7.7 KiB
mgua's kickstart.nvim
Introduction
This project is heavily based on TJ DeVries amazing work to promote Neovim adoption and usage. Please see the original project nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim In my neovim journey I recently migrated from vimscript to lua, and I am still in the process of adjusting my setup.
I am working to make this kickstart a standard for my development team, which is easy to deploy on Windows Linux amd MacOSX systems. Kickstart is just a configuration procedure. It requires to have several components installed and prepared. In the following notes I will list the preparation activities to be performed on the different operating systems. A possible alternative approach is to use a neovim distribution, like
- LazyVim: maintained by @folke (the author of lazy.nvim package manager)
Linux
Neovim preparation and Installation for Linux
Ubuntu
from root:
- apt update
- apt upgrade
- apt install software-properties-common
- add-apt-repository ppa:neovim-ppa/stable
- apt update
- apt install ripgrep fd-find
- apt install neovim
Kali
from root:
- apt update
- apt upgrade
- apt install ripgrep fd-find
- cd
- mkdir neovim
- cd neovim
- curl -LO https://github.com/neovim/neovim/releases/latest/download/nvim.appimage
- chmod +x nvim.appimage
- cp nvim.appimage /usr/bin/
- ln -s /usr/bin/nvim.appimage /usr/bin/nvim
- (To be completed)
Almalinux
from root:
- yum update
- yum install ripgrep fd-find
- yum install neovim
- Kickstart Configuration (in non privileged user context)*
- Exit from nvim if open
- cd $HOME/.config
- mv nvim nvim_old
- mkdir nvim
- cd nvim
- git clone https://github.com/mgua/kickstart.nvim.git .
Start nvim now, and you should see the automatic download and updates by lazy
--
Windows
Neovim preparation and Installation for windows
actions to be executed from administrator user:
- Chocolatey package manager installation (see https://chocolatey.org/)
- run the following from powershell admin
- Set-ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Scope Process -Force; [System.Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol = [System.Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol -bor 3072; iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://community.chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))
- close and reopen admin window
- Winget package manager installation ( see https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/package-manager/winget/ )
- install winget from microsoft store
- from an administrator console, execute:
Kickstart Configuration (in non privileged user context)
- Exit from nvim if open
- cd $HOME/App.config
- mv nvim nvim_old
- mkdir nvim
- cd nvim
- git clone https://github.com/mgua/kickstart.nvim.git .
--
Kickstart.nvim targets only the latest 'stable' and latest 'nightly' of Neovim. If you are experiencing issues, please make sure you have the latest versions.
- Backup your previous configuration
- (Recommended) Fork this repo (so that you have your own copy that you can modify).
- Clone the kickstart repo into
$HOME/.config/nvim/
(Linux/Mac) or~/AppData/Local/nvim/
(Windows)- If you don't want to include it as a git repo, you can just clone it and then move the files to this location
- Start Neovim (
nvim
) and allowlazy.nvim
to complete installation. - Restart Neovim
- You're ready to go!
Additional system requirements:
- Make sure to review the readmes of the plugins if you are experiencing errors. In particular:
- See as well Windows Installation
Configuration And Extension
- Inside of your fork, feel free to modify any file you like! It's your fork!
- Then there are two primary configuration options available:
- Include the
lua/kickstart/plugins/*
files in your configuration. - Add new configuration in
lua/custom/plugins/*
files, which will be auto sourced usinglazy.nvim
- NOTE: To enable this, you need to uncomment
{ import = 'custom.plugins' }
in yourinit.lua
- NOTE: To enable this, you need to uncomment
- Include the
You can also merge updates/changes from the repo back into your fork, to keep up-to-date with any changes for the default configuration
Example: Adding an autopairs plugin
In the file: lua/custom/plugins/autopairs.lua
, add:
-- File: lua/custom/plugins/autopairs.lua
return {
"windwp/nvim-autopairs",
config = function()
require("nvim-autopairs").setup {}
end,
}
This will automatically install nvim-autopairs
and enable it on startup. For more information, see documentation for lazy.nvim.
Example: Adding a file tree plugin
In the file: lua/custom/plugins/filetree.lua
, add:
-- Unless you are still migrating, remove the deprecated commands from v1.x
vim.cmd([[ let g:neo_tree_remove_legacy_commands = 1 ]])
return {
"nvim-neo-tree/neo-tree.nvim",
version = "*",
dependencies = {
"nvim-lua/plenary.nvim",
"nvim-tree/nvim-web-devicons", -- not strictly required, but recommended
"MunifTanjim/nui.nvim",
},
config = function ()
require('neo-tree').setup {}
end,
}
This will install the tree plugin and add the command :Neotree
for you. You can explore the documentation at neo-tree.nvim for more information.
Example: Adding a file to change default options
To change default options, you can add a file in the /after/plugin/
folder (see :help load-plugins
) to include your own options, keymaps, autogroups, and more. The following is an example defaults.lua
file (located at $HOME/.config/nvim/after/plugin/defaults.lua
).
vim.opt.relativenumber = true
vim.keymap.set('n', '<leader>sr', require('telescope.builtin').resume, { desc = '[S]earch [R]esume' })
Contribution
Pull-requests are welcome. The goal of this repo is not to create a Neovim configuration framework, but to offer a starting template that shows, by example, available features in Neovim. Some things that will not be included:
- Custom language server configuration (null-ls templates)
- Theming beyond a default colorscheme necessary for LSP highlight groups
Each PR, especially those which increase the line count, should have a description as to why the PR is necessary.
FAQ
- What should I do if I already have a pre-existing neovim configuration?
- You should back it up, then delete all files associated with it.
- This includes your existing init.lua and the neovim files in
~/.local
which can be deleted withrm -rf ~/.local/share/nvim/
- You may also want to look at the migration guide for lazy.nvim
- What if I want to "uninstall" this configuration:
- See lazy.nvim uninstall information
- Are there any cool videos about this plugin?
- Current iteration of kickstart (coming soon)
- Here is one about the previous iteration of kickstart: video introduction to Kickstart.nvim.
Windows Installation
Installation may require installing build tools, and updating the run command for telescope-fzf-native
See telescope-fzf-native
documentation for more details
This requires:
- Install CMake, and the Microsoft C++ Build Tools on Windows
{'nvim-telescope/telescope-fzf-native.nvim', build = 'cmake -S. -Bbuild -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release && cmake --build build --config Release && cmake --install build --prefix build' }