Upgrade and update (which is a bit redundant as upgrade does an update.)
take a prohibitively long time on both of my machines. Instead I'll
manually manage that and just use refresh instead.
This is a very fragile implementation of this, but I didn't want to add
any dependencies to this script since I want it to be able to portable
above all else. If anyone has a better solution I would love to hear it.
I've reorganized some of the fzf dependency some. There are large number
of resources I need from the fzf repo that I have been omitting because
zplug does no work well with a repo that both has both bins and plugins.
Instead I've been manually managing the fzf.zsh files and the fzf-tmux
then using the binary from fzf-bin. This nominally worked for zsh it
wasnone functioning for other things that used fzf as a dependency.
Additionally this broke the rule of don't write what you don't have to
mantra of this project.
So I found a rather weird issue. The makefile was evaling the
conditional of a target before that target is called.
`make install` is a empty target with a ordered dependency: `init` and
`update`. In the `init` script section it will install the `~/.zplug`
zsh dependency, and the update script checks to see if that target
exist, aborting if it doesn't. The issue is that running `make install`
will install the `~/.zplug` dir, then report that the dir doesn't exist.
Where running `make init && make update` will work as expected.
There is probably some flag in make to resolve this, but I was unable to
to find any documentation for this.