Introduction to Vim
The Vim package, which is an abbreviation for VI IMproved, contains a vi clone with extra features as compared to the original vi.
The default LFS instructions install vim as a part of the base system. If you would prefer to link vim against X, you should recompile vim to enable GUI mode. There is no need for special instructions since X support is automatically detected.
Note
Development versions of BLFS may not build or run some packages properly if LFS or dependencies have been updated since the most recent stable versions of the books.
Package Information
Vim Dependencies
Recommended
a graphical environment and GTK+-3.24.40
Optional
GPM-1.20.7, Lua-5.4.6, Ruby-3.3.0, and rsync-3.2.7
Installation of Vim
Note
If you recompile Vim to link against X and your X libraries are not on the root partition, you will no longer have an editor for use in emergencies. You may choose to install an additional editor, not link Vim against X, or move the current vim executable to the /bin
directory under a different name such as vi
.
Install Vim by running the following commands:
Note
If you intend to run the tests and have not installed Xorg in /usr, append LDFLAGS='-L$XORG_PREFIX/lib' to the configure line below.
echo '#define SYS_VIMRC_FILE "/etc/vimrc"' >> src/feature.h &&
echo '#define SYS_GVIMRC_FILE "/etc/gvimrc"' >> src/feature.h &&
./configure --prefix=/usr \
--with-features=huge \
--enable-gui=gtk3 \
--with-tlib=ncursesw &&
make
Note
If the global configuration file /etc/vimrc
references the VIMRUNTIME
environment variable, some tests may complain about being unable to find the corresponding directory and wait for user input. If this is the case, this file should be saved and removed before running the tests. Or if bubblewrap-0.8.0 is installed, it's also possible to create a lightweight container environment where this file is hidden and run the tests in the container.
To test the results, issue: make -j1 test, or bwrap --dev-bind / / --dev-bind /dev/null /etc/vimrc make -j1 test if running the tests with bubblewrap-0.8.0 and /etc/vimrc
hidden. Even if one of the tests fails to produce the file test.out
in src/testdir
, the remaining tests will still be executed. If all goes well, the log will report ALL DONE
. Some tests labelled as “flaky” may fail occasionally and can be ignored. The tests are known to fail if the output is redirected to a file, and also if they are run in a 'screen' session.
Note
Some color tests expect to be executed under the xterm terminal emulator.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
By default, Vim's documentation is installed in /usr/share/vim
. The following symlink allows the documentation to be accessed via /usr/share/doc/vim-9.0.2189
, making it consistent with the location of documentation for other packages:
ln -snfv ../vim/vim90/doc /usr/share/doc/vim-9.0.2189
If you wish to update the runtime files, issue the following command (requires rsync-3.2.7) to download it:
rsync -avzcP --exclude="/dos/" --exclude="/spell/" \
ftp.nluug.nl::Vim/runtime/ ./runtime/
And then install the updated runtime files and regenerate the tags
file, as the root
user issue:
make -C src installruntime &&
vim -c ":helptags /usr/share/doc/vim-9.0.2189" -c ":q"
Command Explanations
--with-features=huge
: This switch enables all the additional features available in Vim, including support for multibyte characters.
--with-tlib=ncursesw
: This switch forces Vim to link against the libncursesw
library.
--enable-gui=no
: This will prevent compilation of the GUI. Vim will still link against X, so that some features such as the client-server model or the x11-selection (clipboard) are still available.
--without-x
: If you prefer not to link Vim against X, use this switch.
--enable-luainterp
, --enable-perlinterp
, --enable-python3interp=dynamic
, --enable-tclinterp --with-tclsh=tclsh
, --enable-rubyinterp
: These options include the Lua, Perl, Python3, Tcl, or Ruby interpreters that allow using other application code in vim scripts. All the --enable-*
options can accept =dynamic
to dynamically load the interpreter when needed. This is required for Python 3 to prevent segmentation faults. For tcl, it is necessary to indicate the name of the tclsh executable, since configure only searches versioned names with old versions.
Configuring Vim
Config Files
/etc/vimrc
and ~/.vimrc
Configuration Information
Vim has an integrated spell checker which you can enable by issuing the following in a vim window:
:setlocal spell spelllang=ru
This setting will enable spell checking for the Russian language for the current session.
By default, Vim only installs spell files for the English language. If a spell file is not available for a language, then Vim will call the $VIMRUNTIME/plugin/spellfile.vim
plugin and will try to obtain the *.spl and optionally *.sug from the vim ftp server, by using the $VIMRUNTIME/plugin/netrwPlugin.vim
plugin.
Alternatively you can manually download the *.spl and *.sug files from: ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/runtime/spell/ and save them to ~/.vim/spell
or in /usr/share/vim/vim90/spell/
.
To find out what's new in Vim-9.0.2189 issue the following command:
:help version-9.0.2189
For additional information on setting up Vim configuration files, see The vimrc Files and https://vim.fandom.com/wiki/Example_vimrc.
Contents
A list of the reinstalled files, along with their short descriptions can be found in the LFS Vim Installation Instructions.
Installed Programs: gview, gvim, gvimdiff, gvimtutor, rgview, and rgvim
Installed Libraries: None
Installed Directory: /usr/share/vim
Short Descriptions
gview
|
starts gvim in read-only mode
|
gvim
|
is the editor that runs under X and includes a GUI
|
gvimdiff
|
edits two or three versions of a file with gvim and shows the differences
|
gvimtutor
|
teaches the basic keys and commands of gvim
|
rgview
|
is a restricted version of gview
|
rgvim
|
is a restricted version of gvim
|