Awesome
vimagit
Ease your git workflow within vim.
From a very single vim buffer, you can perform main git operations in few key press. To name a few:
- Visualize all diffs in your git repository.
- Stage file, hunks or even just parts of a hunk using a single key press.
- Write or amend your commit message and commit in the same buffer.
Take a look at TL;DR to start using it immediately. If you encounter any performance issue, take a look in the section performance.
Some screencasts:
- A simple asciicast
- A commented video presenting vimagit (thank you Mike Hartington!)
This workflow is 100% inspired from magnificent emacs Magit plugin.
Outstanding features
- Preview all your git changes in one unique buffer, folded at hunk level.
- Interactively stage/unstage/discard changes with one key press.
- Stage/unstage at file/hunk/line level.
- Write the commit message in the same buffer.
- From a hunk in magit buffer, jump to the file at the diff position.
- 100% VimL plugin, no external dependency (except git of course).
- Enhanced by external plugins: vim-gitgutter vim-airline
- Stable. All features are tested in continuous integration.
More to come:
- Add a push function, taking care if needed about the remote repository and branch #24 .
- Handle commit fixup! and squash!, with a smart git log popup #23 .
- Handle stash: add, pop, apply, drop #26 .
- Stage multiple hunks or file by visually selecting them #83 .
- Go through history, cherry-pick changes.
- Make vimagit more efficient for huge repositories, with a lot of diffs.
- Something is missing? Open an issue!
Why should I use vimagit, there are already plethora git plugins for vim?
- fugitive is a very complete plugin, with a lot of functions. I use it for years, and it is a fundamental tool in my workflow. But visualize your changes and staged them in broad number of files is really a pain.
- vim-gitgutter is very well integrated into vim, but without the ability to commit stages, it stays an informational plugin.
TL;DR
This is the minimal required set of command you must know to start playing with vimagit. See Mappings for a complete description.
To simply test vimagit, modify/add/delete/rename some files in a git repository and open vim.
:Magit
Open magit buffer with :Magit command.<C-n>
Jump to next hunk with<C-n>
, or move the cursor as you like. The cursor is on a hunk.S
While the cursor is on an unstaged hunk, pressS
in Normal mode: the hunk is now staged, and appears in "Staged changes" section (you can also unstage a hunk from "Staged section" withS
).CC
Once you have stage all the required changes, pressCC
.- Section "Commit message" is shown.
- Type your commit message in this section.
- To commit, go back in Normal mode, and press
CC
(or:w
if you prefer).
You just created your first commit with vimagit!
Performance
For various reasons, vimagit may be slow to refresh. A refresh happends every time you stage, unstage, commit or refresh the vimagit buffer. Currently, vimagit is quite dumb: every time the buffer is refreshed, it dumps everything and reconstruct the entire buffer. It could be smarter, but there are a lot of corner cases and it is quite a big work.
vimagit tends to be slow when:
- there is a lot of diff lines
- there are long lines
Possible solution:
Fold level
let g:magit_default_fold_level = 0
Change the default fold level. When fold level is set to 0, diff content are not print in the buffer. The buffer will show the files containing diffs. If you want to see the diff relative to file, move the cursor to the filename, and press<Enter>
.
In a near future, vimagit may try to be smart, and adapt the foldlevel automatically, based on the bumber of diff lines.
Contribute
Any contribution is welcomed. Contribution can be bug fix, new feature, but also feedback or even tutorial! Check contribution rules here.
Release 1.8
Now that stage feature is quite mature, I would like to introduce more commands to vimagit. For this, user feedback is very important to me, to ensure that UI is appropriate for the most of users and that vimagit fits most of git workflows (by UI, I mean default mapping, user prompt, etc.).
Proper way to discuss is on gitter and on issues opened for the new features.
The next major release of vimagit will see 3 new important features. Interested users are encouraged to discuss the best way to design these new features:
- git push: push from magit buffer with
<CP>
. magit will detect the default push branch; if there is not default, or if the user used another mapping, magit will provide a way to select remote branch to push #24 - git checkout: checkout a branch with
<CH>
. Like for push, a UI must be designed to select the branch, with completion of course #141 - git stash: stage what you want (files, hunks, lines, exactly the same way as for a commit), and stash them #142
Thanks for your time.
Installation
This plugin follows the standard runtime path structure, and as such it can be installed with a variety of plugin managers:
- Pathogen
git clone https://github.com/jreybert/vimagit ~/.vim/bundle/vimagit
Remember to run :Helptags to generate help tags - NeoBundle
NeoBundle 'jreybert/vimagit'
- Vundle
Plugin 'jreybert/vimagit'
- Plug
Plug 'jreybert/vimagit'
- VAM
call vam#ActivateAddons([ 'jreybert/vimagit' ])
- manual
copy all of the files into your ~/.vim directory
Usage
Modes
vimagit buffer has modes. Mappings may have different behavior, depending on current mode and cursor position.
For the moment, vimagit counts only two modes.
Stage mode
This is the default mode. In this mode, you can stage and unstage hunks, refresh vimagit buffer...
Commit mode
In this mode, "Commit message" section is open, you can write your commit message and validate your commit.
Commit mode has two flavors.
Commit mode flavors
- Normal: current commit will be a new commit.
- Amend: current commit will be meld with previous commit.
- Previous commit message is shown in "Commit message" section.
- Use this flavor if you forgot something in the previous commit.
By the way, you can also perform all stage mode actions in commit mode.
Sections
IMPORTANT: mappings can have different meanings regarding the cursor position.
There are 5 sections:
- Info: this section display some information about the git repository, like the current branch and the HEAD commit.
- Commit message: this section appears in commit mode. It contains the message to be committed.
- Staged changes: this sections contains all staged files/hunks, ready to commit.
- Unstaged changes: this section contains all unstaged and untracked files/hunks.
- Stash list: this section contains all stahes.
Inline modifications
- It is possible to modify the content to be staged or unstaged in magit buffer, with some limitations:
- only lines starting with a + sign can be modified
- no line can be deleted
Visual selection
It is possible to stage and unstage part of hunk, by different ways:
- By visually selecting some lines, then [un]staging the selection with S.
- By marking some lines "to be staged" with M, then [un]staging these selected lines with S.
- [Un]staging individual lines with L.
Visual selection and marked lines have some limitations for the moment:
- Selection/marks must be within a single hunk.
- Marks not within the hunk currently staged are lost during stage process magit buffer refresh.
Commands
magit#show_magit()
Function to open magit buffer. This buffer will handle the git repository including focused file. It is possible to handle multiple git repositories within one vim instance.
It takes 3 parameters:
- orientation (mandatory): it can be
- 'v', curent window is split vertically, and magit is displayed in new buffer
- 'h', curent window is split horizontally, and magit is displayed in new buffer
- 'c', magit is displayed in current buffer
- show_all_files: define how file diffs are shown by default for this session (see g:magit_default_show_all_files)
- foldlevel: set default magit buffer foldlevel for this session (see g:magit_default_fold_level)
:Magit
Open magit buffer in a vertical split (see details).
:MagitOnly
Open magit buffer in current window (see details).
You can create a bash alias like magit="vim -c MagitOnly"
Mappings
For each mapping, user can redefine the behavior with its own mapping. Each variable is described in vimagit help like vimagit-g:magit_nameofmapping_mapping
Global mappings
Following mappings are broadly set, and are applied in all vim buffers.
<Leader>M
Open Magit buffer
Local mappings
Following mappings are set locally, for magit buffer only, in normal mode.
Some mappings are set for the whole magit buffer, others are set for specific section only.
Whole buffer mappings
<kbd>CC</kbd>, <kbd>:w</kbd> <kbd>:x</kbd> <kbd>:wq</kbd> <kbd>ZZ</kbd>
- From stage mode, set commit mode in normal flavor and show empty "Commit message" section.
<kbd>CA</kbd>
- From stage mode or commit mode: set commit mode in amend flavor, and display "Commit message" section with previous commit message. Commit will be meld with previous commit.
<kbd>CF</kbd>
- From stage mode: amend the staged changes into the previous commit, without modifying previous commit message.
<kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>n</kbd>,<kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>p</kbd>
- Move to Next or Previous hunk.
<kbd>Enter</kbd>
- All files are folded by default. To see the changes in a file, move cursor to the filename line, and press Enter. You can close the changes display retyping Enter.
<kbd>zo</kbd>,<kbd>zO</kbd>
- Typing <kbd>zo</kbd> on a file will unhide its diffs.
<kbd>zc</kbd>,<kbd>zC</kbd>
- Typing zc on a file will hide its diffs.
<kbd>R</kbd>
- Refresh magit buffer
<kbd>-</kbd> , <kbd>+</kbd> , <kbd>0</kbd>
- Shrink,enlarge,reset diff context
<kbd>q</kbd>
- Close the magit buffer
<kbd>?</kbd>
- Toggle help showing in magit buffer
Stage / unstage sections mappings
<kbd>S</kbd>
- If cursor is in a hunk, stage/unstage hunk at cursor position.
- If cursor is in diff header, stage/unstage whole file at cursor position.
- If some lines in the hunk are selected (using v), stage only visual selected lines (only works for staging).
- If some lines in the hunk are marked (using M), stage only marked lines (only works for staging).
- When cursor is in "Unstaged changes" section, it will stage the hunk/file.
- On the other side, when cursor is in "Staged changes" section, it will unstage hunk/file.
<kbd>F</kbd>
- Stage/unstage the whole file at cursor position.
- When cursor is in "Unstaged changes" section, it will stage the file.
- On the other side, when cursor is in "Staged changes" section, it will unstage file.
<kbd>L</kbd>
- Stage the line under the cursor.
<kbd>M</kbd>
- Mark the line under the cursor "to be staged".
- If some lines in the hunk are selected (using v), mark selected lines "to be staged".
- To staged marked lines in a hunk, move cursor to this hunk and press S.
<kbd>DDD</kbd>
- If cursor is in a hunk, discard hunk at cursor position.
- If cursor is in diff header, discard whole file at cursor position.
- Only works in "Unstaged changes" section.
<kbd>I</kbd>
- Add the file under the cursor in .gitignore
<kbd>E</kbd>
If cursor is in a hunk, cursor will move in the file containing this hunk, at the line of the beginning of the hunk.
- if the file is already visible in a window, cursor moves to this window at the hunk line
- if there is more than one window open, cursor moves to last accessed window and open buffer at the hunk line
- if there is only magit window opened, split vertically, moves cursor to new split and open buffer at the hunk line
E means 'edit'.
:exclamation: this function is extremely powerful, just give it a try!
Commit section mappings
<kbd>CC</kbd>, <kbd>:w</kbd> <kbd>:x</kbd> <kbd>:wq</kbd> <kbd>ZZ</kbd>
- From commit mode, commit all staged changes with commit flavor (normal or amend) with message in "Commit message" section.
<kbd>CA</kbd>
- From stage mode or commit mode: set commit mode in amend flavor, and display "Commit message" section with previous commit message. Commit will be meld with previous commit.
<kbd>CU</kbd>
- From commit mode: go back to stage mode (current commit message will be lost).
Mapping update
Since vimagit 1.7, jump mappings have changed:
- Jump next hunk : N -> <C-n>
- Jump prev hunk : P -> <C-p>
Autocommand events
Magit will raise some events at some point. User can plug some specific commands to these events (see example.
VimagitBufferInit
This event is raised when the magit buffer is initialized (i.e. each time magit#show_magit() is called.
VimagitRefresh
This event is raised every time the magit buffer is refreshed, event if no file is updated.
VimagitUpdateFile
This event is raised each time a file status is updated in magit buffer
(typically when a file or a hunk is staged or unstaged). The variable
g:magit_last_updated_buffer
is set to the last updated file, with its
absolute path.
Note: g:magit_last_updated_buffer
will be updated and VimagitUpdateFile event will
be raised only if the buffer is currently opened in vim.
VimagitEnterCommit
This event is raised when the commit section opens and the cursor is placed in this section. For example, the user may want to go straight into insert mode when committing, defining this autocmd in its vimrc:
autocmd User VimagitEnterCommit startinsert
VimagitLeaveCommit
This event is raised when the commit section is closed, because the user finished to write its commit message or canceled it. For example, the user wants to set the |textwidth| of the vimagit buffer while editing a commit message, defining these |autocmd| in vimrc:
autocmd User VimagitEnterCommit setlocal textwidth=72
autocmd User VimagitLeaveCommit setlocal textwidth=0
Autocmd example
The following example calls the vim-gitgutter refresh function on a specific buffer each time vimagit update the git status of this file.
autocmd User VimagitUpdateFile
\ if ( exists("*gitgutter#process_buffer") ) |
\ call gitgutter#process_buffer(bufnr(g:magit_last_updated_buffer), 0) |
\ endif
The following example is already embeded in vimagit plugin (see g:magit_refresh_gitgutter), then you shouldn't add this particular example to your vimrc.
Options
User can define in its prefered vimrc some options.
g:magit_show_magit_display
Choose display setup for magit (default: 'v') Possible values: 'v': vertical split 'h': horizontal split 'c': current buffer
let g:magit_show_magit_display='v'
g:magit_enabled
To enable or disable vimagit plugin. Default value is 1.
let g:magit_enabled=[01]
g:magit_git_cmd
Git command, may be simply simply "git" if git is in your path. Defualt is "git"
let g:magit_git_cmd="git"
g:magit_show_help
To disable chatty inline help in magit buffer (default 1)
let g:magit_show_help=[01]
g:magit_commit_title_limit
Text is grayed if first line of commit message exceed this number of character (default 50)
let g:magit_commit_title_limit=[0..300]
g:magit_default_show_all_files
When this variable is set to 0, all diff files are hidden by default. When this variable is set to 1, all diff for modified files are shown by default. When this variable is set to 2, all diff for all files are shown by default. Default value is 1. NB: for repository with large number of differences, display may be slow.
let g:magit_default_show_all_files=[012]
g:magit_default_fold_level
Default foldlevel for magit buffer. When set to 0, both filenames and hunks are folded. When set to 1, filenames are unfolded and hunks are folded. When set to 2, filenames and hunks are unfolded. Default value is 1.
let g:magit_default_fold_level=[012]
g:magit_auto_foldopen
When stage/unstage a hunk, cursor goes to the closest hunk in the same section. This option automatically opens the fold of the hunk cursor has jump to. Default value is 1.
let g:magit_auto_foldopen=[01]
g:magit_default_sections
With this variable, the user is able to choose which sections are displayed in magit buffer, and in which order. Default value:
let g:magit_default_sections = ['info', 'global_help', 'commit', 'staged', 'unstaged']
g:magit_warning_max_lines
This variable is the maximum number of diff lines that vimagit will display without warning the user. If the number of diff lines to display is greater than this variable, vimagit will ask a confirmation to the user before refreshing the buffer. If user answer is 'yes', vimagit will display diff lines as expected. If user answer is 'no', vimagit will close all file diffs before refreshing. Default value is 10000.
let g:magit_warning_max_lines=val
g:magit_discard_untracked_do_delete
When set to 1, discard an untracked file will indeed delete this file. Default value is 0.
let g:magit_discard_untracked_do_delete=[01]
g:magit_refresh_gitgutter
When set to 1, and if vim-gitgutter plugin is installed, gitgutter signs will be updated each time magit update the git status of a file (i.e. when a file or a hunk is staged/unstaged). Default value is 1.
let g:magit_refresh_gitgutter=[01]
g:magit_auto_close
When set to 1, magit buffer automatically closes after a commit if there is nothing else to stage (which means that both Staged and Unstaged sections are empty). Default value is 0.
let g:magit_auto_close=[01]
Requirements
This part must be refined, I don't see any minimal version for git and vim, but for sure there should be one.
At least, it is tested with vim 7.3.249 and git 1.8.5.6 (see Integration).
Integration
Branches master and next are continuously tested on travis when published on github.
vimagit is tested with various versions of vim on linux: vim 7.3.249, vim 7.4.273, and latest neovim version. It is also tested for macos X: vim, macvim and neovim. Anyway, if you feel that vimagit behaves oddly (slow refresh, weird display order...) please fill an issue.
For the most enthusiastic, you can try the branch next. It is quite stable, just check its travis status before fetching it.
Travis status:
A lot a features are developed in dev/feature_name branches. While it may be asked to users to test these branches (during a bug fix for example), one is warned that these branches may be heavily rebased/deleted.
Contribution guideline
Pull requests are very welcomed. Some good practice:
- Make your pull request upon
next
branch - In case changes are asked in your PR, prefer a rebase instead of a new commit
Credits
- Obviously, big credit to Magit. For the moment, I am only copying their stage workflow, but I won't stop there! They have a lot of other good ideas.
- Sign handling is based on vim-gitgutter work.
- Command line completion is based on hypergit work.
License
Copyright (c) Jerome Reybert. Distributed under the same terms as Vim itself. See :help license.