Name | Last Update | Last Commit 6e1bd532164 – version bumps for homebrew, nodejs, ruby to fix... | history |
---|---|---|---|
config | |||
lib | |||
manifests | |||
modules | |||
script | |||
shared | |||
vendor | |||
.gitignore | |||
.rbenv-version | |||
Gemfile | |||
Gemfile.lock | |||
Puppetfile | |||
Puppetfile.lock | |||
README.md |
README.md
Our Boxen
This is a template Boxen project designed for your organization to fork and modify appropriately. The Boxen rubygem and the Boxen puppet modules are only a framework for getting things done. This repository template is just a basic example of how to do things with them.
Getting Started
- Install XCode Command Line Tools and/or full XCode.
- Create a new repository on GitHub as your user for your Boxen. (eg.
wfarr/my-boxen
). Make sure it is a private repository! Get running like so:
mkdir -p ~/src/my-boxen cd ~/src/my-boxen git init git remote add upstream https://github.com/boxen/our-boxen git fetch upstream git co -b master upstream/master git remote add origin https://github.com/wfarr/my-boxen git push origin master script/boxen
Close and reopen your Terminal. If you have a shell config file (eg.
~/.bashrc
) you'll need to add this at the very end:[ -f /opt/boxen/env.sh ] && source /opt/boxen/env.sh
, and reload your shell.Confirm the Boxen env has loaded:
boxen --env
Now you have your own my-boxen repo that you can hack on. You may have noticed we didn't ask you to fork the repo. This is because when our-boxen goes open source that'd have some implications about your fork also potentially being public. That's obviously quite bad, so that's why we strongly suggest you create an entirely separate repo and simply pull the code in, as shown above.
What You Get
This template project provides the following by default:
- Homebrew
- Git
- Hub
- DNSMasq w/ .dev resolver for localhost
- NVM
- RBenv
- Full Disk Encryption requirement
- NodeJS 0.4
- NodeJS 0.6
- NodeJS 0.8
- Ruby 1.8.7
- Ruby 1.9.2
- Ruby 1.9.3
- Ack
- Findutils
- GNU-Tar
Customizing
You can always check out the number of existing modules we already
provide as optional installs under the
boxen organization. These modules are all
tested to be compatible with Boxen. Use the Puppetfile
to pull them
in dependencies automatically whenever boxen
is run. You'll have to
make sure your "node" (Puppet's term for your laptop, basically)
includes or requires them. You can do this by either modifying
manifests/site.pp
for each module, or we would generally recommend
you create a module for your organization (eg. modules/github
) and
create an environment class in that. Then you need only adjust
manifests/site.pp
by doing include github::environment
or
what-have-you for your organization.
For organization projects (read: repositories that people will be working in), please see the documentation in the projects module template we provide.
For per-user configuration that doesn't need to be applied globally to everyone, please see the documentation in the people module template we provide.
Binary packages
We support binary packaging for everything in Homebrew, RBEnv, and NVM.
See config/boxen.rb
for the environment variables to define.