- Add the ‘dunst’, ‘zsh’, ‘mcron’, and ‘mbsync’ modules.
- Tell Make that any ‘*.el’ files ar “precious”, meaning that when a ‘.elc’ file
was generated from a ‘.el’ file that was itself generated from a ‘.org’ file,
the ‘.el’ file isn't just an intermediate file and should not be deleted.
- Change the ‘install’ and ‘clean’ to use the ‘*-stow’ and ‘*-clean’ rules set
up for each module.
- Add configuration for ‘outline-minor-mode’ and change the headings to adhere
to that configuration.
- Stop using the ‘build/’ directory, tangle all the files to the same directory
as the source files, and use stow, not cp, to install them. The only exception
is the XDG files, which now have their specific ‘xdg-stow’ rule. This is
necessary because programs using these files will overwrite a symbolic link
they find and replace it with a new file, overwriting my settings.
- Add some files that were missing, and rename some files to follow the existing
convention to make them easy to tangle.
- Add xsession. Instead of requiring each of my machines to setup their own
‘.xsession’ add one that should work for all of them.
- Use M4 for the Xresources database. I didn’t want the X11 project to be aware
of all the configuration files that could be added in there and I was able to
figure out how to have it load all of the configuration files in the
‘Xresources.d’ directory. Now each configuration can inject properties into the
X resources database.
- Have ‘.xsession’ load all of the scripts in ‘.config/X11/Xsession.d’. Each
configuration can now inject some script to run when X starts.
- Have ‘.xsession’ load a machine-specific script so that each machine can
override what it does when X starts.
The comment in ‘stow-home’ claims that ‘.stowrc’ doesn’t support variable
expansion. I don’t know if I couldn’t figure it out before or if stow has been
updated since then, but it seems to work fine now.