Mercurial > vim
view READMEdir/README_ami.txt @ 18722:3bc59131171f
Cirrus CI: add a simple CI using BSD
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/e307073680d498b113c7df8250abd5676de1ed13
Author: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Date: Wed Nov 27 15:45:57 2019 +0100
Cirrus CI: add a simple CI using BSD
Cirrus CI allows to run CI tests in a wide variety of systems, such as
Mac, Windows and FreeBSD. For a starter, add a Cirrus-CI test just for
FreeBSD using version 12, assuming Windows and Linux are already tested
using appveyor and Travis CI
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 27 Nov 2019 16:15:04 +0100 |
parents | 1174611ad715 |
children | af69c9335223 |
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README_ami.txt for version 8.1 of Vim: Vi IMproved. This file explains the installation of Vim on Amiga systems. See README.txt for general information about Vim. Unpack the distributed files in the place where you want to keep them. It is wise to have a "vim" directory to keep your vimrc file and any other files you change. The distributed files go into a subdirectory. This way you can easily upgrade to a new version. For example: dh0:editors/vim contains your vimrc and modified files dh0:editors/vim/vim54 contains the Vim version 5.4 distributed files dh0:editors/vim/vim55 contains the Vim version 5.5 distributed files You would then unpack the archives like this: cd dh0:editors tar xf t:vim81bin.tar tar xf t:vim81rt.tar Set the $VIM environment variable to point to the top directory of your Vim files. For the above example: set VIM=dh0:editors/vim Vim version 5.4 will look for your vimrc file in $VIM, and for the runtime files in $VIM/vim54. See ":help $VIM" for more information. Make sure the Vim executable is in your search path. Either copy the Vim executable to a directory that is in your search path, or (preferred) modify the search path to include the directory where the Vim executable is.