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gitemacsgit-submoduleselpa

Dotfiles repository: Switching from per-package Git submodules to ELPA while maintaining portability


I've been using Git submodules within my dotfiles repository to track each Emacs package that I use. With a package manager being built-in with Emacs 24, though, I'd like to switch to the more official and easier-to-use method.

My problem with switching: With my current Git submodule method, any clone of the dotfiles repository is guaranteed to contain all the referenced add-ons. Is there a built-in functionality within this package manager to allow synchronization of packages, so that any pull of the Git repo will contain the necessary packages (or have them all installable with a single command)?

If there's nothing like this built-in, is there a "post-package-install" hook that I can use to maintain a text-based list of packages (later readable with a custom command which installs the packages in the list)? Essentially I would like to keep my packages / package list under version control so that it is portable between computers.


Solution

  • I tried el-get by kindahero's suggestion, but this didn't work out too well for me.. it didn't load correctly — either by some bug in the code or by my lack of skill in Emacs Lisp (more likely the latter).

    I stumbled upon the Emacs Prelude project, and found a very simple snippet of code while browsing through the source:

    (require 'package)
    (add-to-list 'package-archives
                 '("marmalade" . "http://marmalade-repo.org/packages/") t)
    (package-initialize)
    
    (when (not package-archive-contents)
      (package-refresh-contents))
    
    (defvar prelude-packages
      '(auctex clojure-mode coffee-mode deft gist haml-mode
                     haskell-mode magit markdown-mode paredit projectile
                     sass-mode scss-mode yaml-mode yari yasnippet)
      "A list of packages to ensure are installed at launch.")
    
    (dolist (p prelude-packages)
      (when (not (package-installed-p p))
        (package-install p)))
    

    I shamelessly stole this for my own purposes, and it has been working great. I deleted almost all of my submodules by switching to the package manager (with the Marmalade repo).