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vimproc is a great asynchronous execution library for Vim. It is a fork of
proc.vim by Yukihiro Nakadaira. I added some features and fixed some bugs and
I'm maintaining it now. Instead of an external shell (example: 'shell'),
vimproc uses an external DLL file.
Supported platforms:
Windows 32/64bit (Compiled by MinGW or Visual Studio)
macOS (10.5 or later)
Linux
Cygwin
Solaris
BSD (but cannot check)
Android (experimental)
Not supported platforms:
Other UNIX platforms
Install
Manual Install
Clone this repo
Build vimproc's native extensions (see Building for details)
Copy autoload/*, lib/* and plugin/* files to your 'runtimepath'
directory (see :help runtimepath).
dein.vim
If you use dein.vim, you can
update and build vimproc automatically. This is the recommended package manager.
vimproc uses a pathogen compatible structure, so it can be managed with
pathogen, however you must remember to
compile after cloning the repo.
git clone https://github.com/Shougo/vimproc.vim.git ~/.vim/bundle/vimproc.vim
cd~/.vim/bundle/vimproc.vim
make
Building
Note: You must use GNU make to build vimproc.
You can install the dll using |VimProcInstall|. If you are having any trouble
or want to build manually then read on.
Linux
$ make
macOS
Note: Users of macOS 10.15 (Catalina) cannot directly use this library with the system-provided vi. (SIP prevents binaries in the write-only /usr/bin directory from calling dlopen on unsigned libraries like vimproc_mac.so.) The simplest solution is to build or install another version of vi in a non-SIP protected location. For example, using homebrew, brew install vim (or nvim) will install an unrestricted executable in /usr/local/bin. (Don't forget to set up aliases or $PATH so that you don't accidentally invoke the system vi.)
$ make
Note: If you want to build for multiple architectures, you can use ARCHS and CC variables.
Build for i386 and x86-64:
$ make ARCHS='i386 x86_64'
FreeBSD
$ gmake
If you want to use BSD make, use the platform specific makefile:
$ make -f make_bsd.mak
Solaris
$ gmake
Note: If you want to use Sun Compiler, you can use SUNCC variable.
$ gmake SUNCC=cc
Windows
Note: In Windows, using MinGW is recommended.
Note: If you have not "gcc" binary, you must change $CC value.
Windows using MinGW (32bit Vim):
$ mingw32-make -f make_mingw32.mak
Windows using MinGW (If you want to use MinGW compiler in Cygwin):
$ mingw32-make -f make_mingw32.mak CC=mingw32-gcc
Windows using MinGW (64bit Vim):
$ mingw32-make -f make_mingw64.mak
Windows using Visual Studio (32bit/64bit Vim):
$ nmake -f make_msvc.mak
You should run this from VS command prompt.
The architecture will be automatically detected, but you can also specify the
architecture explicitly. E.g.: