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Building Vim from source
Compiling Vim from source is actually not that difficult. Here's what you should do:
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First, install all the prerequisite libraries, including Git. For a Debian-like Linux distribution like Ubuntu, that would be the following:
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 python-dev \ python3-dev ruby-dev lua5.1 lua5.1-dev libperl-dev git
(If you know what languages you'll be using, feel free to leave out packages you won't need, e.g. Python2
python-dev
or Rubyruby-dev
. This principle heavily applies to the whole page.)For Fedora 20, that would be the following:
sudo yum install -y ruby ruby-devel lua lua-devel luajit \ luajit-devel ctags git python python-devel \ python3 python3-devel tcl-devel \ perl perl-devel perl-ExtUtils-ParseXS \ perl-ExtUtils-XSpp perl-ExtUtils-CBuilder \ perl-ExtUtils-Embed
This step is needed to rectify an issue with how Fedora 20 installs XSubPP:
# symlink xsubpp (perl) from /usr/bin to the perl dir sudo ln -s /usr/bin/xsubpp /usr/share/perl5/ExtUtils/xsubpp
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Remove vim if you have it already.
sudo apt-get remove vim vim-runtime gvim
On Ubuntu 12.04.2 you probably have to remove these packages as well:
sudo apt-get remove vim-tiny vim-common vim-gui-common vim-nox
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Once everything is installed, getting the source is easy.
Note: If you are using Python, your config directory might have a machine-specific name (e.g.
config-3.5m-x86_64-linux-gnu
). Check in /usr/lib/python[2/3/3.5] to find yours, and change thepython-config-dir
and/orpython3-config-dir
arguments accordingly.Add/remove the flags below to fit your setup. For example, you can leave out
enable-luainterp
if you don't plan on writing any Lua.Also, if you're not using vim 8.0, make sure to set the VIMRUNTIMEDIR variable correctly below (for instance, with vim 8.0a, use /usr/share/vim/vim80a). Keep in mind that some vim installations are located directly inside /usr/share/vim; adjust to fit your system:
cd ~ git clone https://github.com/vim/vim.git cd vim ./configure --with-features=huge \ --enable-multibyte \ --enable-rubyinterp \ --enable-pythoninterp \ --with-python-config-dir=/usr/lib/python2.7/config \ --enable-python3interp \ --with-python3-config-dir=/usr/lib/python3.5/config \ --enable-perlinterp \ --enable-luainterp \ --enable-gui=gtk2 --enable-cscope --prefix=/usr make VIMRUNTIMEDIR=/usr/share/vim/vim80
If you want to be able to easily uninstall vim use
checkinstall
.sudo apt-get install checkinstall cd ~/vim sudo checkinstall
Otherwise, you can use
make
to install.cd ~/vim sudo make install
Set vim as your default editor with
update-alternatives
.sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/editor editor /usr/bin/vim 1 sudo update-alternatives --set editor /usr/bin/vim sudo update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/vi vi /usr/bin/vim 1 sudo update-alternatives --set vi /usr/bin/vim
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Double check that you are in fact running the new Vim binary by looking at the output of
vim --version
.If you don't get gvim working (on ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS), try changing
--enable-gui=gtk2
to--enable-gui=gnome2
If you have problems, double check that you
configure
d using the correct Python config directory, as noted at the beginning of Step 3.These
configure
andmake
calls assume a Debian-like distro where Vim's runtime files directory is placed in/usr/share/vim/vim80/
, which is not Vim's default. Same thing goes for--prefix=/usr
in theconfigure
call. Those values may need to be different with a Linux distro that is not based on Debian. In such a case, try to remove the--prefix
variable in theconfigure
call and theVIMRUNTIMEDIR
in themake
call (in other words, go with the defaults).If you get stuck, here's some [other useful information on building Vim] (http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Building_Vim).