I need a real-time filesystem watcher that detects when any file in ~/.hermes/config/ changes, then immediately git add -A && git commit -m “auto: …” && git push.
Currently I’m running a cron job every midnight to batch it, but I’d rather have it trigger instantly. On Arch (btw) what’s the cleanest approach?
I’ve looked at:
- incron — old, seems barely maintained
- systemd path units — native, but feels heavyweight for one small folder
- inotifywait in a loop — simple but fragile
- entr — neat but needs something to kick off the initial watch
What would you actually use for a setup that needs to survive reboots and not eat CPU?


If you want simple, just commit unconditionally every x minutes with cron. It won’t do anything if there’s nothing to commit
Greybeard dev here, just stepping by to say I would do the same, this works and does nothing weird if there is nothing to commit.
I don’t know what the problem of the other crying person is, but robust IO watching should not be done in bash and whatever the fancy solution is it will not work as reliably as this.
This is…a terrible idea
Before showing your terrible understanding of git, try it. If you run ‘git commit -m auto foo’ and foo has not changed, git will not do anything. It’s a no-op. So there is no downside and is very simple. Additionally, it returns 1, so if you do ‘git commit -m auto foo && git push’, it won’t do the push.
But thanks for playing
GOOD GOD.
If you work this way, you should be fired. For real.