TL;DR:
example-tree.json
:
{
"file": "Hello, world!",
"dir": {
"subfile": "Content.\n",
"subdir": {}
},
"symlink": ["link", "target path"],
"script": ["script", "#!/bin/sh\necho Howdy!"]
}
cat example-tree.json | json2dir
Here, four files will be added to the current directory: file
, dir
, symlink
, and script
.
One way to use this tool is in conjunction with Nix to generate the JSON describing the wanted dotfiles. Look at home.md for details.
Note that using Nix is not a requirement. You can also use JSON directly, generate it with Cue, or do something totally different. Possibilities are endless!
- Objects represent directories.
- Strings represent contents of files.
- Arrays are used to represent symlinks and executable files.
- Arrays of the form
["link", target]
represent symlinks, second element representing the target of the symlink. - Arrays of the form
["script", content]
represent executable files, second representing the content of the script.
Regular JSON constraints apply. In particular, the input must be UTF-8. Currently, there's no way to represent files containing non-UTF-8 content.
When using this utility to create files for other users, care must be taken in order to prevent TOCTOU (time of check, time of use) attacks (e.g. with symlinks).
flake.nix
contains a Nix package for json2dir
.
To build the project, run cargo build
or nix build
. If you're using rustup
, rust-toolchain.toml
is provided.
Useful scripts may be found in the scripts
folder.
A Nix cache is available at https://json2dir.cachix.org.
Feel free to fork/open issues/submit PRs/etc.