diff --git a/bin/mailsync b/bin/mailsync index 02e4f98..1d676b8 100755 --- a/bin/mailsync +++ b/bin/mailsync @@ -20,17 +20,17 @@ pgrep -x mbsync >/dev/null && { echo "mbsync is already running." ; exit ;} # archive, notmuch and the GPG home. This is done by searching common profile # files for variable assignments. This is ugly, but there are few options that # will work on the maximum number of machines. -eval `grep -h -- \ - "^\(export \)\?\(MBSYNCRC\|PASSWORD_STORE_DIR\|NOTMUCH_CONFIG\|GNUPGHOME\)=" \ - "$HOME/.profile" "$HOME/.bash_profile" "$HOME/.zprofile" "$HOME/.bashrc" "$HOME/.zshrc" "$HOME/.pam_environment" 2>/dev/null` +eval "$(grep -h -- \ + "^\s*\(export \)\?\(MBSYNCRC\|PASSWORD_STORE_DIR\|NOTMUCH_CONFIG\|GNUPGHOME\)=" \ + "$HOME/.profile" "$HOME/.bash_profile" "$HOME/.zprofile" "$HOME/.bashrc" "$HOME/.zshrc" "$HOME/.pam_environment" 2>/dev/null)" # One alternative to this kind of command would be marking the script for # /bin/sh -l. That might cause other problems on other particular setups that # do more complicated things on login, or those people who assign environmental # variables in shell rc files. -# This variable might be required for soysdemd users, but it will break the -# script on Artix runit. -# export DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS=unix:path=/run/user/$(id -u)/bus +case "$(readlink -f /sbin/init)" in + *systemd*) export DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS=unix:path=/run/user/$(id -u)/bus ;; +esac export GPG_TTY=$TTY [ -n "$MBSYNCRC" ] && alias mbsync="mbsync -c $MBSYNCRC" || MBSYNCRC="$HOME/.mbsyncrc"