| *pi_netrw.txt* For Vim version 7.0aa. Last change: Apr 21, 2004 |
| |
| |
| VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Charles E. Campbell, Jr. |
| |
| *dav* *http* *network* *rcp* *scp* |
| *fetch* *netrw* *Nread* *rsync* *sftp* |
| *ftp* *netrw.vim* *Nwrite* *netrw-file* |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 0. Contents *netrw-contents* |
| |
| 1. Netrw Reference.....................................|netrw-ref| |
| 2. Network-Oriented File Transfer......................|netrw-xfer| |
| 3. Activation..........................................|netrw-activate| |
| 4. Transparent File Transfer...........................|netrw-transparent| |
| 5. Ex Commands.........................................|netrw-ex| |
| 6. Variables and Options...............................|netrw-var| |
| 7. Debugging...........................................|netrw-debug| |
| 8. New Stuff...........................................|netrw-new| |
| 9. Credits.............................................|netrw-credits| |
| |
| The functionality mentioned here is done via using |standard-plugin| |
| techniques. This plugin is only available if |
| |
| set nocp " 'compatible' is not set |
| filetype plugin on " plugins are enabled |
| |
| You can avoid loading this plugin by setting the "loaded_netrw" variable |
| in your <.vimrc> file: > |
| |
| :let loaded_netrw = 1 |
| |
| {Vi does not have any of this} |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 1. Netrw Reference *netrw-ref* |
| |
| OPTIONS |
| let g:netrw_ftp =0 use ftp (default) (uid password) |
| =1 use alternate ftp method (user uid password) |
| If you're having trouble with ftp, try changing the value |
| of this variable in your <.vimrc> to change methods |
| |
| let g:netrw_ignorenetrc= 1 |
| If you have a <.netrc> file but it doesn't work and you |
| want it ignored, then set this variable as shown. Its mere |
| existence is enough to cause <.netrc> to be ignored. |
| |
| Controlling External Applications |
| |
| Protocol Variable Default Value |
| -------- ---------------- ------------- |
| dav: g:netrw_dav_cmd = "cadaver" |
| fetch: g:netrw_fetch_cmd = "fetch -o" |
| ftp: g:netrw_ftp_cmd = "ftp" |
| http: g:netrw_http_cmd = "fetch -o" else if fetch is available |
| http: g:netrw_http_cmd = "wget -q -O" If wget is available |
| rcp: g:netrw_rcp_cmd = "rcp" |
| rsync: g:netrw_rsync_cmd = "rsync -a" |
| scp: g:netrw_scp_cmd = "scp -q" |
| sftp: g:netrw_sftp_cmd = "sftp" |
| |
| READING |
| :Nread ? give help |
| :Nread "machine:file" uses rcp |
| :Nread "machine file" uses ftp with <.netrc> |
| :Nread "machine id password file" uses ftp |
| :Nread "dav://machine[:port]/file" uses cadaver |
| :Nread "fetch://[user@]machine/file" uses fetch |
| :Nread "ftp://[user@]machine[[:#]port]/file" uses ftp autodetects <.netrc> |
| :Nread "http://[user@]machine/file" uses http uses wget |
| :Nread "rcp://[user@]machine/file" uses rcp |
| :Nread "rsync://[user@]machine[:port]/file" uses rsync |
| :Nread "scp://[user@]machine[[:#]port]/file" uses scp |
| :Nread "sftp://[user@]machine/file" uses sftp |
| |
| WRITING |
| :Nwrite ? give help |
| :Nwrite "machine:file" uses rcp |
| :Nwrite "machine file" uses ftp with <.netrc> |
| :Nwrite "machine id password file" uses ftp |
| :Nwrite "dav://machine[:port]/file" uses cadaver |
| :Nwrite "ftp://[user@]machine[[:#]port]/file" uses ftp autodetects <.netrc> |
| :Nwrite "rcp://[user@]machine/file" uses rcp |
| :Nwrite "rsync://[user@]machine[:port]/file" uses rsync |
| :Nwrite "scp://[user@]machine[[:#]port]/file" uses scp |
| :Nwrite "sftp://[user@]machine/file" uses sftp |
| http: not supported! |
| |
| USER AND PASSWORD CHANGING |
| Attempts to use ftp will prompt you for a user-id and a password. |
| These will be saved in g:netrw_uid and g:netrw_passwd Subsequent uses |
| of ftp will re-use those. If you need to use a different user id |
| and/or password, you'll want to call NetUserPass() first. |
| |
| :NetUserPass [uid [password]] -- prompts as needed |
| :call NetUserPass() -- prompts for uid and password |
| :call NetUserPass("uid") -- prompts for password |
| :call NetUserPass("uid","password") -- sets global uid and password |
| |
| VARIABLES |
| b:netrw_lastfile last file Network-read/written retained on |
| a per-buffer basis (supports plain :Nw ) |
| s:netrw_line during Nw/NetWrite, holds current line number |
| s:netrw_col during Nw/NetWrite, holds current column number |
| s:netrw_line and s:netrw_col are used to |
| restore the cursor position on writes |
| g:netrw_ftp if it doesn't exist, use default ftp |
| =0 use default ftp (uid password) |
| =1 use alternate ftp method (user uid password) |
| g:netrw_ftpmode ="binary" (default) |
| ="ascii" (or your choice) |
| g:netrw_uid (ftp) user-id, retained on a per-session basis |
| g:netrw_passwd (ftp) password, retained on a per-session basis |
| g:netrw_win95ftp =0 use unix-style ftp even if win95/win98/winME |
| =1 use default method to do ftp |
| g:netrw_cygwin =1 assume scp under windows is from cygwin |
| (default if windows) |
| =0 assume scp under windows accepts |
| windows-style paths (default otherwise) |
| g:netrw_use_nt_rcp=0 don't use the rcp of WinNT, Win2000 and WinXP (default) |
| =1 use the rcp of WinNT,... in binary mode |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 2. Network-Oriented File Transfer *netrw-xfer* |
| |
| Network-oriented file transfer under Vim is implemented by a VimL-based script |
| (<netrw.vim>) using plugin techniques. It currently supports both reading |
| and writing across networks using rcp, scp, ftp or ftp+<.netrc>, scp, fetch, |
| dav/cadaver, rsync, or sftp. |
| |
| http is currently supported read-only via use of wget or fetch. |
| |
| <netrw.vim> is a standard plugin which acts as glue between Vim and the |
| various file transfer programs. It uses autocommand events (BufReadCmd, |
| FileReadCmd, BufWriteCmd) to intercept reads/writes with url-like filenames. > |
| |
| ex. vim ftp://hostname/path/to/file |
| < |
| The characters preceding the colon specify the protocol to use; |
| in the example, its ftp. The <netrw.vim> script then formulates |
| a command or a series of commands (typically ftp) which it issues |
| to an external program (ftp, scp, etc) which does the actual file |
| transfer/protocol. Files are read from/written to a temporary file |
| (under Unix/Linux, /tmp/...) which the <netrw.vim> script will |
| clean up. |
| |
| One may modify any protocol's implementing external application |
| by setting a variable (ex. scp uses the variable g:netrw_scp_cmd, |
| which is defaulted to "scp -q"). |
| |
| Ftp, an old protocol, seems to be blessed by numerous implementations. |
| Unfortunately, some implementations are noisy (ie., add junk to the end |
| of the file). Thus, concerned users may decide to write a NetReadFixup() |
| function that will clean up after reading with their ftp. Some Unix systems |
| (ie., FreeBSD) provide a utility called "fetch" which uses the ftp protocol |
| but is not noisy and more convenient, actually, for <netrw.vim> to use. |
| Consequently, if "fetch" is executable, it will be used to do reads for |
| ftp://... (and http://...) . See |netrw-var| for more about this. |
| |
| For rcp, scp, sftp, and http, one may use network-oriented file transfers |
| transparently; ie. |
| > |
| vim rcp://[user@]machine/path |
| vim scp://[user@]machine/path |
| < |
| If your ftp supports <.netrc>, then it too can be just as transparently used |
| if the needed triad of machine name, user id, and password are present in |
| that file. Your ftp must be able to use the <.netrc> file on its own, however. |
| > |
| vim ftp://[user@]machine[[:#]portnumber]/path |
| < |
| However, ftp will often need to query the user for the userid and password. |
| The latter will be done "silently"; ie. asterisks will show up instead of |
| the actually-typed-in password. Netrw will retain the userid and password |
| for subsequent read/writes from the most recent transfer so subsequent |
| transfers (read/write) to or from that machine will take place without |
| additional prompting. |
| |
| *netrw-urls* |
| +=================================+============================+============+ |
| | Reading | Writing | Uses | |
| +=================================+============================+============+ |
| | DAV: | | | |
| | dav://host/path | | cadaver | |
| | :Nread dav://host/path | :Nwrite dav://host/path | cadaver | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | FETCH: | | | |
| | fetch://[user@]host/path | | | |
| | fetch://[user@]host:http/path | Not Available | fetch | |
| | :Nread fetch://[user@]host/path| | | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | FILE: | | | |
| | file:///* | file:///* | | |
| | file://localhost/* | file://localhost/* | | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | FTP: (*3) | (*3) | | |
| | ftp://[user@]host/path | ftp://[user@]host/path | ftp (*2) | |
| | :Nread ftp://host/path | :Nwrite ftp://host/path | ftp+.netrc | |
| | :Nread host path | :Nwrite host path | ftp+.netrc | |
| | :Nread host uid pass path | :Nwrite host uid pass path | ftp | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | HTTP: wget is executable: (*4) | | | |
| | http://[user@]host/path | Not Available | wget | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | HTTP: fetch is executable (*4) | | | |
| | http://[user@]host/path | Not Available | fetch | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | RCP: | | | |
| | rcp://[user@]host/path | rcp://[user@]host/path | rcp | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | RSYNC: | | | |
| | rsync://[user@]host/path | rsync://[user@]host/path | rsync | |
| | :Nread rsync://host/path | :Nwrite rsync://host/path | rsync | |
| | :Nread rcp://host/path | :Nwrite rcp://host/path | rcp | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | SCP: | | | |
| | scp://[user@]host/path | scp://[user@]host/path | scp | |
| | :Nread scp://host/path | :Nwrite scp://host/path | scp (*1) | |
| +---------------------------------+----------------------------+------------+ |
| | SFTP: | | | |
| | sftp://[user@]host/path | sftp://[user@]host/path | sftp | |
| | :Nread sftp://host/path | :Nwrite sftp://host/path | sftp (*1) | |
| +=================================+============================+============+ |
| |
| (*1) For an absolute path use scp://machine//path. |
| |
| (*2) if <.netrc> is present, it is assumed that it will |
| work with your ftp client. Otherwise the script will |
| prompt for user-id and password. |
| |
| (*3) for ftp, "machine" may be machine#port or machine:port |
| if a different port is needed than the standard ftp port |
| |
| (*4) for http:..., if wget is available it will be used. Otherwise, |
| if fetch is available it will be used. |
| |
| Both the :Nread and the :Nwrite ex-commands can accept multiple filenames. |
| |
| |
| NETRC *netrw-netrc* |
| |
| The typical syntax for lines in a <.netrc> file is given as shown below. |
| Ftp under Unix usually support <.netrc>; Windows' ftp usually doesn't. |
| > |
| machine {full machine name} login {user-id} password "{password}" |
| default login {user-id} password "{password}" |
| |
| Your ftp client must handle the use of <.netrc> on its own, but if the |
| <.netrc> file exists, an ftp transfer will not ask for the user-id or |
| password. |
| |
| Note: |
| Since this file contains passwords, make very sure nobody else can |
| read this file! Most programs will refuse to use a .netrc that is |
| readable for others. Don't forget that the system administrator can |
| still read the file! |
| |
| |
| PASSWORD *netrw-passwd* |
| |
| The script attempts to get passwords for ftp invisibly using |inputsecret()|, |
| a built-in Vim function. See |netrw-uidpass| for how to change the password |
| after one has set it. |
| |
| Unfortunately there doesn't appear to be a way for netrw to feed a password |
| to scp. Thus every transfer via scp will require re-entry of the password. |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 3. Activation *netrw-activate* |
| |
| Network-oriented file transfers are available by default whenever |
| |'nocompatible'| mode is enabled. The <netrw.vim> file resides in your |
| system's vim-plugin directory and is sourced automatically whenever you |
| bring up vim. |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 4. Transparent File Transfer *netrw-transparent* |
| |
| Transparent file transfers occur whenever a regular file read or write |
| (invoked via an |:autocmd| for |BufReadCmd| or |BufWriteCmd| events) is made. |
| Thus one may use files across networks as if they were local. > |
| |
| vim ftp://[user@]machine/path |
| ... |
| :wq |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 5. Ex Commands *netrw-ex* |
| |
| The usual read/write commands are supported. There are also a couple of |
| additional commands available. |
| |
| :[range]Nw Write the specified lines to the current |
| file as specified in b:netrw_lastfile. |
| |
| :[range]Nw {netfile} [{netfile}]... |
| Write the specified lines to the {netfile}. |
| |
| :Nread |
| Read the specified lines into the current |
| buffer from the file specified in |
| b:netrw_lastfile. |
| |
| :Nread {netfile} {netfile}... |
| Read the {netfile} after the current line. |
| |
| *netrw-uidpass* |
| :call NetUserPass() |
| If b:netrw_uid and b:netrw_passwd don't exist, |
| this function query the user for them. |
| |
| :call NetUserPass("userid") |
| This call will set the b:netrw_uid and, if |
| the password doesn't exist, will query the user for it. |
| |
| :call NetUserPass("userid","passwd") |
| This call will set both the b:netrw_uid and b:netrw_passwd. |
| The user-id and password are used by ftp transfers. One may |
| effectively remove the user-id and password by using "" |
| strings. |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 6. Variables and Options *netrw-options* *netrw-var* |
| |
| The script <netrw.vim> uses several variables which can affect <netrw.vim>'s |
| behavior. These variables typically may be set in the user's <.vimrc> file: |
| |
| g:netrw_uid Holds current user-id for ftp. |
| g:netrw_passwd Holds current password for ftp. |
| b:netrw_lastfile Holds latest method/machine/path. |
| b:netrw_line Holds current line number (during NetWrite) |
| b:netrw_col Holds current cursor position (during NetWrite) |
| g:netrw_ftp =0 use default ftp (uid password) |
| =1 use alternate ftp (user uid password) |
| (see |netrw-options|) |
| g:netrw_ftpmode ="binary" (default) |
| ="ascii" (your choice) |
| g:netrw_ignorenetrc =1 (default) |
| if you have a <.netrc> file but you don't |
| want it used, then set this variable. Its |
| mere existence is enough to cause <.netrc> |
| to be ignored. |
| g:netrw_win95ftp =0 use unix-style ftp even if win95/98/ME/etc |
| =1 use default method to do ftp |
| g:netrw_cygwin =1 assume scp under windows is from cygwin |
| (default/windows) |
| =0 assume scp under windows accepts windows |
| style paths (default/else) |
| g:netrw_use_nt_rcp =0 don't use WinNT/2K/XP's rcp (default) |
| =1 use WinNT/2K/XP's rcp, binary mode |
| |
| |
| The script will also make use of the following variables internally, albeit |
| temporarily. |
| |
| g:netrw_method Index indicating rcp/ftp+.netrc/ftp |
| g:netrw_machine Holds machine name parsed from input |
| g:netrw_fname Holds filename being accessed |
| |
| *netrw-protocol* |
| > |
| ------------------------ |
| Protocol Control Options |
| ------------------------ |
| Option Type Setting Meaning ~ |
| --------- -------- -------------- --------------------------- > |
| netrw_ftp variable =doesn't exist userid set by "user userid" |
| =0 userid set by "user userid" |
| =1 userid set by "userid" |
| NetReadFixup function =doesn't exist no change |
| =exists Allows user to have files |
| read via ftp automatically |
| transformed however they wish |
| by NetReadFixup() |
| g:netrw_dav_cmd variable ="cadaver" |
| g:netrw_fetch_cmd variable ="fetch -o" |
| g:netrw_ftp_cmd variable ="ftp" |
| g:netrw_http_cmd variable ="fetch -o" else if fetch is executable |
| g:netrw_http_cmd variable ="wget -O" if wget is executable |
| g:netrw_rcp_cmd variable ="rcp" |
| g:netrw_rsync_cmd variable ="rsync -a" |
| g:netrw_scp_cmd variable ="scp -q" |
| g:netrw_sftp_cmd variable ="sftp" |
| < |
| The first two options both help with certain ftp's that give trouble otherwise. |
| In order to best understand how to use these options if ftp is giving you |
| troubles, a bit of discussion follows on how netrw does ftp reads. |
| |
| The g:netrw_..._cmd variables specify the external program to use handle |
| the associated protocol (rcp, ftp, etc), plus any options. |
| |
| Netrw typically builds up lines of one of the following formats in a |
| temporary file: |
| > |
| IF g:netrw_ftp !exists or is not 1 IF g:netrw_ftp exists and is 1 |
| ---------------------------------- ------------------------------ |
| open machine [port] open machine [port] |
| user userid password userid password |
| [g:netrw_ftpmode] password |
| get filename tempfile [g:netrw_ftpmode] |
| get filename tempfile |
| < |
| Netrw then executes the lines above by use of a filter: |
| > |
| :%! {g:netrw_ftp_cmd} -i [-n] |
| < |
| |
| where |
| g:netrw_ftp_cmd is usually "ftp", |
| -i tells ftp not to be interactive |
| -n means don't use netrc and is used for Method #3 (ftp w/o <.netrc>) |
| |
| If <.netrc> exists it will be used to avoid having to query the user for |
| userid and password). The transferred file is put into a temporary file. |
| The temporary file is then read into the main editing session window that |
| requested it and the temporary file deleted. |
| |
| If your ftp doesn't accept the "user" command and immediately just demands |
| a userid, then try putting "let netrw_ftp=1" in your <.vimrc>. |
| |
| *netrw-fixup* |
| If your ftp for whatever reason generates unwanted lines (such as AUTH |
| messages) you may write a NetReadFixup(tmpfile) function: |
| > |
| function! NetReadFixup(method,line1,line2) |
| " a:line1: first new line in current file |
| " a:line2: last new line in current file |
| if a:method == 1 "rcp |
| elseif a:method == 2 "ftp + <.netrc> |
| elseif a:method == 3 "ftp + machine,uid,password,filename |
| elseif a:method == 4 "scp |
| elseif a:method == 5 "http/wget |
| elseif a:method == 6 "dav/cadaver |
| elseif a:method == 7 "rsync |
| elseif a:method == 8 "fetch |
| elseif a:method == 9 "sftp |
| else " complain |
| endif |
| endfunction |
| > |
| The NetReadFixup() function will be called if it exists and thus allows |
| you to customize your reading process. As a further example, <netrw.vim> |
| contains just such a function to handle Windows 95 ftp. For whatever |
| reason, Windows 95's ftp dumps four blank lines at the end of a transfer, |
| and so it is desirable to automate their removal. Here's some code taken |
| from <netrw.vim> itself: |
| > |
| if has("win95") && g:netrw_win95ftp |
| fu! NetReadFixup(method, line1, line2) |
| if method == 3 " ftp (no <.netrc>) |
| let fourblanklines= line2 - 3 |
| silent fourblanklines.",".line2."g/^\s*/d" |
| endif |
| endfunction |
| endif |
| > |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 7. Debugging *netrw-debug* |
| |
| The <netrw.vim> script is typically available as: |
| |
| /usr/local/share/vim/vim6x/plugin/netrw.vim |
| |
| which is loaded automatically at startup (assuming :set nocp). |
| |
| 1. Get the <Decho.vim> script, available as: |
| |
| http://mysite.verizon.net/astronaut/vim/index.html#vimlinks_scripts |
| as "Decho, a vimL debugging aid" |
| or |
| http://vim.sourceforge.net/scripts/script.php?script_id=120 |
| |
| and put it into your local plugin directory |
| |
| 2. Edit the <netrw.vim> file as follows: |
| |
| :DechoOn |
| |
| (to restore to normal, use :DechoOff ) |
| |
| 3. Then bring up vim and attempt a transfer. A set of messages |
| should appear concerning the steps that <netrw.vim> took in |
| attempting to read/write your file over the network. Please |
| send that information to <netrw.vim>'s maintainer, |
| |
| drchipNOSPAM at campbellfamily.biz - NOSPAM |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 8. New Stuff *netrw-new* *netrw-newstuff* |
| |
| v43: * moved "Explanation" comments to <pi_netrw.txt> help file |
| as "Network Reference" (|netrw-ref|) |
| * <netrw.vim> now uses Dfunc() Decho() and Dret() for debugging |
| * removed superfluous NetRestorePosn() calls |
| v42: * now does BufReadPre and BufReadPost events on file:///* |
| and file://localhost/* |
| v41: * installed file:///* and file://localhost/* handling |
| v40: * prevents redraw when a protocol error occurs so that the |
| user may see it |
| v39: * sftp support |
| v38: * Now uses NetRestorePosn() calls with Nread/Nwrite commands |
| * Temporary files now removed via bwipe! instead of bwipe |
| (thanks to Dave Roberts) |
| v37: * Claar's modifications which test if ftp is successful, otherwise |
| give an error message |
| * After a read, the alternate file was pointing to the temp file. |
| The temp file buffer is now wiped out. |
| * removed silent from transfer methods so user can see what's |
| happening |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 9. Credits *netrw-credits* |
| |
| Vim editor by Bram Moolenaar (Thanks, Bram!) |
| dav support by C Campbell |
| fetch support by Bram Moolenaar and C Campbell |
| ftp support by C Campbell <NdrOchip@ScampbellPfamily.AbizM> - NOSPAM |
| http support by Bram Moolenaar <bram@moolenaar.net> |
| rcp |
| rsync support by C Campbell (suggested by Erik Warendorph) |
| scp support by raf <raf@comdyn.com.au> |
| sftp support by C Campbell |
| |
| inputsecret(), BufReadCmd, BufWriteCmd contributed by C Campbell |
| |
| Jérôme Augé -- also using new buffer method with ftp+.netrc |
| Bram Moolenaar -- obviously vim itself, :e and v:cmdarg use, fetch,... |
| Yasuhiro Matsumoto -- pointing out undo+0r problem and a solution |
| Erik Warendorph -- for several suggestions (g:netrw_..._cmd |
| variables, rsync etc) |
| Doug Claar -- modifications to test for success with ftp operation |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: |