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The following instructions assume that your home directory contains a .vimrc file, a .vim directory and a .gvimrc file (optional). Move the .vimrc and .gvimrc files into the .vim directory: mv .vimrc ~/.vim/vimrc mv .gvimrc ~/.vim/gvimrc Create symbolic links so that ~/.vimrc points to the ~/.vim/vimrc file: ln -s ~/.vim/vimrc ~/.vimrc ln -s ~/.vim/gvimrc ~/.gvimrc Change to the .vim directory, and initialize it as a git repository: cd ~/.vim git init Create a README file, and paste installation instructions into it (see example README). Add all files, and make an initial commit: git add . git commit -m "Initial commit" I suggest publishing your dotvim files to github: it’s really easy to set up an account, and they host open source projects for free. In the video, I demonstrate how to publish a git repository to github. Keep your plugins in git The traditional method for installing Vim plugins is to copy each script that is distributed with the plugin into the corresponding .vim subdirectory. For example, if you wanted to install Fugitive.vim (a git wrapper for Vim), you would copy the documentation file into .vim/doc, and copy the plugin file into .vim/plugin. You could then check these in to your git repository, and they could be syncronised across machines as easily as the rest of your configuration files. But you lose something by doing this. The Fugitive plugin itself is kept under version control with git. It would be much better if you could keep it that way. Pathogen.vim The pathogen plugin makes it possible to cleanly install plugins as a bundle. Rather than having to place all of your plugins side by side in the same directory, you can keep all of the files for each individual plugin together in one directory. This makes installation more straightforward, and also simplifies the tasks of upgrading and even removing a plugin if you decide you no longer need it. To install Pathogen, download the script and place it in your .vim/autoload directory (if the directory doesn’t exist, you’ll have to create it). There are a couple of lines that you should add to your .vimrc file to activate pathogen. call pathogen#runtime_append_all_bundles() call pathogen#helptags() It is essential that these lines are called before enabling filetype detection, so I would recommend putting them at the top of your vimrc file. Install plugins as submodules With pathogen installed, it’s now possible to keep the files for each plugin together, which means that every plugin can be kept in its own git repository. The best way to do this is to use git submodules, which are designed especially for the purpose of keeping git repositories within a git repository. To install the fugitive plugin as a git submodule, take the following steps: cd ~/.vim mkdir ~/.vim/bundle git submodule add http://github.com/tpope/vim-fugitive.git bundle/fugitive git add . git commit -m "Install Fugitive.vim bundle as a submodule." Installing your Vim environment on another machine Once your vim configuration is under version control, it’s quite straightforward to import your settings to any machine that has git installed. If you followed the instructions above to put your vimrc and plugins in a dotvim directory, then you can follow these steps to synchronise them to another machine: cd ~ git clone http://github.com/username/dotvim.git ~/.vim ln -s ~/.vim/vimrc ~/.vimrc ln -s ~/.vim/gvimrc ~/.gvimrc cd ~/.vim git submodule init git submodule update As Marcin Kulik points out in the comments below, the last two git commands can be rolled in to one: git submodule update --init. Upgrading a plugin bundle At some point in the future, the fugitive plugin might be updated. To fetch the latest changes, go into the fugitive repository, and pull the latest version: cd ~/.vim/bundle/fugitive git pull origin master Upgrading all bundled plugins You can use the foreach command to execute any shell script in from the root of all submodule directories. To update to the latest version of each plugin bundle, run the following: git submodule foreach git pull origin master
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