The bootstrap script has 'set -euo pipefail' at the top. The font
check was 'fc-list 2>/dev/null | grep -qi "Maple Mono NF"'. With
pipefail enabled, this fails:
1. grep -q exits 0 as soon as it finds the first match
2. grep closing its stdin early sends SIGPIPE to fc-list
3. fc-list exits with 141 (SIGPIPE)
4. With pipefail, the pipeline returns 141, not 0
5. The 'if' evaluates 141 as false → NO-MATCH
6. Bootstrap re-installs the font even though it's already there
Discovered on kaiser: bootstrap kept failing at 'paru -S maplemono-nf-cn'
because the font was already installed but the check said it wasn't.
Fix: use bash string matching instead of a pipeline.
[[ "$(fc-list 2>/dev/null)" == *"Maple Mono NF"* ]]
This reads all output into a string (no pipe), then bash's built-in
glob match handles the test. No pipefail issue.
Kaiser bootstrap failed at 'paru -S maplemono-nf-cn' with
'sudo: a terminal is required to read the password'. paru doesn't
need sudo for the build itself (it builds as the user), but it does
call sudo internally for some package operations — and on kaiser
the sudoers config requires a TTY password for those calls.
--sudoloop runs sudo in the background, which avoids the TTY-prompt
issue entirely. The package still builds as the user; only the
internal sudo calls go through the background loop.
Kaiser's existing .zshrc had fzf-tab added to the plugins list —
it gives a navigable Tab completion menu with descriptions for each
match. Adding to the canonical plugin list so kaiser doesn't lose
functionality when the repo version overwrites the box-specific
one. Strictly additive: doesn't affect miche or other boxes.
Adds:
- fzf-tab to dot_zshrc.tmpl plugins array
- install_zsh_plugin Aloxaf/fzf-tab to run_once_20
run_once_20 runs BEFORE run_onchange_30 in the bootstrap chain, so
'command -v cargo' inside run_once_20 was always false on a fresh
box — cargo install bat was skipped, leaving bat missing on debian.
Move the bat install to run_onchange_30 (which runs last, after
rustup is installed). Restructure the script to:
1. Ensure cargo is installed (existing logic)
2. Install bat via cargo on debian only (new logic, gated by os_family)
This way the bootstrap chain becomes:
run_once_00 -> run_once_10 -> run_once_20 (apt packages, neovim, oh-my-zsh, font)
-> run_onchange_30 (rustup, then bat from crates.io)
Crouton currently has rustup installed but no bat (cargo install
in progress in background). Re-running chezmoi init will skip
run_once_20 (state recorded) and re-run run_onchange_30 (content
changed), which will see bat missing and trigger cargo install
automatically.
chsh asks for the user's password by default (PAM authentication).
In an interactive SSH session this works fine; in a non-interactive
chezmoi run it fails with 'PAM: Authentication failure' because
there's no TTY to prompt.
sudo chsh works because the script has already cached sudo
credentials via earlier 'sudo apt-get install' / 'sudo pacman'
calls in the same script run.
Crouton bootstrap was failing here after font install + neovim +
oh-my-zsh all succeeded — wasted ~10 minutes of bootstrap just for
the chsh step.
Discovered on crouton bootstrap: a fresh debian install may not
have fontconfig installed, so fc-cache is missing. The script's
font install step crashed at fc-cache, aborting the rest of the
bootstrap (cargo install bat never ran).
Fixes:
1. Add fontconfig to APT_PKGS so fc-cache and fc-list are present
on debian from the start (matches what's typically pre-installed
on most desktop distros but not on minimal server installs)
2. Wrap fc-cache in 'command -v' guard so if the package somehow
isn't installed, the script logs a warning and continues instead
of aborting the whole chain
Debian's 'bat' package is renamed 'batcat' to avoid clashing with an
unrelated Debian package. The rename makes .zshrc's 'alias cat=bat'
fail.
Install upstream bat via cargo instead — gets the real binary at
$HOME/.cargo/bin/bat, version-aligned with arch's pacman install.
Drop 'bat' from the debian apt install list (no more batcat conflict
to work around).
Same as fdfind -> fd. Debian renames the upstream 'bat' binary to
'batcat' because there's a different unrelated 'bat' package in the
distro. .zshrc aliases 'cat=bat' so without the symlink, the alias
fails on debian.
The tarball filename is nvim-linux-arm64.tar.gz but the extracted
directory inside it is also named nvim-linux-arm64. However, my
original code did $(basename nvim.tar.gz .tar.gz) which returns 'nvim'
(strips both the directory and the suffix), creating a symlink to
/opt/nvim/bin/nvim that pointed to a non-existent path.
Discovered on rye after the bootstrap appeared to succeed but nvim
wasn't findable. Fixed by hardcoding the extracted directory name
based on the arch case:
x86_64: nvim-linux64.tar.gz -> nvim-linux64
aarch64: nvim-linux-arm64.tar.gz -> nvim-linux-arm64
Same fix applied to:
- run_once_20-install-user-packages.sh.tmpl (initial install)
- dot_local/bin/update-neovim.sh (topgrade-time updates)
Verified on rye: /usr/local/bin/nvim -> /opt/nvim-linux-arm64/bin/nvim,
'nvim --version' returns 'NVIM v0.11.4'.
Pacstall tried to BUILD neovim from source (downloaded the v0.12.2
tarball and ran the build chain). On a Pi this is 5+ minutes plus
fragile — pacstall's connection broke during download.
Switch to direct binary tarball install:
1. Pinned to NVIM_TARGET_VERSION='v0.11.4' in two places:
- run_once_20-install-user-packages.sh.tmpl (initial install)
- dot_local/bin/update-neovim.sh (topgrade-time updates)
2. Both use the same install logic: detect arch via uname -m, download
the right tarball (nvim-linux-arm64.tar.gz for aarch64), extract
to /opt, symlink /usr/local/bin/nvim. Idempotent — if installed
version == target, no-op.
3. Topgrade config has a [commands] entry that runs the update script
after system updates. To upgrade neovim across all boxes: edit
NVIM_TARGET_VERSION in dot_local/bin/update-neovim.sh, commit,
push, run topgrade.
4. Removed run_once_05-install-pacstall.sh.tmpl entirely — pacstall
isn't worth the install footprint for one package.
The pacstall installer has its own dep install logic that handles edge
cases (e.g. debian-trixie dropped spdx-licenses from apt, so the
installer has a fallback to fetch the .deb directly from
ftp.debian.org and install via 'apt install /path/to/deb'). My script
was duplicating that logic with a strict apt-get install that failed
because spdx-licenses isn't in trixie apt.
Fix: install only the absolute minimum (curl, wget, ca-certificates,
sudo) so the installer can fetch and verify its own deps. Trust the
installer.
Three changes:
1. NEW run_once_05-install-pacstall.sh.tmpl (debian-only)
Installs pacstall via its official installer. Pacstall is an
AUR-like package manager for debian/ubuntu, with neovim at
0.12.2-1 (current as of bootstrap). The installer requires
root and prompts for 'install axel?', so we run it under
sudo with NON_INTERACTIVE=true and stdin redirected from /dev/null.
2. UPDATE run_once_20-install-user-packages.sh.tmpl
On debian, prefer pacstall over the GitHub tarball when
pacstall is available. The tarball fallback remains for the
case where pacstall install failed or isn't wanted.
3. NEW dot_config/topgrade/topgrade.toml
Topgrade's built-in pacstall step auto-detects pacstall and
runs 'pacstall -U -Up' (update repo + upgrade packages).
Built-in chezmoi step also auto-detects chezmoi. So our
topgrade config just sets pre_sudo=true for password caching
and ignore_failures for node.
Two bugs hit on rye:
1. neovim tarball URL hardcoded to nvim-linux64.tar.gz (x86_64 only).
On aarch64 boxes (rye is arm64), curl would 404 the tarball, the
unpack would create a binary that won't run, or apt's bundled
neovim might not even be installed.
2. The 'apt's neovim is too old' branch only ran if apt had
successfully installed an old neovim. If apt didn't install
neovim at all (or installed a recent enough version), the
tarball fallback never triggered. On rye, the script reached
the final 'nvim --version' verification line and crashed with
'command not found'.
Fix:
- Detect arch via uname -m, map to correct tarball name
(x86_64 -> nvim-linux64.tar.gz, aarch64 -> nvim-linux-arm64.tar.gz)
- If command -v nvim returns false at all, skip the version check
entirely and go straight to the GitHub tarball
- If apt's neovim IS recent enough (>= 0.9), keep it and skip the
tarball
- Final 'nvim --version' verification preceded by a PATH-ensure
for /usr/local/bin in case the freshly-installed tarball binary
isn't yet on PATH for this script's environment
Verified template renders cleanly on arch.
Script claimed to be arch-only in its comment but had no actual guard.
The body always ran, so on debian it tried pacman-key (which doesn't
exist), failed with 'command not found', and aborted the whole bootstrap
chain (run_once_20 and run_onchange_30 never executed).
Fixes:
1. Wrap entire body in {{ if eq .os_family "arch" }} ... {{ end }} so
the script is a no-op on debian (logs a skip message instead of dying)
2. Prepend sudo to pacman-key, pacman -U, pacman -Syu, pacman -S, and
grep /etc/pacman.conf — same user-vs-root pattern that bit run_once_00
chezmoi runs scripts as the invoking user, not root. run_once_00 was
calling apt-get/pacman directly, which fails on debian with
'Permission denied' on /var/lib/apt/lists/lock and on arch with
similar pacman lock errors. Same pattern was already correct in
run_once_20. Mirror that here.
This is the bug that blocked rye on the second attempt.
chezmoi runs run_once_* scripts as the invoking user (uid != 0).
The earlier check [[ $(id -u) -ne 0 ]] && die ... killed the script
immediately when invoked via 'chezmoi apply' or 'chezmoi init --apply'
from a normal user session.
The scripts use sudo internally for package operations (pacman/apt),
so elevation happens correctly. The id -u check was wrong: it belongs
in a script that's *meant* to be invoked as root directly, not in a
chezmoi-managed script.
debian-stable's /etc/os-release has no ID_LIKE field. Template crashed
with 'map has no entry for key idLike' when chezmoi init ran on rye.
Two fixes:
1. hasKey() guard around .chezmoi.osRelease.idLike so missing key
doesn't error out
2. Flip contains() arg order: sprig's signature is contains(substr, str),
not contains(str, substr). Was checking backwards.
Tested against:
- miche (ID=debian-derivative with ID_LIKE=arch) -> os_family=arch
- empty ID_LIKE fallback (debian-stable) -> falls through to .id=debian
-> os_family=debian
Anonymous read is enabled on the forge, so a freshly-installed box can
clone + init without needing SSH keys pre-configured. SSH stays as the
push URL on the main workstation.
- Arch: paru -S maplemono-nf-cn (AUR package, installed via Chaotic-AUR)
- Debian: download MapleMono-NF.zip from subframe7536/Maple-font v7.9
release, extract to ~/.local/share/fonts, run fc-cache
- Idempotent: skips if fc-list already shows Maple Mono NF
- Pinned to v7.9 (20.6MB); bump MAPLE_FONT_VERSION when upgrading
Also documented in README that the default Maple Mono NF in nvim
init.lua will Just Work on every box thanks to the bootstrap.