airblade / voom

A simplest-thing-that-works Vim plugin manager. Use with Vim 8 or Pathogen.
MIT License
29 stars 9 forks source link
plugin-manager vim

voom: a simple Vim plugin manager

voom is a simplest-thing-that-works tool to manage your Vim plugins. It installs plugins, updates them, and uninstalls them.

It assumes:

voom is an alternative to vim-plug, Vundle, NeoBundle, vam, Vizadry, etc.

Features:

Installation

Voom works with both Vim and NeoVim.

Vim users: just follow the instructions below.

NeoVim users: follow the instructions below but:

If you use Pathogen instead of Vim packages, follow the instructions below but:

Create the installation directory

Create a ~/.vim/pack/voom/start (Vim) or ~/.config/nvim/pack/voom/start (NeoVim) directory and git-ignore everything in pack/voom/.

$ cd ~/.vim && mkdir -p pack/voom/start && echo 'pack/voom/' >> .gitignore
$ cd ~/.config/nvim && mkdir -p pack/voom/start && echo 'pack/voom/' >> .gitignore

Install the (n)voom scripts somewhere on your PATH

For example, if ~/bin is on your path:

$ curl -LSso ~/bin/voom https://raw.githubusercontent.com/airblade/voom/master/voom
$ curl -LSso ~/bin/nvoom https://raw.githubusercontent.com/airblade/voom/master/nvoom

Pathogen users: tell voom where to save your plugins:

$ alias voom='VIM_PLUGINS_DIR=~/.vim/bundle voom'

Declare your plugins in plugins and add the file to your repo

$ echo 'airblade/voom' > ~/.vim/plugins    # optional
$ voom edit                                # opens your editor so you can declare your plugins
$ git add ~/.vim/plugins

You don't need airblade/voom in your manifest – the voom script does all the work – but it makes editing the manifest a little nicer.

Usage

Declare your plugins in plugins, a plain-text manifest in your vim repo. Open your manifest with:

$ voom edit

Here's an example of a manifest:

# Comments start with a hash character.
# Note the plugin declarations are case-sensitive.

# Declare repos on GitHub with: username/repo.
tpope/vim-fugitive

# Declare repos on Gitlab or others with full URL:
https://github.com/tpope/vim-obsession
https://gitlab.com/hugoh/vim-auto-obsession

# Declare repos on your file system with the absolute path.
/Users/andy/code/src/vim-gitgutter
# Or with a tilde path.
~/code/src/vim-rooter

Run voom without arguments to install and uninstall plugins as necessary to match your manifest.

To update your online plugins:

$ voom update

If you just want to update one plugin:

$ voom update vim-fugitive

If you want to update plugins with minimal output:

$ voom update -q

Restart Vim to pick up changes to your plugins.

How does it work?

When voom installs a plugin:

When voom uninstalls a plugin:

[1] voom performs a shallow clone of depth 1. If you subsequently want a repo's full history, do git pull --unshallow.

Why is voom written in bash not Vim script?

Installing, updating, and uninstalling plugins simply involves making directory trees available at the appropriate locations on the file system. It's basic command-line stuff involving things like git, ln, rm. A shell script is the natural solution.

All a Vim script wrapper would do is call those same shell commands – but with all the problems that come with shelling out from Vim.

In this case the simplest thing that works is a shell script.

Intellectual Property

Copyright Andrew Stewart. Released under the MIT licence.