers:

  • Small, focused feature set designed for dotfiles. There's simply less to learn with chezmoi compared to whole system management tools.
  • Easy installation and execution on every platform, without root access. Installing chezmoi requires only copying a single binary file with no external dependencies. Executing chezmoi just involves running the binary. In contrast, installing and running a whole system management tool typically requires installing a scripting language runtime, several packages, and running a system service, all typically requiring root access.

chezmoi's focus and simple installation means that it runs almost everywhere: from tiny ARM-based Linux systems to Windows desktops, from inside lightweight containers to FreeBSD-based virtual machines in the cloud.

Can I use chezmoi to manage files outside my home directory?

In practice, yes, you can, but this is strongly discouraged beyond using your system's package manager to install the packages you need.

chezmoi is designed to operate on your home directory, and is explicitly not a full system configuration management tool. That said, there are some ways to have chezmoi manage a few files outside your home directory.

chezmoi's scripts can execute arbitrary commands, so you can use a run_ script that is run every time you run chezmoi apply, to, for example:

  • Make the target file outside your home directory a symlink to a file managed by chezmoi in your home directory.
  • Copy a file managed by chezmoi inside your home directory to the target file.
  • Execute a template with chezmoi execute-template --output=filename template where filename is outside the target directory.

chezmoi executes all scripts as the user executing chezmoi, so you may need to add extra privilege elevation commands like sudo or PowerShell start -verb runas -wait to your script.

chezmoi, by default, operates on your home directory but this can be overridden with the --destination command line flag or by specifying destDir in your config file, and could even be the root directory (/ or C:\). This allows you, in theory, to use chezmoi to manage any file in your filesystem, but this usage is extremely strongly discouraged.

If your needs extend beyond modifying a handful of files outside your target system, then existing configuration management tools like Puppet, Chef, Ansible, and Salt are much better suited - and of course can be called from a chezmoi run_ script. Put your Puppet Manifests, Chef Recipes, Ansible Modules, and Salt Modules in a directory ignored by .chezmoiignore so they do not pollute your home directory.

Where does the name "chezmoi" come from?

"chezmoi" splits to "chez moi" and pronounced /ʃeɪ mwa/ (shay-moi) meaning "at my house" in French. It's seven letters long, which is an appropriate length for a command that is only run occasionally.

What other questions have been asked about chezmoi?

See the issues on GitHub.

Where do I ask a question that isn't answered here?

Please open an issue on GitHub.

I like chezmoi. How do I say thanks?

Thank you! chezmoi was written to scratch a personal itch, and I'm very happy that it's useful to you. Please give chezmoi a star on GitHub, and if you're happy to share your public dotfile repo then tag it with chezmoi.

If you write an article or give a talk on chezmoi please inform the author (e.g. by opening an issue) so it can be added to chezmoi's media page.

Contributions are very welcome and every bug report, support request, and feature request helps make chezmoi better. Thank you :)