use-package
inspired plugin/package management for
Neovim.
Have questions? Start a discussion.
Have a problem or idea? Make an issue or a PR.
Packer is built on native packages. You may wish to read :h packages
before continuing
- Notices
- Features
- Requirements
- Quickstart
- Bootstrapping
- Usage
- Profiling
- Debugging
- Status
- Contributors
- 2021-07-31: If you're on macOS, note that building Neovim with the version of
luv
fromhomebrew
will cause anypacker
command to crash. More about this issue at neovim/neovim#15054. - 2021-07-28:
packer
will now highlight commits/plugin names with potentially breaking changes (determined by looking forbreaking change
orbreaking_change
, case insensitive, in the update commit bodies and headers) asWarningMsg
in the status window. - 2021-06-06: Your Neovim must include neovim/neovim#14659;
packer
uses thenoautocmd
key. - 2021-04-19:
packer
now provides built-in profiling for your config via thepacker_compiled
file. Take a look at the docs for more information! - 2021-02-18: Having trouble with Luarocks on macOS? See this issue.
- 2021-01-19: Basic Luarocks support has landed! Use the
rocks
key with a string or table to specify packages to install. - 2020-12-10: The
disable_commands
configuration flag now affects non-startup
use as well. This means that, by default,packer
will create commands for basic operations for you. - 2020-11-13: There is now a default implementation for a floating window
open_fn
inpacker.util
. - 2020-09-04: Due to changes to the Neovim
extmark
api (see: https://github.com/neovim/neovim/commit/3853276d9cacc99a2698117e904475dbf7033383), users will need to update to a version of Neovim after the aforementioned PR was merged. There are currently shims around the changed functions which should maintain support for earlier versions of Neovim, but these are intended to be temporary and will be removed by 2020-10-04. Therefore Packer will not work with Neovim v0.4.4, which was released before theextmark
change.
- Declarative plugin specification
- Support for dependencies
- Support for Luarocks dependencies
- Expressive configuration and lazy-loading options
- Automatically compiles efficient lazy-loading code to improve startup time
- Uses native packages
- Extensible
- Written in Lua, configured in Lua
- Post-install/update hooks
- Uses jobs for async installation
- Support for
git
tags, branches, revisions, submodules - Support for local plugins
- You need to be running Neovim v0.5.0+;
packer
makes use of extmarks and other newly-added Neovim features. - If you are on Windows 10, you need developer mode enabled in order to use local plugins (creating symbolic links requires admin privileges on Windows - credit to @TimUntersberger for this note)
To get started, first clone this repository to somewhere on your packpath
, e.g.:
Unix, Linux Installation
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/wbthomason/packer.nvim\
~/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/packer.nvim
If you use Arch Linux, there is also an AUR package.
Windows Powershell Installation
git clone https://github.com/wbthomason/packer.nvim "$env:LOCALAPPDATA\nvim-data\site\pack\packer\start\packer.nvim"
Then you can write your plugin specification in Lua, e.g. (in ~/.config/nvim/lua/plugins.lua
):
-- This file can be loaded by calling `lua require('plugins')` from your init.vim
-- Only required if you have packer configured as `opt`
vim.cmd [[packadd packer.nvim]]
return require('packer').startup(function()
-- Packer can manage itself
use 'wbthomason/packer.nvim'
-- Simple plugins can be specified as strings
use '9mm/vim-closer'
-- Lazy loading:
-- Load on specific commands
use {'tpope/vim-dispatch', opt = true, cmd = {'Dispatch', 'Make', 'Focus', 'Start'}}
-- Load on an autocommand event
use {'andymass/vim-matchup', event = 'VimEnter'}
-- Load on a combination of conditions: specific filetypes or commands
-- Also run code after load (see the "config" key)
use {
'w0rp/ale',
ft = {'sh', 'zsh', 'bash', 'c', 'cpp', 'cmake', 'html', 'markdown', 'racket', 'vim', 'tex'},
cmd = 'ALEEnable',
config = 'vim.cmd[[ALEEnable]]'
}
-- Plugins can have dependencies on other plugins
use {
'haorenW1025/completion-nvim',
opt = true,
requires = {{'hrsh7th/vim-vsnip', opt = true}, {'hrsh7th/vim-vsnip-integ', opt = true}}
}
-- Plugins can also depend on rocks from luarocks.org:
use {
'my/supercoolplugin',
rocks = {'lpeg', {'lua-cjson', version = '2.1.0'}}
}
-- You can specify rocks in isolation
use_rocks 'penlight'
use_rocks {'lua-resty-http', 'lpeg'}
-- Local plugins can be included
use '~/projects/personal/hover.nvim'
-- Plugins can have post-install/update hooks
use {'iamcco/markdown-preview.nvim', run = 'cd app && yarn install', cmd = 'MarkdownPreview'}
-- Post-install/update hook with neovim command
use { 'nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter', run = ':TSUpdate' }
-- Post-install/update hook with call of vimscript function with argument
use { 'glacambre/firenvim', run = function() vim.fn['firenvim#install'](0) end }
-- Use specific branch, dependency and run lua file after load
use {
'glepnir/galaxyline.nvim', branch = 'main', config = function() require'statusline' end,
requires = {'kyazdani42/nvim-web-devicons'}
}
-- Use dependency and run lua function after load
use {
'lewis6991/gitsigns.nvim', requires = { 'nvim-lua/plenary.nvim' },
config = function() require('gitsigns').setup() end
}
-- You can specify multiple plugins in a single call
use {'tjdevries/colorbuddy.vim', {'nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter', opt = true}}
-- You can alias plugin names
use {'dracula/vim', as = 'dracula'}
end)
Note that if you get linter complaints about use
being an undefined global, these errors are
spurious - packer
injects use
into the scope of the function passed to startup
.
If these errors bother you, the easiest fix is to simply specify use
as an argument to the
function you pass to startup
, e.g.
packer.startup(function(use)
...your config...
end)
packer
provides the following commands after you've run and configured packer
with require('packer').startup(...)
:
-- You must run this or `PackerSync` whenever you make changes to your plugin configuration
-- Regenerate compiled loader file
:PackerCompile
-- Remove any disabled or unused plugins
:PackerClean
-- Clean, then install missing plugins
:PackerInstall
-- Clean, then update and install plugins
:PackerUpdate
-- Perform `PackerUpdate` and then `PackerCompile`
:PackerSync
-- Loads opt plugin immediately
:PackerLoad completion-nvim ale
You can configure Neovim to automatically run :PackerCompile
whenever plugins.lua
is updated with
an autocommand:
augroup packer_user_config
autocmd!
autocmd BufWritePost plugins.lua source <afile> | PackerCompile
augroup end
This autocommand can be placed in your init.vim
, or any other startup file as per your setup.
Placing this in plugins.lua
could look like this:
vim.cmd([[
augroup packer_user_config
autocmd!
autocmd BufWritePost plugins.lua source <afile> | PackerCompile
augroup end
]])
If you want to automatically install and set up packer.nvim
on any machine you clone your configuration to,
add the following snippet (which is due to @Iron-E and @khuedoan) somewhere in your config before your first usage of packer
:
local fn = vim.fn
local install_path = fn.stdpath('data')..'/site/pack/packer/start/packer.nvim'
if fn.empty(fn.glob(install_path)) > 0 then
packer_bootstrap = fn.system({'git', 'clone', '--depth', '1', 'https://github.com/wbthomason/packer.nvim', install_path})
end
return require('packer').startup(function(use)
-- My plugins here
-- use 'foo1/bar1.nvim'
-- use 'foo2/bar2.nvim'
-- Automatically set up your configuration after cloning packer.nvim
-- Put this at the end after all plugins
if packer_bootstrap then
require('packer').sync()
end
end)
You can also use the following command (with packer
bootstrapped) to have packer
setup your
configuration (or simply run updates) and close once all operations are completed:
$ nvim --headless -c 'autocmd User PackerComplete quitall' -c 'PackerSync'
The above snippets give some examples of packer
features and use. Examples include:
- My dotfiles:
- An example using the
startup
method: tjdevries- Using this method, you do not require a "loading" file. You can simply
lua require('plugins')
from yourinit.vim
- Using this method, you do not require a "loading" file. You can simply
The following is a more in-depth explanation of packer
's features and use.
packer
provides packer.startup(spec)
, which is used in the above examples.
startup
is a convenience function for simple setup and can be invoked as follows:
spec
can be a function:packer.startup(function() use 'tjdevries/colorbuddy.vim' end)
spec
can be a table with a function as its first element and config overrides as another element:packer.startup({function() use 'tjdevries/colorbuddy.vim' end, config = { ... }})
spec
can be a table with a table of plugin specifications as its first element, config overrides as another element, and optional rock specifications as another element:packer.startup({{'tjdevries/colorbuddy.vim'}, config = { ... }, rocks = { ... }})
You are not required to use packer.startup
if you prefer a more manual setup with finer control
over configuration and loading.
To take this approach, load packer
like any other Lua module. You must call packer.init()
before
performing any operations; it is recommended to call packer.reset()
if you may be re-running your
specification code (e.g. by sourcing your plugin specification file with luafile
).
You may pass a table of configuration values to packer.init()
to customize its operation. The
default configuration values (and structure of the configuration table) are:
{
ensure_dependencies = true, -- Should packer install plugin dependencies?
package_root = util.join_paths(vim.fn.stdpath('data'), 'site', 'pack'),
compile_path = util.join_paths(vim.fn.stdpath('config'), 'plugin', 'packer_compiled.lua'),
plugin_package = 'packer', -- The default package for plugins
max_jobs = nil, -- Limit the number of simultaneous jobs. nil means no limit
auto_clean = true, -- During sync(), remove unused plugins
compile_on_sync = true, -- During sync(), run packer.compile()
disable_commands = false, -- Disable creating commands
opt_default = false, -- Default to using opt (as opposed to start) plugins
transitive_opt = true, -- Make dependencies of opt plugins also opt by default
transitive_disable = true, -- Automatically disable dependencies of disabled plugins
auto_reload_compiled = true, -- Automatically reload the compiled file after creating it.
git = {
cmd = 'git', -- The base command for git operations
subcommands = { -- Format strings for git subcommands
update = 'pull --ff-only --progress --rebase=false',
install = 'clone --depth %i --no-single-branch --progress',
fetch = 'fetch --depth 999999 --progress',
checkout = 'checkout %s --',
update_branch = 'merge --ff-only @{u}',
current_branch = 'branch --show-current',
diff = 'log --color=never --pretty=format:FMT --no-show-signature HEAD@{1}...HEAD',
diff_fmt = '%%h %%s (%%cr)',
get_rev = 'rev-parse --short HEAD',
get_msg = 'log --color=never --pretty=format:FMT --no-show-signature HEAD -n 1',
submodules = 'submodule update --init --recursive --progress'
},
depth = 1, -- Git clone depth
clone_timeout = 60, -- Timeout, in seconds, for git clones
default_url_format = 'https://github.com/%s' -- Lua format string used for "aaa/bbb" style plugins
},
display = {
non_interactive = false, -- If true, disable display windows for all operations
open_fn = nil, -- An optional function to open a window for packer's display
open_cmd = '65vnew \\[packer\\]', -- An optional command to open a window for packer's display
working_sym = '⟳', -- The symbol for a plugin being installed/updated
error_sym = '✗', -- The symbol for a plugin with an error in installation/updating
done_sym = '✓', -- The symbol for a plugin which has completed installation/updating
removed_sym = '-', -- The symbol for an unused plugin which was removed
moved_sym = '→', -- The symbol for a plugin which was moved (e.g. from opt to start)
header_sym = '━', -- The symbol for the header line in packer's display
show_all_info = true, -- Should packer show all update details automatically?
prompt_border = 'double', -- Border style of prompt popups.
keybindings = { -- Keybindings for the display window
quit = 'q',
toggle_info = '<CR>',
diff = 'd',
prompt_revert = 'r',
}
},
luarocks = {
python_cmd = 'python' -- Set the python command to use for running hererocks
},
log = { level = 'warn' }, -- The default print log level. One of: "trace", "debug", "info", "warn", "error", "fatal".
profile = {
enable = false,
threshold = 1, -- integer in milliseconds, plugins which load faster than this won't be shown in profile output
}
}
packer
is based around declarative specification of plugins. You can declare a plugin using the
function packer.use
, which I highly recommend locally binding to use
for conciseness.
use
takes either a string or a table. If a string is provided, it is treated as a plugin location
for a non-optional plugin with no additional configuration. Plugin locations may be specified as
- Absolute paths to a local plugin
- Full URLs (treated as plugins managed with
git
) username/repo
paths (treated as Githubgit
plugins)
A table given to use
can take two forms:
- A list of plugin specifications (strings or tables)
- A table specifying a single plugin. It must have a plugin location string as its first element, and may additionally have a number of optional keyword elements, shown below:
use {
'myusername/example', -- The plugin location string
-- The following keys are all optional
disable = boolean, -- Mark a plugin as inactive
as = string, -- Specifies an alias under which to install the plugin
installer = function, -- Specifies custom installer. See "custom installers" below.
updater = function, -- Specifies custom updater. See "custom installers" below.
after = string or list, -- Specifies plugins to load before this plugin. See "sequencing" below
rtp = string, -- Specifies a subdirectory of the plugin to add to runtimepath.
opt = boolean, -- Manually marks a plugin as optional.
branch = string, -- Specifies a git branch to use
tag = string, -- Specifies a git tag to use
commit = string, -- Specifies a git commit to use
lock = boolean, -- Skip updating this plugin in updates/syncs. Still cleans.
run = string, function, or table, -- Post-update/install hook. See "update/install hooks".
requires = string or list, -- Specifies plugin dependencies. See "dependencies".
rocks = string or list, -- Specifies Luarocks dependencies for the plugin
config = string or function, -- Specifies code to run after this plugin is loaded.
-- The setup key implies opt = true
setup = string or function, -- Specifies code to run before this plugin is loaded.
-- The following keys all imply lazy-loading and imply opt = true
cmd = string or list, -- Specifies commands which load this plugin. Can be an autocmd pattern.
ft = string or list, -- Specifies filetypes which load this plugin.
keys = string or list, -- Specifies maps which load this plugin. See "Keybindings".
event = string or list, -- Specifies autocommand events which load this plugin.
fn = string or list -- Specifies functions which load this plugin.
cond = string, function, or list of strings/functions, -- Specifies a conditional test to load this plugin
module = string or list -- Specifies Lua module names for require. When requiring a string which starts
-- with one of these module names, the plugin will be loaded.
module_pattern = string/list -- Specifies Lua pattern of Lua module names for require. When
requiring a string which matches one of these patterns, the plugin will be loaded.
}
For the cmd
option, the command may be a full command, or an autocommand pattern. If the command contains any
non-alphanumeric characters, it is assumed to be a pattern, and instead of creating a stub command, it creates
a CmdUndefined autocmd to load the plugin when a command that matches the pattern is invoked.
You can check whether or not a particular plugin is installed with packer
as well as if that plugin is loaded.
To do this you can check for the plugin's name in the packer_plugins
global table.
Plugins in this table are saved using only the last section of their names
e.g. tpope/vim-fugitive
if installed will be under the key vim-fugitive
.
if packer_plugins["vim-fugitive"] and packer_plugins["vim-fugitive"].loaded then
print("Vim fugitive is loaded")
-- other custom logic
end
NOTE: this table is only available after packer_compiled.vim
is loaded so cannot be used till after plugins
have been loaded.
You may specify that a plugin requires one or more Luarocks packages using the rocks
key. This key
takes either a string specifying the name of a package (e.g. rocks=lpeg
), or a list specifying one or more packages.
Entries in the list may either be strings, a list of strings or a table --- the latter case is used to specify arguments such as the
particular version of a package.
all supported luarocks keys are allowed except: tree
and local
. Environment variables for the luarocks command can also be
specified using the env
key which takes a table as the value as shown below.
rocks = {'lpeg', {'lua-cjson', version = '2.1.0'}}
use_rocks {'lua-cjson', 'lua-resty-http'}
use_rocks {'luaformatter', server = 'https://luarocks.org/dev'}
use_rocks {'openssl' env = {OPENSSL_DIR = "/path/to/dir"}}
Currently, packer
only supports equality constraints on package versions.
packer
also provides the function packer.luarocks.install_commands()
, which creates the
PackerRocks <cmd> <packages...>
command. <cmd>
must be one of "install" or "remove";
<packages...>
is one or more package names (currently, version restrictions are not supported with
this command). Running PackerRocks
will install or remove the given packages. You can use this
command even if you don't use packer
to manage your plugins. However, please note that (1)
packages installed through PackerRocks
will be removed by calls to packer.luarocks.clean()
(unless they are also part of a packer
plugin specification), and (2) you will need to manually
invoke packer.luarocks.setup_paths
(or otherwise modify your package.path
) to ensure that Neovim
can find the installed packages.
Finally, packer
provides the function packer.use_rocks
, which takes a string or table specifying
one or more Luarocks packages as in the rocks
key. You can use this to ensure that packer
downloads and manages some rocks which you want to use, but which are not associated with any
particular plugin.
You may specify a custom installer & updater for a plugin using the installer
and updater
keys.
Note that either both or none of these keys are required. These keys should be functions which take
as an argument a display
object (from lua/packer/display.lua
) and return an async function (per
lua/packer/async.lua
) which (respectively) installs/updates the given plugin.
Providing the installer
/updater
keys overrides plugin type detection, but you still need to
provide a location string for the name of the plugin.
You may specify operations to be run after successful installs/updates of a plugin with the run
key. This key may either be a Lua function, which will be called with the plugin
table for this
plugin (containing the information passed to use
as well as output from the installation/update
commands, the installation path of the plugin, etc.), a string, or a table of functions and strings.
If an element of run
is a string, then either:
- If the first character of
run
is ":", it is treated as a Neovim command and executed. - Otherwise,
run
is treated as a shell command and run in the installation directory of the plugin via$SHELL -c '<run>'
.
Plugins may specify dependencies via the requires
key. This key can be a string or a list (table).
If requires
is a string, it is treated as specifying a single plugin. If a plugin with the name
given in requires
is already known in the managed set, nothing happens. Otherwise, the string is
treated as a plugin location string and the corresponding plugin is added to the managed set.
If requires
is a list, it is treated as a list of plugin specifications following the format given
above.
If ensure_dependencies
is true, the plugins specified in requires
will be installed.
Plugins specified in requires
are removed when no active plugins require them.
You may specify a loading order for plugins using the after
key. This key can be a string or a
list (table).
If after
is a string, it must be the name of another plugin managed by packer
(e.g. the final segment of a plugin's path - for a Github plugin FooBar/Baz
, the name would be just Baz
). If after
is a table, it must be a list of plugin names. If a plugin has an alias (i.e. uses the as
key), this alias is its name.
The set of plugins specified in a plugin's after
key must all be loaded before the plugin
using after
will be loaded. For example, in the specification
use {'FooBar/Baz', ft = 'bax'}
use {'Something/Else', after = 'Baz'}
the plugin Else
will only be loaded after the plugin Baz
, which itself is only loaded for files
with bax
filetype.
Plugins may be lazy-loaded on the use of keybindings/maps. Individual keybindings are specified either as a string (in which case they are treated as normal mode maps) or a table in the format {mode, map}
.
packer
exposes the following functions for common plugin management operations. In all of the
below, plugins
is an optional table of plugin names; if not provided, the default is "all managed
plugins":
packer.install(plugins)
: Install the specified plugins if they are not already installedpacker.update(plugins)
: Update the specified plugins, installing any that are missingpacker.clean()
: Remove any disabled or no longer managed pluginspacker.sync(plugins)
: Perform aclean
followed by anupdate
packer.compile(path)
: Compile lazy-loader code and save topath
.
You can add custom key handlers to packer
by calling packer.set_handler(name, func)
where name
is the key you wish to handle and func
is a function with the signature func(plugins, plugin, value)
where plugins
is the global table of managed plugins, plugin
is the table for a specific
plugin, and value
is the value associated with key name
in plugin
.
To optimize startup time, packer.nvim
compiles code to perform the lazy-loading operations you
specify. This means that you do not need to load packer.nvim
unless you want to perform some
plugin management operations.
To generate the compiled code, call packer.compile(path)
, where path
is some file path on your
runtimepath
, with a .vim
extension. This will generate a blend of Lua and Vimscript to load and
configure all your lazy-loaded plugins (e.g. generating commands, autocommands, etc.) and save it to
path
. Then, when you start vim, the file at path
is loaded (because path
must be on your
runtimepath
), and lazy-loading works.
If path
is not provided to packer.compile
, the output file will default to the value of
config.compile_path
.
The option compile_on_sync
, which defaults to true
, will run packer.compile()
during
packer.sync()
, if set to true
. Note that otherwise, you must run packer.compile
yourself
to generate the lazy-loader file!
NOTE: If you use a function value for config
or setup
keys in any plugin specifications, it
must not have any upvalues (i.e. captures). We currently use Lua's string.dump
to compile
config/setup functions to bytecode, which has this limitation.
Additionally, if functions are given for these keys, the functions will be passed the plugin
name and information table as arguments.
packer
runs most of its operations asyncronously. If you would like to implement automations that
require knowing when the operations are complete, you can use the following User
autocmds (see
:help User
for more info on how to use):
PackerComplete
: Fires after install, update, clean, and sync asynchronous operations finish.PackerCompileDone
: Fires after compiling (see the section on compilation)
You can configure Packer to use a floating window for command outputs by passing a utility
function to packer
's config:
packer.startup({function()
-- Your plugins here
end,
config = {
display = {
open_fn = require('packer.util').float,
}
}})
By default, this floating window will show doubled borders. If you want to customize the window
appearance, you can pass a configuration to float
, which is the same configuration that would be
passed to nvim_open_win
:
packer.startup({function()
-- Your plugins here
end,
config = {
display = {
open_fn = function()
return require('packer.util').float({ border = 'single' })
end
}
}})
Packer has built in functionality that can allow you to profile the time taken loading your plugins. In order to use this functionality you must either enable profiling in your config, or pass in an argument when running packer compile.
config = {
profile = {
enable = true,
threshold = 1 -- the amount in ms that a plugins load time must be over for it to be included in the profile
}
}
:PackerCompile profile=true
" or
:PackerCompile profile=false
This will rebuild your packer_compiled.vim
with profiling code included. In order to visualise the output of the profile
restart your neovim and run PackerProfile
. This will open a window with the output of your profiling.
packer.nvim
logs to stdpath(cache)/packer.nvim.log
. Looking at this file is usually a good start
if something isn't working as expected.
tl;dr: Beta. Things seem to work and most features are complete, but certainly not every edge case has been tested. People willing to give it a try and report bugs/errors are very welcome!
- Basic package management works (i.e. installation, updating, cleaning, start/opt plugins, displaying results)
- Automatic generation of lazy-loading code works
- More testing is needed
- The code is messy and needs more cleanup and refactoring
- Playing with ideas to make manual compilation less necessary
Many thanks to those who have contributed to the project! PRs and issues are always welcome. This list is infrequently updated; please feel free to bug me if you're not listed here and you would like to be.
- @akinsho
- @nanotee
- @weilbith
- @Iron-E
- @tjdevries
- @numToStr
- @fsouza
- @gbrlsnchs
- @lewis6991
- @TimUntersberger
- @bfredl
- @sunjon
- @gwerbin
- @shadmansaleh
- @ur4ltz
- @EdenEast
- @khuedoan