Provided by: rcm_1.3.4-1_all bug

NAME

     lsrc — show dotfiles files managed by rcm

SYNOPSIS

     lsrc [-FhqVv] [-B hostname] [-d dir] [-I excl_pat] [-S excl_pat] [-s excl_pat] [-t tag] [-U excl_pat]
          [-u excl_pat] [-x excl_pat] [files ...]

DESCRIPTION

     This program lists all configuration files, both the sources in the dotfiles directories and the
     destinations in your home directory.  See rcup(1), the DIRECTORY LAYOUT section, for details on the
     directory layout.  It supports these options:

     -B HOSTNAME  treat host-HOSTNAME as the host-specific directory instead of computing it based on the
                  computer's hostname

     -d DIR       list dotfiles from the DIR. This can be specified multiple times.

     -F           show symbols next to each file indicating status information. Supported symbols are @ which
                  indicates that the file is a symlink, $ which indicates it's a symlinked directory, and X to
                  indicate that the file is a copy. More details on copied files and symlinked directories can
                  be found in rcrc(5) under the documentation on COPY_ALWAYS and SYMLINK_DIRS, respectively.

     -h           show usage instructions.

     -I excl_pat  include the files that match the given pattern. This is applied after any -x options. It uses
                  the same pattern language as -x; more details are in the EXCLUDE PATTERN section. Note that
                  you may have to quote the exclude pattern so the shell does not evaluate the glob.

     -S excl_pat  symlink the directories that match the given pattern. See EXCLUDE PATTERN for more details.
                  This option can be repeated. You may need to quote the pattern to prevent the shell from
                  swallowing the glob.

     -s excl_pat  if a directory matches the given pattern, recur inside of it instead of symlinking. See
                  EXCLUDE PATTERN for more details. This is the opposite of the -S option, and can be used to
                  undo it or the SYMLINK_DIRS setting in your rcrc(5) configuration. It can be repeated, and the
                  pattern may need to be quoted to protect it from your shell.

     -t TAG       list dotfiles according to TAG

     -U excl_pat  the rc files or directories matching this pattern will not be symlinked or created with a
                  leading dot. See EXCLUDE PATTERN for more details. This option can be repeated. You may need
                  to quote the pattern to prevent the shell from swallowing the glob.

     -u excl_pat  if an rc file or directory matches the given pattern, it must be dotted. See EXCLUDE PATTERN
                  for more details. This is the opposite of the -U option, and can be used to undo it or the
                  UNDOTTED setting in your rcrc(5) configuration. This option can be repeated. You may need to
                  quote the pattern to prevent the shell from swallowing the glob.

     -V           show the version number.

     -v           increase verbosity. This can be repeated for extra verbosity.

     -q           decrease verbosity

     -x excl_pat  exclude the files that match the given pattern. See EXCLUDE PATTERN for more details. This
                  option can be repeated. Quote the pattern if it contains a valid shell glob.

     files ...    only list the specified file(s)

EXCLUDE PATTERN

     The exclude pattern specifies a colon-separated pair of dotfiles directory and file glob. The dotfiles
     directory is optional and, if omitted, defaults to *, which is a special token that matches any dotfiles
     directory. The file glob is relative to the dotfiles directory, ignoring meta directories. A colon combines
     them.

     For example, to ignore all emacs-related items from the thoughtbot-dotfiles directory, use the exclude
     pattern:

           thoughtbot-dotfiles:*emacs*

     To ignore any bash_profile file, use the pattern:

           *:bash_profile

     Or more simply:

           bash_profile

     Since exclude patterns are often valid shell globs, be sure to quote them. See the caveats noted in BUGS
     when using an exclude pattern.

ENVIRONMENT

     RCRC  User configuration file. Defaults to ~/.rcrc.

FILES

     ~/.dotfiles ~/.rcrc

SEE ALSO

     mkrc(1), rcdn(1), rcup(1), rcrc(5), rcm(7)

AUTHORS

     lsrc is maintained by Mike Burns <mburns@thoughtbot.com> and thoughtbot: http://thoughtbot.se