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- *recover.txt* Nvim
- VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
- Recovery after a crash *crash-recovery*
- You have spent several hours typing in that text that has to be finished
- next morning, and then disaster strikes: Your computer crashes.
- DON'T PANIC!
- You can recover most of your changes from the files that Vim uses to store
- the contents of the file. Mostly you can recover your work with one command:
- vim -r filename
- Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
- ==============================================================================
- 1. The swap file *swap-file*
- Vim stores the things you changed in a swap file. Using the original file
- you started from plus the swap file you can mostly recover your work.
- You can see the name of the current swap file being used with the command:
- :sw[apname] *:sw* *:swapname*
- Or you can use the |swapname()| function, which also allows for seeing the
- swap file name of other buffers.
- The name of the swap file is normally the same as the file you are editing,
- with the extension ".swp".
- - On Unix, a '.' is prepended to swap file names in the same directory as the
- edited file. This avoids that the swap file shows up in a directory
- listing.
- - If this file already exists (e.g., when you are recovering from a crash) a
- warning is given and another extension is used, ".swo", ".swn", etc.
- - An existing file will never be overwritten.
- - The swap file is deleted as soon as Vim stops editing the file.
- *E326*
- Technical: If the ".swp" file name already exists, the last character is
- decremented until there is no file with that name or ".saa" is
- reached. In the last case, no swap file is created.
- By setting the 'directory' option you can place the swap file in another place
- than where the edited file is.
- Advantages:
- - You will not pollute the directories with ".swp" files.
- - When the 'directory' is on another partition, reduce the risk of damaging
- the file system where the file is (in a crash).
- Disadvantages:
- - You can get name collisions from files with the same name but in different
- directories (although Vim tries to avoid that by comparing the path name).
- This will result in bogus ATTENTION warning messages.
- - When you use your home directory, and somebody else tries to edit the same
- file, that user will not see your swap file and will not get the ATTENTION
- warning message.
- If you want to put swap files in a fixed place, put a command resembling the
- following ones in your vimrc:
- :set dir=~/tmp (for Unix)
- :set dir=c:\\tmp (for Win32)
- This is also very handy when editing files on floppy. Of course you will have
- to create that "tmp" directory for this to work!
- For read-only files, a swap file is not used right away. The swap file is
- created only when making changes.
- The 'swapfile' option can be reset to avoid creating a swapfile. And the
- |:noswapfile| modifier can be used to not create a swapfile for a new buffer.
- :nos[wapfile] {command} *:nos* *:noswapfile*
- Execute {command}. If it contains a command that loads a new
- buffer, it will be loaded without creating a swapfile and the
- 'swapfile' option will be reset. If a buffer already had a
- swapfile it is not removed and 'swapfile' is not reset.
- Detecting an existing swap file ~
- You can find this in the user manual, section |11.3|.
- Updating the swapfile ~
- The swap file is updated after typing 200 characters or when you have not
- typed anything for four seconds. This only happens if the buffer was
- changed, not when you only moved around. The reason why it is not kept up to
- date all the time is that this would slow down normal work too much. You can
- change the 200 character count with the 'updatecount' option. You can set
- the time with the 'updatetime' option. The time is given in milliseconds.
- After writing to the swap file Vim syncs the file to disk.
- If the writing to the swap file is not wanted, it can be switched off by
- setting the 'updatecount' option to 0. The same is done when starting Vim
- with the "-n" option. Writing can be switched back on by setting the
- 'updatecount' option to non-zero. Swap files will be created for all buffers
- when doing this. But when setting 'updatecount' to zero, the existing swap
- files will not be removed, it will only affect files that will be opened
- after this.
- If you want to make sure that your changes are in the swap file use this
- command:
- *:pre* *:preserve* *E313* *E314*
- :pre[serve] Write all text for the current buffer into its swap
- file. The original file is no longer needed for
- recovery.
- A Vim swap file can be recognized by the first six characters: "b0VIM ".
- After that comes the version number, e.g., "3.0".
- Links and symbolic links ~
- On Unix it is possible to have two names for the same file. This can be done
- with hard links and with symbolic links (symlinks).
- For hard links Vim does not know the other name of the file. Therefore, the
- name of the swapfile will be based on the name you used to edit the file.
- There is no check for editing the same file by the other name too, because Vim
- cannot find the other swapfile (except for searching all of your harddisk,
- which would be very slow).
- For symbolic links Vim resolves the links to find the name of the actual file.
- The swap file name is based on that name. Thus it doesn't matter by what name
- you edit the file, the swap file name will normally be the same. However,
- there are exceptions:
- - When the directory of the actual file is not writable the swapfile is put
- elsewhere.
- - When the symbolic links somehow create a loop you get an *E773* error
- message and the unmodified file name will be used. You won't be able to
- save your file normally.
- ==============================================================================
- 2. Recovery *recovery* *E308* *E311*
- Basic file recovery is explained in the user manual: |usr_11.txt|.
- Another way to do recovery is to start Vim and use the ":recover" command.
- This is easy when you start Vim to edit a file and you get the "ATTENTION:
- Found a swap file ..." message. In this case the single command ":recover"
- will do the work. You can also give the name of the file or the swap file to
- the recover command:
- *:rec* *:recover* *E305* *E306* *E307*
- :rec[over] [file] Try to recover [file] from the swap file. If [file]
- is not given use the file name for the current
- buffer. The current contents of the buffer are lost.
- This command fails if the buffer was modified.
- :rec[over]! [file] Like ":recover", but any changes in the current
- buffer are lost.
- *E312* *E309* *E310*
- Vim has some intelligence about what to do if the swap file is corrupt in
- some way. If Vim has doubt about what it found, it will give an error
- message and insert lines with "???" in the text. If you see an error message
- while recovering, search in the file for "???" to see what is wrong. You may
- want to cut and paste to get the text you need.
- The most common remark is "???LINES MISSING". This means that Vim cannot read
- the text from the original file. This can happen if the system crashed and
- parts of the original file were not written to disk.
- Be sure that the recovery was successful before overwriting the original
- file or deleting the swap file. It is good practice to write the recovered
- file elsewhere and run 'diff' to find out if the changes you want are in the
- recovered file. Or use |:DiffOrig|.
- Once you are sure the recovery is ok delete the swap file. Otherwise, you
- will continue to get warning messages that the ".swp" file already exists.
- vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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