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VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
Terminal window support *terminal*
WARNING: THIS IS ONLY PARTLY IMPLEMENTED, ANYTHING CAN STILL CHANGE
The terminal feature is optional, use this to check if your Vim has it: >
echo has('terminal')
If the result is "1" you have it.
1. Basic use |terminal-use|
Typing |terminal-typing|
Size and color |terminal-size-color|
Syntax |:terminal|
Resizing |terminal-resizing|
Terminal Modes |Terminal-mode|
Cursor style |terminal-cursor-style|
Special keys |terminal-special-keys|
Unix |terminal-unix|
MS-Windows |terminal-ms-windows|
2. Remote testing |terminal-testing|
3. Debugging |terminal-debug|
Starting |termdebug-starting|
Example session |termdebug-example|
Stepping through code |termdebug-stepping|
Inspecting variables |termdebug-variables|
Other commands |termdebug-commands|
Communication |termdebug-communication|
Customizing |termdebug-customizing|
{Vi does not have any of these commands}
{only available when compiled with the |+terminal| feature}
The terminal feature requires the |+multi_byte|, |+job| and |+channel| features.
==============================================================================
1. Basic use *terminal-use*
This feature is for running a terminal emulator in a Vim window. A job can be
started connected to the terminal emulator. For example, to run a shell: >
:term bash
Or to run build command: >
:term make myprogram
The job runs asynchronously from Vim, the window will be updated to show
output from the job, also while editing in another window.
Typing ~
*terminal-typing*
When the keyboard focus is in the terminal window, typed keys will be sent to
the job. This uses a pty when possible. You can click outside of the
terminal window to move keyboard focus elsewhere.
CTRL-W can be used to navigate between windows and other CTRL-W commands, e.g.:
CTRL-W CTRL-W move focus to the next window
CTRL-W : enter an Ex command
See |CTRL-W| for more commands.
Special in the terminal window: *CTRL-W_.* *CTRL-W_N*
CTRL-W . send a CTRL-W to the job in the terminal
CTRL-W N go to Terminal-Normal mode, see |Terminal-mode|
CTRL-\ CTRL-N go to Terminal-Normal mode, see |Terminal-mode|
CTRL-W " {reg} paste register {reg} *CTRL-W_quote*
Also works with the = register to insert the result of
evaluating an expression.
CTRL-W CTRL-C ends the job, see below |t_CTRL-W_CTRL-C|
See option 'termkey' for specifying another key instead of CTRL-W that
will work like CTRL-W. However, typing 'termkey' twice sends 'termkey' to
the job. For example:
'termkey' CTRL-W move focus to the next window
'termkey' : enter an Ex command
'termkey' 'termkey' send 'termkey' to the job in the terminal
'termkey' . send a CTRL-W to the job in the terminal
'termkey' N go to terminal Normal mode, see below
'termkey' CTRL-N same as CTRL-W N
'termkey' CTRL-C same as |t_CTRL-W_CTRL-C|
*t_CTRL-\_CTRL-N*
The special key combination CTRL-\ CTRL-N can be used to switch to Normal
mode, just like this works in any other mode.
*t_CTRL-W_CTRL-C*
CTRL-W CTRL-C can be typed to forcefully end the job. On MS-Windows a
CTRL-BREAK will also kill the job.
If you type CTRL-C the effect depends on what the pty has been configured to
do. For simple commands this causes a SIGINT to be sent to the job, which
would end it. Other commands may ignore the SIGINT or handle the CTRL-C
themselves (like Vim does).
To change the keys you type use terminal mode mappings, see |:tmap|.
These are defined like any mapping, but apply only when typing keys that are
sent to the job running in the terminal. For example, to make Escape switch
to Terminal-Normal mode: >
tnoremap <Esc> <C-W>N
< *options-in-terminal*
After opening the terminal window and setting 'buftype' to "terminal" the
BufWinEnter autocommand event is triggered. This makes it possible to set
options specifically for the window and buffer. Example: >
au BufWinEnter * if &buftype == 'terminal' | setlocal bufhidden=hide | endif
Mouse events (click and drag) are passed to the terminal. Mouse move events
are only passed when Vim itself is receiving them. For a terminal that is
when 'balloonevalterm' is enabled.
Size and color ~
*terminal-size-color*
See option 'termsize' for controlling the size of the terminal window.
(TODO: scrolling when the terminal is larger than the window)
The job running in the terminal can change the colors. The default foreground
and background colors are taken from Vim, the Normal highlight group.
For a color terminal the 'background' option is used to decide whether the
terminal window will start with a white or black background.
To use a different color the Terminal highlight group can be used, for
example: >
hi Terminal ctermbg=lightgrey ctermfg=blue guibg=lightgrey guifg=blue
Syntax ~
:[range]ter[minal] [options] [command] *:ter* *:terminal*
Open a new terminal window.
If [command] is provided run it as a job and connect
the input and output to the terminal.
If [command] is not given the 'shell' option is used.
if [command] is NONE no job is started, the pty of the
terminal can be used by a command like gdb.
A new buffer will be created, using [command] or
'shell' as the name, prefixed with a "!". If a buffer
by this name already exists a number is added in
parentheses. E.g. if "gdb" exists the second terminal
buffer will use "!gdb (1)".
If [range] is given the specified lines are used as
input for the job. It will not be possible to type
keys in the terminal window. For MS-Windows see the
++eof argument below.
*term++close* *term++open*
Supported [options] are:
++close The terminal window will close
automatically when the job terminates.
++open When the job terminates and no window
shows it, a window will be opened.
Note that this can be interruptive.
++curwin Open the terminal in the current
window, do not split the current
window. Fails if the current buffer
cannot be |abandon|ed.
++hidden Open the terminal in a hidden buffer,
no window will be used.
++rows={height} Use {height} for the terminal window
height. If the terminal uses the full
Vim height (no window above or below
th terminal window) the command line
height will be reduced as needed.
++cols={width} Use {width} for the terminal window
width. If the terminal uses the full
Vim width (no window left or right of
the terminal window) this value is
ignored.
++eof={text} when using [range]: text to send after
the last line was written. Cannot
contain white space. A CR is
appended. For MS-Windows the default
is to send CTRL-D.
E.g. for a shell use "++eof=exit" and
for Python "++eof=exit()". Special
codes can be used like with `:map`,
e.g. "<C-Z>" for CTRL-Z.
If you want to use more options use the |term_start()|
function.
When the buffer associated with the terminal is unloaded or wiped out the job
is killed, similar to calling `job_stop(job, "kill")`
So long as the job is running the window behaves like it contains a modified
buffer. Trying to close the window with `CTRL-W :quit` fails. When using
`CTRL-W :quit!` the job is ended. The text in the window is lost. The buffer
still exists, but getting it in a window with `:buffer` will show an empty
buffer.
Trying to close the window with `CTRL-W :close` also fails. Using
`CTRL-W :close!` will close the window and make the buffer hidden.
You can use `CTRL-W :hide` to close the terminal window and make the buffer
hidden, the job keeps running. The `:buffer` command can be used to turn the
current window into a terminal window. If there are unsaved changes this
fails, use ! to force, as usual.
To have a background job run without a window, and open the window when it's
done, use options like this: >
:term ++hidden ++open make
Note that the window will open at an unexpected moment, this will interrupt
what you are doing.
*E947* *E948*
So long as the job is running, the buffer is considered modified and Vim
cannot be quit easily, see |abandon|.
When the job has finished and no changes were made to the buffer: closing the
window will wipe out the buffer.
Before changes can be made to a terminal buffer, the 'modifiable' option must
be set. This is only possible when the job has finished. At the first change
the buffer will become a normal buffer and the highlighting is removed.
You may want to change the buffer name with |:file| to be able to write, since
the buffer name will still be set to the command.
Resizing ~
*terminal-resizing*
The size of the terminal can be in one of three modes:
1. The 'termsize' option is empty: The terminal size follows the window size.
The minimal size is 2 screen lines with 10 cells.
2. The 'termsize' option is "rows*cols", where "rows" is the minimal number of
screen rows and "cols" is the minimal number of cells.
3. The 'termsize' option is "rowsXcols" (where the x is upper or lower case).
The terminal size is fixed to the specified number of screen lines and
cells. If the window is bigger there will be unused empty space.
If the window is smaller than the terminal size, only part of the terminal can
be seen (the lower-left part).
The |term_getsize()| function can be used to get the current size of the
terminal. |term_setsize()| can be used only when in the first or second mode,
not when 'termsize' is "rowsXcols".
Terminal-Job and Terminal-Normal mode ~
*Terminal-mode*
When the job is running the contents of the terminal is under control of the
job. That includes the cursor position. Typed keys are sent to the job.
The terminal contents can change at any time. This is called Terminal-Job
mode.
Use CTRL-W N (or 'termkey' N) to switch to Terminal-Normal mode. Now the
contents of the terminal window is under control of Vim, the job output is
suspended. CTRL-\ CTRL-N does the same.
Terminal-Job mode is where |:tmap| mappings are applied. Keys sent by
|term_sendkeys()| are not subject to tmap, but keys from |feedkeys()| are.
*E946*
In Terminal-Normal mode you can move the cursor around with the usual Vim
commands, Visually mark text, yank text, etc. But you cannot change the
contents of the buffer. The commands that would start insert mode, such as
'i' and 'a', return to Terminal-Job mode. The window will be updated to show
the contents of the terminal. |:startinsert| is ineffective.
In Terminal-Normal mode the statusline and window title show "(Terminal)". If
the job ends while in Terminal-Normal mode this changes to
"(Terminal-finished)".
It is not possible to enter Insert mode from Terminal-Job mode.
Cursor style ~
*terminal-cursor-style*
By default the cursor in the terminal window uses a not blinking block. The
normal xterm escape sequences can be used to change the blinking state and the
shape. Once focus leaves the terminal window Vim will restore the original
cursor.
An exception is when xterm is started with the "-bc" argument, or another way
that causes the cursor to blink. This actually means that the blinking flag
is inverted. Since Vim cannot detect this, the terminal window cursor
blinking will also be inverted.
Special keys ~
*terminal-special-keys*
Since the terminal emulator simulates an xterm, only escape sequences that
both Vim and xterm recognize will be available in the terminal window. If you
want to pass on other escape sequences to the job running in the terminal you
need to set up forwarding. Example: >
tmap <expr> <Esc>]b SendToTerm("\<Esc>]b")
func SendToTerm(what)
call term_sendkeys('', a:what)
return ''
endfunc
Unix ~
*terminal-unix*
On Unix a pty is used to make it possible to run all kinds of commands. You
can even run Vim in the terminal! That's used for debugging, see below.
Environment variables are used to pass information to the running job:
TERM name of the terminal, 'term'
ROWS number of rows in the terminal initially
LINES same as ROWS
COLUMNS number of columns in the terminal initially
COLORS number of colors, 't_Co' (256*256*256 in the GUI)
VIM_SERVERNAME v:servername
The |client-server| feature can be used to communicate with the Vim instance
where the job was started. This only works when v:servername is not empty.
If needed you can set it with: >
call remote_startserver('vim-server')
In the job you can then do something like: >
vim --servername $VIM_SERVERNAME --remote +123 some_file.c
This will open the file "some_file.c" and put the cursor on line 123.
MS-Windows ~
*terminal-ms-windows*
On MS-Windows winpty is used to make it possible to run all kind of commands.
Obviously, they must be commands that run in a terminal, not open their own
window.
You need the following two files from winpty:
winpty.dll
winpty-agent.exe
You can download them from the following page:
https://github.com/rprichard/winpty
Just put the files somewhere in your PATH. You can set the 'winptydll' option
to point to the right file, if needed. If you have both the 32-bit and 64-bit
version, rename to winpty32.dll and winpty64.dll to match the way Vim was
build.
Environment variables are used to pass information to the running job:
VIM_SERVERNAME v:servername
==============================================================================
2. Remote testing *terminal-testing*
Most Vim tests execute a script inside Vim. For some tests this does not
work, running the test interferes with the code being tested. To avoid this
Vim is executed in a terminal window. The test sends keystrokes to it and
inspects the resulting screen state.
Functions ~
term_sendkeys() send keystrokes to a terminal (not subject to tmap)
term_wait() wait for screen to be updated
term_scrape() inspect terminal screen
==============================================================================
3. Debugging *terminal-debug*
The Terminal debugging plugin can be used to debug a program with gdb and view
the source code in a Vim window. Since this is completely contained inside
Vim this also works remotely over an ssh connection.
Starting ~
*termdebug-starting*
Load the plugin with this command: >
packadd termdebug
< *:Termdebug*
To start debugging use `:Termdebug` followed by the command name, for example: >
:Termdebug vim
This opens two windows:
gdb window A terminal window in which "gdb vim" is executed. Here you
can directly interact with gdb. The buffer name is "!gdb".
program window A terminal window for the executed program. When "run" is
used in gdb the program I/O will happen in this window, so
that it does not interfere with controlling gdb. The buffer
name is "gdb program".
The current window is used to show the source code. When gdb pauses the
source file location will be displayed, if possible. A sign is used to
highlight the current position (using highlight group debugPC).
If the buffer in the current window is modified, another window will be opened
to display the current gdb position.
Focus the terminal of the executed program to interact with it. This works
the same as any command running in a terminal window.
When the debugger ends, typically by typing "quit" in the gdb window, the two
opened windows are closed.
Example session ~
*termdebug-example*
Start in the Vim "src" directory and build Vim: >
% make
Start Vim: >
% ./vim
Load the termdebug plugin and start debugging Vim: >
:packadd termdebug
:Termdebug vim
You should now have three windows:
source - where you started, has a window toolbar with buttons
gdb - you can type gdb commands here
program - the executed program will use this window
You can use CTRL-W CTRL-W or the mouse to move focus between windows.
Put focus on the gdb window and type: >
break ex_help
run
Vim will start running in the program window. Put focus there and type: >
:help gui
Gdb will run into the ex_help breakpoint. The source window now shows the
ex_cmds.c file. A ">>" marker will appear where the breakpoint was set. The
line where the debugger stopped is highlighted. You can now step through the
program. Let's use the mouse: click on the "Next" button in the window
toolbar. You will see the highlighting move as the debugger executes a line
of source code.
Click "Next" a few times until the for loop is highlighted. Put the cursor on
the end of "eap->arg", then click "Eval" in the toolbar. You will see this
displayed:
"eap->arg": 0x555555e68855 "gui" ~
This way you can inspect the value of local variables. You can also focus the
gdb window and use a "print" command, e.g.: >
print *eap
Now go back to the source window and put the cursor on the first line after
the for loop, then type: >
:Break
You will see a ">>" marker appear, this indicates the new breakpoint. Now
click "Cont" in the toolbar and the code until the breakpoint will be
executed.
You can type more advanced commands in the gdb window. For example, type: >
watch curbuf
Now click "Cont" in the toolbar (or type "cont" in the gdb window). Execution
will now continue until the value of "curbuf" changes, which is in do_ecmd().
To remove this watchpoint again type in the gdb window: >
delete 3
You can see the stack by typing in the gdb window: >
where
Move through the stack frames, e.g. with: >
frame 3
The source window will show the code, at the point where the call was made to
a deeper level.
Stepping through code ~
*termdebug-stepping*
Put focus on the gdb window to type commands there. Some common ones are:
- CTRL-C interrupt the program
- next execute the current line and stop at the next line
- step execute the current line and stop at the next statement,
entering functions
- finish execute until leaving the current function
- where show the stack
- frame N go to the Nth stack frame
- continue continue execution
In the window showing the source code these commands can used to control gdb:
:Run [args] run the program with [args] or the previous arguments
:Arguments {args} set arguments for the next :Run
:Break set a breakpoint at the current line; a sign will be displayed
:Delete delete a breakpoint at the current line
:Step execute the gdb "step" command
:Over execute the gdb "next" command (:Next is a Vim command)
:Finish execute the gdb "finish" command
:Continue execute the gdb "continue" command
:Stop interrupt the program
If 'mouse' is set the plugin adds a window toolbar with these entries:
Step :Step
Next :Over
Finish :Finish
Cont :Continue
Stop :Stop
Eval :Evaluate
This way you can use the mouse to perform the most common commands. You need
to have the 'mouse' option set to enable mouse clicks.
Inspecting variables ~
*termdebug-variables*
:Evaluate evaluate the expression under the cursor
K same
:Evaluate {expr} evaluate {expr}
:'<,'>Evaluate evaluate the Visually selected text
This is similar to using "print" in the gdb window.
Other commands ~
*termdebug-commands*
:Gdb jump to the gdb window
:Program jump to the window with the running program
Communication ~
*termdebug-communication*
There is another, hidden, buffer, which is used for Vim to communicate with
gdb. The buffer name is "gdb communication". Do not delete this buffer, it
will break the debugger.
Customizing ~
*termdebug-customizing*
To change the name of the gdb command, set the "termdebugger" variable before
invoking `:Termdebug`: >
let termdebugger = "mygdb"
< *gdb-version*
Only debuggers fully compatible with gdb will work. Vim uses the GDB/MI
interface. This probably requires gdb version 7.12. if you get this error:
Undefined command: "new-ui". Try "help".~
Then your gdb is too old.
*hl-debugPC* *hl-debugBreakpoint*
The color of the signs can be adjusted with these highlight groups:
- debugPC the current position
- debugBreakpoint a breakpoint
The defaults are, when 'background' is "light":
hi debugPC term=reverse ctermbg=lightblue guibg=lightblue
hi debugBreakpoint term=reverse ctermbg=red guibg=red
When 'background' is "dark":
hi debugPC term=reverse ctermbg=darkblue guibg=darkblue
hi debugBreakpoint term=reverse ctermbg=red guibg=red
To change the width of the Vim window when debugging starts, and use a
vertical split: >
let g:termdebug_wide = 163
This will set &columns to 163 when :Termdebug is used. The value is restored
when quitting the debugger.
If g:termdebug_wide is set and &Columns is already larger than
g:termdebug_wide then a vertical split will be used without changing &columns.
Set it to 1 to get a vertical split without every changing &columns (useful
for when the terminal can't be resized by Vim).
vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
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