Welcome to Vim plugin index’s documentation!

Contents:

Projects that are part of the Vim plugin index

Vim plugin index
Database in format described by this documentation.
Vim-pi legacy plugin index
Database in old format. Should not be used and will eventually be removed.
Vim-pi documentation
Vim plugin index documentation. Contains sources for the documentation you are currently viewing.
Vim-pi descriptions
Database containing plugin descriptions. Feel free to use it to construct search indexes or do some research.
Vim-pi tools

Tools used by developers. Some notes about this repository:

  • Backward or forward compatibility between tools is not guaranteed.
  • There is no official documentation for these tools.
  • These tools are used to build Vim plugin index database and/or manipulate it.
Vim-pi private data
Database containing data used by vim-pi developer tools. Format or existence of particular data is not guaranteed. You need to use up-to-date developer tools with up-to-date private data: compatibility is not guranteed as well.

Database directory structure

Note

Example JSON code blocks show generic JSON structure, not the exact layout of data physically written to the file. E.g. plugin managers must not rely on vim-pi (not) writing the whole file as one long line.

/
Root of the database. Contains all of the following data.
/index.json

Index of all plugins. Is a JSON file containing mapping with the following format:

{
    "{name}": {
        "last-update-time": "{update-time}",
        "last-release-time": "{release-time}",
        "description": "{description}",
        "author": "{author}",
        "vim-script-nr": {scriptnr},
        "alternate-names": ["{name1}", "{name2}", ..., "{nameN}"],
        "deprecated": {deprecated}
    },
    ...
}

Fields:

{name}
Exactly the same name as plugin directory name.
{update-time}

Field {update-time} is written in a very strict variant of ISO-8601 (described below), so unless you are preparing for 101 century you can safely use simple string comparison. This field should be checked by plugin managers when they decide whether they need to update information about plugin.

Required.

{release-time}

Like above, but is only altered when either new release, new fork or new development version were added. Is not altered when description or hooks were changed or when one of the old versions was removed.

Required.

Note

Vim-PI is not tracking development version updates if they use some of the version control systems. Plugin managers are supposed to simply rely on used VCS to update such plugins.

{author}
Author name. Optional.
{description}
Latest description of the plugin. May be used for searches. Optional.
{scriptnr}
A script number on www.vim.org. Optional.
{name1} ... {nameN}

Alternate names may be not unique and are supposed to represent alternative variants of writing plugin: e.g. “VAM” for “vim-addon-manager”. Optional. Plugin managers are supposed to prefer these names over fuzzy matches.

Note

Two plugins may share the same alternate name.

{deprecated}
true if plugin was deprecated. If it was not this field is absent, but may be set to false as well. Optional. Plugin managers are supposed to remove deprecated plugins from search and completion unless configured otherwise.

Note

For forward compatibility plugin managers must not rely on absence of keys that are not described here.

Note

ISO-8601 is very permissive. For index.json there are additional restrictions:

  • UTC time zone indicated by Z at the end,
  • nanoseconds; uses comma as decimal fraction separator,
  • hyphenminuses (ASCII dashes) as year, month and day separator,
  • no week dates,
  • T as date/time separator,
  • : as hour/minute/second separator.

In this format UNIX Epoch will look like this:

1970-01-01T00:00:00,000000000Z
/update-times.dat

Smaller version of the index of all plugins: contains only plugin namelast update timelast time of a new release 3-tuples in the format:

{name1}\0{last-update-time1}\0{last-release-time1}\n
...
{nameN}\0{last-update-timeN}\0{last-release-timeN}\n

, trailing newline is always present and all *-time fields have all separators stripped and are missing timezone: UNIX Epoch will look like 19700101000000000000000 so plugin managers still may use string comparison, but also numeric comparison (if they are written in a language with big integer support and want to waste time on creating it).

It is intended that plugin managers use this file only to check for available updates.

/plugins/
Directory, containing plugin directories.
/plugins/name/
Directory with files specific to the given plugin.
/plugins/name/MANIFEST.json

List of the files in this directory. List format:

{
    "{filename1}": {"size": {size1}, "sha256": "{sha256_1}"},
    "{filename2}": {"size": {size2}, "sha256": "{sha256_2}"},
    …
    "{filenameN}": {"size": {sizeN}, "sha256": "{sha256_N}"}
}

. Each filename is a path relative to /plugins/name directory.

Note

For forward compatibility plugin managers must not rely on presence of sha256 key (it may be replaced with other hash(es) in the future, though it is more likely that they will be just added) or absence of any keys that are not described here.

/plugins/name/plugin-info.json

Top-level plugin-info file. Format is described in plugin-info file documentation.

Note

This file must not contain repository and version keys. These key must be defined in plugin-info file inside release or development directory.

/plugins/name/hooks/
Contains hoodospel hook files used by plugin-info file.
/plugins/name/hooks/hook.hds

Contains one specific hook. You should replace hook with one of the stage names identical to one of the hook keys from plugin-info file. If hook should be applied at both post-install and post-update stages it should be named post. If identical hook should be run at two or more other stages then you should deduce a name on your own and raise an issue at vim-pi documentation issue tracker describing this name and the case in which you need identical names for both stages.

All post* and pre* are reserved for hooks that are described directly in relevant keys in a plugin-info file. Names not starting with post or pre may be used for code that is common to more then one hook.

/plugins/name/releases/
Directory that contains version-specific information for all plugin versions.
/plugins/name/releases/version/
Directory that contains version-specific information for one plugin version. Plugin version must not contain @ character: it is reserved for version variants (e.g. 0.1 contains description for installing plugin version 0.1 from archive and 0.1@git uses git) and forks (e.g. marcweber@0.0 for version 0.0 of a fork created by Marc Weber).
/plugins/name/releases/version/plugin-info.json
Main plugin-info file. Format of this file is described in plugin-info file documentation. Is merged with top-level plugin-info file.
/plugins/name/releases/version/hooks/
Same as top-level hooks directory, but contain hooks specific to given plugin version. These hooks will be used first.
/plugins/name/development/
Directory that contains all variants of development installations.
/plugins/name/development/variant/

Directory that contains version-specific information for development plugin version. Directory structure is the same as for release directory. variant should be either a name of the author of the fork, preceded with fork@, an upstream mirror that uses different VCS in a format mirror@vcs where vcs must be one of the repository types or just upstream.

Note

Forks must not be chosen by plugin managers by default.

/plugins/name/files/
Miscellaneous files that are not any of the above files.

Plugin-info file

Plugin-info file is a regular JSON file that contains JSON dictionary with the following keys:

Required keys:

repository

Repository description, must not be present in top-level plugin-info file. Contains a dictionary with the following keys:

type

Required. Must contain one of the following strings:

archive
Designates that this dictionary describes an archive downloaded from given URL.
file
Designates that this dictionary describes a plain .vim file.
hg, git, svn, bzr, darcs
Designates that this dictionary describes a repository controlled by the given version control system.
any name starting with _
Reserved for plugin managers. Must not be present in the database.
url

Required. For archive and file repository types it determines URL of the file to download, for various VCS repository types it determines location from where it should clone the repository.

Note

Plugin managers are supposed to use this URL when updating.

revision
Optional if repository type is one of VCS types, must not be present otherwise. Determines revision that should be checked out, may be a branch name.
vim-directory
Describes directory where plugin .vim file(s) should be moved if repository type happens to be file.
unpack-sequence

Required if repository type happens to be archive, optional if it happens to be file and must be absent in other cases. Contains a list of strings which determine the unpack sequence that should be performed by a plugin manager to unpack downloaded archive. If type is file then this list must contain only stream compress formats. Known formats:

Format Description
gz, xz, lzma, bz2 Stream compress formats: gzip, xz, lzma, bzip2.
tar Tape archive (tar) format.
zip Zip archive format.
rar RAR archive format.
cab CAB (CABinet) archive format.
arj ARJ archive format.
jar JAR (Java ARchive) archive format.
7z 7z archive format (should not be used for non-.7z archives supported by 7-zip, but not listed here).
vmb Vimball archives.
file-name

Required if repository type happens to be file, optional if it happens to be archive and must be absent in other cases. Contains a string that is the name of the .vim file (when type is file) or downloaded archive name (when type is archive) and must not be used for anything but determining how to name file downloaded from the given URL.

Note

For archived files like pt.vim.gz (repository-type is file) the file-name key is pt.vim.gz, not pt.vim. It is up to the plugin manager to determine what will the name of the file be after unpacking.

strip-components

Optional. Tells plugin manager to strip given number of top-level directories. Only valid for repositories with type archive.

Note

Plugin managers must strip given number of path components when this key is present. They are free to do automatic detection in case it is not present.

name
String, name of the plugin. Value must match plugin directory name.
version
String. In database it is required to be the same as {version} component of release directory and be absent in any other plugin-info files.

Optional keys:

dependencies

Dictionary, description of the dependencies. Must be present in the form dependency_name : dependency_description: dependency_name is a dictionary key, dependency_description is a dictionary. The latter may contain keys listed below:

version

A single string describing allowed dependency versions. String must look like the following:

version :: top_constraints " " version_base
top_constraints :: [<=>]? "=" | [<>]
version_base :: version_component ( "." version_component )*
version_component :: same_as_current | number | any
same_as_current :: "~"
number :: [^.~*] [^.]*
any :: "*"

Absense of this key works like if == * was specified.

Description of the format string:

  1. Versions are supposed to have format like 1.2.3.4. Semantic versioning is preferred, but not forced. In place of numbers any alphanumeric sequence may appear. When comparing versions only the first numeric part at the start of each version component will be taken into account: alpha1 equals zero because a is not a digit, components 123rc and 123rc are considered equal, as well as 1rc2 and 1rc3.

    When parsing version any non-alpha-numeric character that is not dot or ~ is stripped out, producing new component: 2014-05-16 is converted into 2014.05.16. This applies both to version key in dependencies dictionary and version key of the actual dependency. Using identical to constraint disables this.

  2. top_constraints specify which versions should be considered to be allowed. Possible variants: < (lesser then), > (greater then), <= (lesser then or equal to), >= (greater then or equal to), = (equal to), == (identical to).

    Checked version is considered matched if its first differing component matches given constraint. Missing component is strictly lesser then any other value.

    When using “indentical to” constraint corresponding string is always treated as a single component and is matched literally unless it is equal to same_as_current or any.

  3. same_as_current is substituted with value of the component in the same position of the version of the package for which dependencies are defined. any means that version component may have any value, and all of the following components may have any value, including missing. It thus must be the last atom.

    All lesser and greater constraint variants automatically receive any as the last component, no matter whether or not it is specified.

    “Identical to” top constraint allows either a single component same_as_current or a random string.

Examples (assuming version key is 2.6.10):

Version definition Matched examples Not matched examples
>= 1.2 1.2, 1.2.5 1.1, 0.1
> 1.2 1.2rc1, 1.3 1.1, 1.2
= 1.2 1.2, 1foo2 1.2.1, 1.1, 1.3
= 1.2.* 1.2, 1.2.3 1.3, 1.1, 1
= ~.~.* 2.6, 2.6.5 2.5, 2
== ~ 2.6.10 2f6f10, 2.6.10.1
== 1alpha2 1alpha2 1.2, 1.0.2, 1foo2
== * 1, alpha, ∫ {no examples}
= * 1.0, 1, 1.2.3 {no examples}
< 1.2 1.0, 1 1.2, 2.0
<= 1.2 1.2, 1.0, 1 1.2.3, 2.5
optional
Boolean. Determines whether described dependency is optional. Defaults to false.
build
Boolean. Determines whether this is build-time dependency. Defaults to true.
homepage
String, the home page of the plugin.
vim-script-nr
Number, script number on vim.org website.
author
String. Describes author of the plugin in format name <email>.
maintainer
String. Describes maintainer of the plugin in format name <email>.
description
String. Plugin description.
deprecation-warning

String, deprecation warning message that should be displayed when installing the plugin.

Note

Plugin managers must display this message when they attempt attended installation of plugins with this key in plugin-info file. They may also display this message when attempting attended update and it appears that this key is present in new plugin-info, but did not exist in the old one.

replacements
List of strings, plugins that are suggested to replace deprecated plugin. Must not be present if there is no deprecation-warning key. Contributors must not list plugin competitors here unless plugin was deprecated for one of the listed reasons.
pre-install, post-install, pre-update, post-update
Tells plugin manager what to run in different cases: *-install hooks are run before or after plugin installation, *-update hooks are run before or after update. Value is a plain string that must correspond to one of the file names in hooks directory without an extension. Note that hook may also be located in release-specific hooks directory.
alternate-names
List of strings: alternate names of the plugin. Used for populating alternate-names key in the index.json file.

Contributing to this database

Contributions are accepted in a form of bitbucket pull requests. There exist the following types of contribution:

Note

One pull request must contain only one contribution type. It may contain more then one contribution with the given type though.

Note

There must be no merge commits in the pull request.

Adding information about a new plugin

To add information about a new plugin one should create a new plugin directory tree in /plugins/ directory without MANIFEST.json file (it will be generated later). Files this tree must contain (relative to plugin directory):

Top level plugin info file
Plugin info file. As mentioned in this file documentation it must not contain repository key.
Plugin info file in one of the releases directories
Plugin info file inside release or development subdirectory. Must contain at least repository key.

Tree also may contain hooks and files used by hooks (in files subdirectory).

Plugin name must consist of latin letters, digits, dashes and underscores. Only ASCII variants of these symbols are allowed. There must not be two consequent dashes or underscores (e.g. substrings -- and __ are not allowed, but _-_ is). It also must be unique.

Note

Contributors should not modify index.json file or update times file. Just like MANIFEST they will be generated later.

Adding deprecation warning

Deprecation warning is added to the top-level plugin info file to the key deprecation-warning. Contributor may also add replacements key. First key must contain a reason for deprecating this plugin and may also contain suggestions for the user about replacing this plugin.

Valid reasons for deprecation:

  • Plugin author explicitly described his plugin as deprecated. In this case deprecation warning should be added even if there are no alternatives.
  • Features of this plugin were included in one of its dependencies.
  • Plugin depends on missing or deprecated plugins.
  • Plugin was last updated at least six months ago, contains known bugs and there is a replacement for it. One may consider contributing information about a fork instead.

Adding information about a fork

TODO