Clear certain criteria from .viminfo file

vim
44,225

Solution 1

I can think of 3 ways to do this.

1. Automatically

  1. Run Vim,

  2. Type: :set viminfo='0,:0,<0,@0,f0

    • '0 means that marks will not be saved
    • :0 means that command-line history will not be saved
    • <0 means that registers will not be saved
    • @0 means that input-line history will not be saved
    • f0 means that marks will not be saved
    • no % means that the buffer list will not be saved
    • no / means that the search history will be saved

    These options are correct in Vim 7.2, but might be different in other versions. For more details on the format of the viminfo string, run :h 'viminfo'

  3. Quit Vim. It will save a new version of the .viminfo file, containing only the information you want to keep.

2. Manually

  1. Open the .viminfo file in vim,

  2. :set viminfo= to turn off the auto-saving of info to the .viminfo file. If you don't do this, Vim will overwrite all your changes when you quit,

  3. Remove everything you don't want (perhaps by using Johnsyweb's answer, or just by deleting the lines with manual edit commands), save the file, and quit vim,

3. In a different editor

Edit the .viminfo file in a different text editor and simply delete everything you don't want,

Solution 2

Open the .viminfo file.

The following command will remove all lines that are neither blank, comment nor search history:

:v/^\([#/?]\|$\)/d

@Rich's answer will help you prevent these lines being repopulated.

Solution 3

You can use vim itself to modify the file, and your changes will stay put if you invoke it like this:

$ vim -i NONE ~/.viminfo

Starting vim with the -i option sets which viminfo file to use for that session. The special value NONE means that nothing is saved at all. This can be handy for editing other auto-generating files or sensitive data.

From man vim:

-i {viminfo}
When using the viminfo file is enabled, this option sets the filename
to use, instead of the default ~/.viminfo. This can also be used to
skip the use of the viminfo file, by giving the name NONE.

Solution 4

VIM seems not having a built-in command for this job. But you can do it in a shell with "grep". For example, the following command will clear the Command Line History,File marks, Jumplist:

bash $ grep -v "^[:'-]" .viminfo > .viminfo_clear
bash $ cp .viminfo_clear .viminfo

If you open the .viminfo, you will find that the command line history is started with ":", the file mark is started with "'", and the jumplist is started with "-".

Solution 5

Copy useful part out and delete .viminfo, then open/close Vim. It will regenerate .viminfo. Then copy useful part back.

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ungalnanban
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ungalnanban

Updated on January 25, 2020

Comments

  • ungalnanban
    ungalnanban about 4 years

    How can I clear certain criteria from my .viminfo file?

    I want to clear the command line history, file marks, jumplist, etc.

    However, I want to keep the search string history.

    Is there any way to do this?

  • ungalnanban
    ungalnanban almost 14 years
    eeeeeeeeeeeeee... bad answer. why you are creating unnecessary file and your answer is wrong.