(Change <tt> to <code>, perhaps also minor tweak.) |
(This method is deprecated since hg.debian.org doesn't exist anymore) Tag: Visual edit |
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#Get dependencies. On Unix-like systems, <code>apt-get build-dep vim-gnome</code> or similar can do this for you. On Windows, there are no dependencies, unless you want to build Vim to use an external DLL for Lua, Perl, Python, Ruby, or Scheme (and you can install these later). |
#Get dependencies. On Unix-like systems, <code>apt-get build-dep vim-gnome</code> or similar can do this for you. On Windows, there are no dependencies, unless you want to build Vim to use an external DLL for Lua, Perl, Python, Ruby, or Scheme (and you can install these later). |
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#:<div style="font-size:80%; line-height:1.1em">'''Note:''' <code>apt-get</code> is for Debian, Ubuntu and similar distributions. On other distributions, the corresponding program may be called <code>yum, yast, zypper,</code> or otherwise, and the way to invoke it may vary widely. It is usually the same program as the one used on your distro to install, update, or uninstall any software package, and if you are lucky, there may be a manpage for it.</div> |
#:<div style="font-size:80%; line-height:1.1em">'''Note:''' <code>apt-get</code> is for Debian, Ubuntu and similar distributions. On other distributions, the corresponding program may be called <code>yum, yast, zypper,</code> or otherwise, and the way to invoke it may vary widely. It is usually the same program as the one used on your distro to install, update, or uninstall any software package, and if you are lucky, there may be a manpage for it.</div> |
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− | #[ |
+ | #[https://github.com/vim/vim Download the Vim source from GitHub] or [[Getting the Vim source with Mercurial|from the Mercurial mirror]]. |
#Change to the directory with the Vim source code and run "make". |
#Change to the directory with the Vim source code and run "make". |
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#Do a "make install" or manually copy necessary files to somewhere Vim knows to use. See {{help|$VIMRUNTIME}} for details and our tip on [[Version independent installation of Vim on Windows|manually locating your Vim files]]. |
#Do a "make install" or manually copy necessary files to somewhere Vim knows to use. See {{help|$VIMRUNTIME}} for details and our tip on [[Version independent installation of Vim on Windows|manually locating your Vim files]]. |
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− | |||
− | ==Overview== |
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==Building Vim on Ubuntu== |
==Building Vim on Ubuntu== |
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libgtk2.0-dev libatk1.0-dev libbonoboui2-dev \ |
libgtk2.0-dev libatk1.0-dev libbonoboui2-dev \ |
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libcairo2-dev libx11-dev libxpm-dev libxt-dev |
libcairo2-dev libx11-dev libxpm-dev libxt-dev |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | |||
+ | For ruby support, you need for package ruby-dev: |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | sudo apt-get install ruby-dev |
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</pre> |
</pre> |
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</pre> |
</pre> |
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− | ===Building Vim .debs on Ubuntu/Debian=== |
+ | ===Building Vim .debs on Ubuntu/Debian (Outdated)=== |
Commands to get started and build the first time. |
Commands to get started and build the first time. |
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<pre> |
<pre> |
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$ cd .. |
$ cd .. |
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</pre> |
</pre> |
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+ | |||
+ | ==Building Vim on Windows== |
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+ | There are a couple options for a compiler on Windows. Vim ships with makefiles for Cygwin, MinGW, and Visual Studio. Visual Studio express is free to download and use from Microsoft and should work with the supplied makefile. |
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+ | |||
+ | In general, you will invoke a make program and pass in the desired build options, like: |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | make FEATURES=HUGE GUI=yes gvim.exe |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | |||
+ | Some more details and examples here: |
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+ | *[[Build Vim in Windows with Visual Studio]] |
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+ | *[[Build Python-enabled Vim on Windows with MinGW]] |
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+ | |||
+ | After you've built Vim, run the compiled executable and do <code>:version</code> to verify it built as you intended. Then you're ready to install; close the Vim instance before you continue. |
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+ | |||
+ | One option is to just install manually every time without any nice installer options like having .bat files in your system path to launch Vim from the command line, a default _vimrc, shell context-menu "Edit with Vim" item, etc.: |
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+ | |||
+ | But most of the time you want to install Vim somewhere everybody on the computer can use it, and integrate it as if you installed from Bram's binary. |
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+ | |||
+ | To do this, see the details in the INSTALLpc.txt file in the src directory of the code you downloaded. Basically it all boils down to: |
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+ | #Create a directory like <code>C:\Program Files\vim\vim74</code> or <code>C:\Vim\vim74</code> |
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+ | #Copy all .exe files from src (which you compiled) to that <code>vim74</code> directory. |
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+ | #Copy xxd.exe from src/xxd into <code>vim74</code> |
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+ | #Copy the .dll file from src/GvimExt into <code>vim74</code> |
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+ | #Copy all files and folders from the runtime directory in your downloaded source into that <code>vim74</code> directory |
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+ | #Run a cmd.exe prompt ''as administrator'' (i.e. right-click and choose "run as administrator" to give yourself admin rights in UAC). |
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+ | #Go to the <code>vim74</code> directory and run the install.exe file you copied over in step (2). |
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+ | |||
+ | This will put Vim into a spot everybody can use it, and give you options to create default _vimrc, user config areas, .bat files for command-line use, "edit with Vim" context menu, etc. |
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==Miscellaneous== |
==Miscellaneous== |
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The configuration option <code>--with-compiledby</code> can be used to set the exact "Compiled by" text (for example, to include an email address). |
The configuration option <code>--with-compiledby</code> can be used to set the exact "Compiled by" text (for example, to include an email address). |
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+ | |||
+ | If you are using Perlbrew and want to build Vim with perl (and why wouldn't you want that if you are using Perlbrew?) you must disable Perlbrew before building with <code>$ perlbrew off</code> and build with system perl, which hopefully isn't too outdated. As of early 2016 Ubuntu is at 5.18 which isn't all that bad! |
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+ | ==Using patches== |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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''Tips, some of which need updating'' |
''Tips, some of which need updating'' |
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*[[Building vim with color on HP-UX]] |
*[[Building vim with color on HP-UX]] |
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*[[Compile a separate copy of Vim for Python coding]] |
*[[Compile a separate copy of Vim for Python coding]] |
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*[[Getting the Vim source with Mercurial]] |
*[[Getting the Vim source with Mercurial]] |
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*[[Get latest releases for syntax highlighting, runtime, plugins etc]] |
*[[Get latest releases for syntax highlighting, runtime, plugins etc]] |
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− | *[[Easily keep runtime files up to date]] |
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*[[:Category:Building Vim|Category of tips for building Vim]] |
*[[:Category:Building Vim|Category of tips for building Vim]] |
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''External sites with how-to information on building Vim'' |
''External sites with how-to information on building Vim'' |
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==Comments== |
==Comments== |
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{{todo}} |
{{todo}} |
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− | *Need info on how to install the shell extensions (e.g. "edit with Vim" context menu entry) on Windows. Do we have a tip for this already? |
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− | *On Windows systems, investigate what <code>install.exe</code> is: note that it is often not needed; what does it do? how is it used? does it work? |
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+ | Merge or link to some of these? |
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− | When you build Vim on Windows, <code>install.exe</code> is built from <code>src/dosinst.c</code>. Its purpose is to add registry entries for the "Edit with Vim" entry on the Windows Explorer context menu (see {{help|gui_w32.txt}}). It is possible to manually change the registry to add or modify "Edit with Vim". The relevant tips are: |
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*[[VimTip636|636 Adding Vim to MS-Windows File Explorer Menu]] |
*[[VimTip636|636 Adding Vim to MS-Windows File Explorer Menu]] |
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*[[VimTip861|861 Right click in Windows Explorer to open gvim in explorer mode]] |
*[[VimTip861|861 Right click in Windows Explorer to open gvim in explorer mode]] |
Latest revision as of 22:59, 28 January 2019
This tip presents an overview of how to download the source for Vim, then build a Vim executable, and install it on your system. You need to download the C source code and the runtime files (standard plugins, help files, and more). You may also need to download dependencies (packages required for building), and you will need a compiler/linker (free versions are available for almost all systems). See where to download Vim if you want to download the Vim program to run on your system, without building it yourself.
Any platform[]
It is easy to build Vim from the source code. In general, it takes four steps:
- Get dependencies. On Unix-like systems,
apt-get build-dep vim-gnome
or similar can do this for you. On Windows, there are no dependencies, unless you want to build Vim to use an external DLL for Lua, Perl, Python, Ruby, or Scheme (and you can install these later).- Note:
apt-get
is for Debian, Ubuntu and similar distributions. On other distributions, the corresponding program may be calledyum, yast, zypper,
or otherwise, and the way to invoke it may vary widely. It is usually the same program as the one used on your distro to install, update, or uninstall any software package, and if you are lucky, there may be a manpage for it.
- Download the Vim source from GitHub or from the Mercurial mirror.
- Change to the directory with the Vim source code and run "make".
- Do a "make install" or manually copy necessary files to somewhere Vim knows to use. See :help $VIMRUNTIME for details and our tip on manually locating your Vim files.
Building Vim on Ubuntu[]
You need the required development packages on Ubuntu to build the GUI:
sudo apt-get install libncurses5-dev libgnome2-dev libgnomeui-dev \ libgtk2.0-dev libatk1.0-dev libbonoboui2-dev \ libcairo2-dev libx11-dev libxpm-dev libxt-dev
For ruby support, you need for package ruby-dev:
sudo apt-get install ruby-dev
Commands to build and install GUI Vim:
$ cd vim7 $ cd src $ make distclean $ ./configure --with-features=huge --enable-gui=gnome2 $ make $ sudo make install
Building Vim .debs on Ubuntu/Debian (Outdated)[]
Commands to get started and build the first time.
$ sudo apt-get install mercurial libssl-dev $ sudo apt-get build-dep vim $ hg clone http://hg.debian.org/hg/pkg-vim/vim $ cd vim $ hg checkout unstable $ debian/rules update-orig $ dpkg-buildpackage -i -I $ cd ..
And to update Vim .debs
$ cd vim $ hg pull $ hg update $ debian/rules update-orig $ dpkg-buildpackage -i -I $ cd ..
Building Vim on Windows[]
There are a couple options for a compiler on Windows. Vim ships with makefiles for Cygwin, MinGW, and Visual Studio. Visual Studio express is free to download and use from Microsoft and should work with the supplied makefile.
In general, you will invoke a make program and pass in the desired build options, like:
make FEATURES=HUGE GUI=yes gvim.exe
Some more details and examples here:
- Build Vim in Windows with Cygwin
- Build Vim in Windows with Visual Studio
- Build Python-enabled Vim on Windows with MinGW
After you've built Vim, run the compiled executable and do :version
to verify it built as you intended. Then you're ready to install; close the Vim instance before you continue.
One option is to just install manually every time without any nice installer options like having .bat files in your system path to launch Vim from the command line, a default _vimrc, shell context-menu "Edit with Vim" item, etc.:
But most of the time you want to install Vim somewhere everybody on the computer can use it, and integrate it as if you installed from Bram's binary.
To do this, see the details in the INSTALLpc.txt file in the src directory of the code you downloaded. Basically it all boils down to:
- Create a directory like
C:\Program Files\vim\vim74
orC:\Vim\vim74
- Copy all .exe files from src (which you compiled) to that
vim74
directory. - Copy xxd.exe from src/xxd into
vim74
- Copy the .dll file from src/GvimExt into
vim74
- Copy all files and folders from the runtime directory in your downloaded source into that
vim74
directory - Run a cmd.exe prompt as administrator (i.e. right-click and choose "run as administrator" to give yourself admin rights in UAC).
- Go to the
vim74
directory and run the install.exe file you copied over in step (2).
This will put Vim into a spot everybody can use it, and give you options to create default _vimrc, user config areas, .bat files for command-line use, "edit with Vim" context menu, etc.
Miscellaneous[]
In Vim, the command :version
includes "Compiled by user@host" (the user and computer host names are provided by the operating system).
The configuration option --with-compiledby
can be used to set the exact "Compiled by" text (for example, to include an email address).
If you are using Perlbrew and want to build Vim with perl (and why wouldn't you want that if you are using Perlbrew?) you must disable Perlbrew before building with $ perlbrew off
and build with system perl, which hopefully isn't too outdated. As of early 2016 Ubuntu is at 5.18 which isn't all that bad!
Using patches[]
- Following works but is obsolete; see above for information on using Mercurial.
- The following applies to Unix-based systems, and Windows.
Download the source from ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/unix/
vim-7.2.tar.bz2
(7.1MB)
Download the extras from ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/extra/
vim-7.2-extra.tar.gz
(0.8MB)vim-7.2-lang.tar.gz
(1.4MB)
Expand each in the same directory, for example somewhere/vim/build/72/
Download the patches from ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/patches/7.2/
Apply the patches.
Configure.
Build (compile and link).
Install.
See also[]
Tips, some of which need updating
- Building vim with color on HP-UX
- Compile a separate copy of Vim for Python coding
- Getting the Vim source with Mercurial
- Get latest releases for syntax highlighting, runtime, plugins etc
- Category of tips for building Vim
External sites with how-to information on building Vim
Comments[]
TO DO
- Where to get other stuff included in the standard installation, like
diff.exe
.
Merge or link to some of these?
- 636 Adding Vim to MS-Windows File Explorer Menu
- 861 Right click in Windows Explorer to open gvim in explorer mode
- 1003 Windows file associations
- 1225 Open files in multiple tabs using the Windows Context Menu
- 1314 Add open-in-tabs context menu for Windows
- 1542 Vim On Vista (the introductory para)
The only tip with info on diff.exe is:
Make sure the library names are correct for all or most distributions. In the Linux dist I'm using it seems the libraries are named <X>-devel instead of <X>-dev. Michael Greene 15:50 Feb 27, 2011 (UTC)