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zdharma / Zinit

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Flexible and fast Zsh plugin manager with clean fpath, reports, completion management, Turbo, annexes, services, packages.

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Table of Contents generated with DocToc

News

Here are the new features and updates added to Zinit in the last 90 days.
  • 16-07-2020

    • A new ice null which works exactly the same as as"null", i.e.: it makes the plugin a null-one ↔ without any scripts sourced (by default, unless src'' or multisrc'' are given) and compiled, and without any completions searched / installed. Example use case:

      zi null sbin"vims" for MilesCranmer/vim-stream
      

      instead of:

      zi as"null" sbin"vims" for MilesCranmer/vim-stream
      

      .

    • A new annex Unscope :) It's goal is: to allow the usage of the unscoped — i.e.: given without any GitHub user name — plugin IDs. Basically it allows to specify, e.g.: zinit load zsh-syntax-highlighting instead of zinit load zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting. It'll automatically send a request to the GitHub API searching for the best candidate (max. # of stars and of forks). It also has an embedded, static database of short nicknames for some of the plugins out there (requests for addition are welcomed), e.g.: vi-reg for zsh-vi-more/evil-registers.

    • A fresh and elastic hook-based architecture has been implemented and deployed — the code is much cleaner and the development will be easier, i.e.: quicker :).

    • Set of small improvements: a) silent'' mutes the Snippet not loaded error message, b) much shorter lag/pause after a plugin installation or update, c) the 256 color palette is being now used for plugin IDs, if available, d) if possible (a UTF-8 locale is needed to be set), the Unicode three-dots will be used instead of ... in the messages, e) nicer snippet IDs in the installation and update messages, f) the annexes can be now loaded in any order without influencing their operation in any way (there have been some issues with Patch-Dl and As-Monitor annexes), g) compile'' can now obtain multiple patterns separated via semicolon (;).

  • 25-06-2020

    • Ability to call the autoloaded function at the moment of loading it by autoload'#fun', i.e.: by prefixing it with the hash sigh (#). So that it's possible to invoke e.g.:

      zinit autoload'#manydots-magic' for knu/zsh-manydots-magic
      

      instead of:

      zinit autoload'manydots-magic' atload'manydots-magic' for \
          knu/zsh-manydots-magic
      
  • 20-06-2020

    • The Bin-Gem-Node annex now has an explicit Cygwin support — it creates additional, extra shim files — Windows batch scripts that allow to run the shielded applications from e.g.: Windows run dialog — if the ~/.zinit/polaris/bin directory is being added to the Windows PATH environment variable, for example (it is a good idea to do so, IMHO). The Windows shims (shims are command-wrapper scripts that are in general created with the sbin'' ice of the annex) have the same name as the standard ones (which are also being created, normally) plus the .cmd extension. You can test the feature by e.g.: installing Firefox from the Zinit package via:

      zinit pack=bgn for firefox
      
    • All cURL progress bars are now guaranteed to be single line — this is being done by a wrapper script.

    • I thought that I'll share an interesting function-type that I'm using within Zinit - a function that outputs messages with theming and colors easily available:

      typeset -gA COLORS=(
          col-error  $'\e[31m'
          col-file   $'\e[38;5;110m'
          col-url    $'\e[38;5;45m'
          col-meta   $'\e[38;5;221m'
          col-meta2  $'\e[38;5;154m'
          col-data   $'\e[38;5;82m'
          col-data2  $'\e[38;5;50m'
          col-rst    $'\e[0m'
          col-can-be-empty ""
      )
      
      m() {
          builtin emulate -LR zsh -o extendedglob
          if [[ $1 = -* ]] { local opt=$1; shift } else { local opt }
          local msg=${(j: :)${@//(#b)([\[\{]([^\]\}]##)[\]\}])/${COLORS[col-$match[2]]-$match[1]}}}
          builtin print -Pr ${opt:#--} -- $msg
      }
      

      Usage is as follows:

      m "{error}ERROR:{rst} The {meta}data{rst} has the value: {data}value{rst}"
      

      Effect:

      screenshot

      The function is available in the atinit'', atload'', etc. hooks.

  • 17-06-2020

    • ziextract and extract'' now support Windows installers — currently the installer of Firefox. Let me know if any of your installers doesn't work. You can test the installer with the Firefox Developer Edition Zinit package:

      zinit pack"bgn" for firefox-dev
      

      The above command will work on Windows (at least on Cygwin), Linux and OS X.

  • 13-06-2020

    • ziextract has a new --move2 option, which moves files two levels up after unpacking. For example, if there will be an archive file with directory structure: Pulumi/bin/{pulumi,pulumi2}, then after ziextract --move2 --auto there will be the two files moved to the top level dir: ./{pulumi,pulumi2}. To obtain the same effect using the extract'' ice, pass two exclamation marks, i.e.: extract'!!'. A real-world example — it uses z-a-as-monitor and z-a-bin-gem-node annexes to download a Zip package that has the files inside two-level nested directory tree:

      zi id-as`pulumi` as`monitor|null` mv`pulumi pulumi_` extract`!` \
          dlink=`https://get.pulumi.com/releases/sdk/pulumi-%VERSION%-windows-x64.zip` \
          sbin`pulumi*` for \
              https://www.pulumi.com/docs/get-started/install/versions/
      
  • 12-06-2020

    • New options to update: -s/--snippets and -l/--plugins — they're limiting the update --all to only plugins or snippets. Example:

      zinit update --plugins
      

      Work also with -p/--parallel.

  • 15-05-2020

    • The autoload'' ice can now rename the autoloaded functions, i.e.: load a function from a file func-A as a function func-B via: autoload'func-A -> func-B; …'.
    • Also, an alternate autoloading method - via: eval "func-file() { $(<func-file); }" — has been exposed — in order to use it, precede the ice contents with an exclamation mark, i.e.: autoload'!func-file'. The rename mode uses this method by default.
  • 12-05-2020

    • A new feature — ability to substitute stringAstringB in plugin source body before executing by subst'A -> B'. Works also for any nested source commands. Example — renaming the dl'' ice into a dload'' ice in the Patch-Dl annex:

      zinit subst"dl'' -> dload''" for zinit-zsh/z-a-patch-dl
      
    • A new ice autoload'' which invokes autoload -Uz … on the given files/functions. Example — a plugin that converts cd ... into cd ../.. that lacks proper setup in any *.plugin.zsh file:

      zinit as=null autoload=manydots-magic atload=manydots-magic for \
          knu/zsh-manydots-magic
      
  • 09-05-2020

    • The from'gh-r' downloading of the binary files from GitHub releases can now download multiple files — if you specify multiple bpick'' ices or separate the patterns with a semicolon (;). Example:

      zinit from"gh-r" as"program" mv"krew-* -> krew" bpick"*.yaml" bpick"*.tar.gz" for \
      kubernetes-sigs/krew
      
    • A new ice opts'' which takes options to sticky-set during sourcing of the plugin. This means that thee options will be also set for all of the functions that the plugin defines — during their execution (only). The option list is space separated. Example:

      # Suppose the example test plugin has the following in test.plugin.zsh:
      #
      # print $options[kshglob] $options[shglob]
      #
      # Then:
      
      zinit opts"kshglob noshglob" for zdharma/test
      
      # Outputs:
      on off
      
      # Can mix with the standard emulation-ices: sh, bash, ksh, csh, zsh (the
      # default one)
      
      zinit sh opts"kshglob" for zdharma/test
      
      # Outputs `on' for the SH_GLOB, because sh-emulation sets this option
      on on 
      
  • 07-05-2020

    • A new from'' value is available — cygwin. It'll cause to download a package from the Cygwin repository — from a random mirror, and then unpack it. Example use:

      # Install gzip and expose it through Bin-Gem-Node annex's sbin'' ice
      zinit from"cygwin" sbin"usr/bin/gzip.exe -> gzip" for gzip
      
  • 16-04-2020

    • Turbo plugins will now get gracefully preinstalled first before the prompt (i.e.: within zshrc processing) and then loaded still as Turbo plugins.
  • 15-04-2020

    • The …/name.plugin.zsh and …/init.zsh can be now skipped from single-file (non-svn) snippet URLs utilizing the OMZ::…, etc. shorthands. Example:

      # Instead of: zinit for OMZP::ruby/ruby.plugin.zsh
      zinit for OMZP::ruby
      # Instead of: zinit for PZTM::rails/init.zsh
      zinit for PZTM::rails
      # Instead of: zinit for OMZT::gnzh.zsh-theme
      zinit for OMZT::gnzh
      
    • New prefixes OMZP:: = OMZ::/plugins/, OMZT:: = OMZ::/themes/, OMZL:: = OMZ::lib/, PZTM:: = PZT::modules/, for both svn and single-file snippets. Example use:

      zinit for OMZP::ruby/ruby.plugin.zsh
      zinit svn for OMZP::ruby
      

      (instead of:

      zinit for OMZ::plugins/ruby/ruby.plugin.zsh
      zinit svn for OMZ::plugins/ruby
      

      ).

  • 12-04-2020

    • A new document on the Wiki is available — about the bindmap'' ice.
    • If id-as'' will have no value, then it'll work as id-as'auto'.
  • 07-04-2020

    • A new feature — param'' ice that defines params for the time of loading of the plugin or snippet. E.g.:

      # Equivalent of `local myparam=1 myparam2=1' right before loading of the plugin
      zinit param'myparam → 1; myparam2 -> 1' for zdharma/null
      # Equivalent of `local myparam myparam2' before loading of the plugin
      zinit param'myparam; myparam2' for zdharma/null
      
    • The atinit'' ice can now be investigated — if it'll be prepended with !, i.e.: atinit'!…'.

  • 01-04-2020

    • As a user noticed, Subversion isn't distributed with Xcode Command Line Tools anymore. Here's a helpful snippet that installs Subversion with use of Zinit.
  • 27-02-2020

    • An important fix has been pushed — due to a bug Turbo has been disabled for non-for syntax invocations of Zinit. Issue zinit self-update to resolve the mistake.
      • If you haven't updated yesterday, please restrain from running zinit update immediately after self-update. Support for reloading Zinit after self-update has been pushed yesterday and after pulling this feature, you'll be able to freely invoke self-update and update.
  • 26-02-2020

    • From now on zinit self-update reloads Zinit for the current session (after updating the plugin manager), and zinit update --all/-p/--parallel detects that self-update has been run in another session and also reloads Zinit right before performing the update. This way the update code is always the newest and consistent.
  • 26-02-2020

    • If the loaded object (plugin or snippet) is not already installed when loading, then Turbo gets automatically disabled for this single loading of the object — it'll be installed before prompt, not after it and also immediately (without waiting the number of seconds given to wait''), i.e.: during the normal processing of zshrc, which intuitively is the expected behavior.
    • The additional disk accesses for the checks cost about 10 ms out of 150 ms (i.e.: the Zsh startup time increases from 140 ms to 150 ms). If you want, you may disable the feature by setting $ZINIT[OPTIMIZE_OUT_DISK_ACCESSES] to 1.
    • A bug in Turbo has been fixed that was delaying the objects' loadings, especially when there were no keystrokes issued.
  • 20-02-2020

    • A new feature - parallel updates of all plugins and snippets — Zinit runs series of spawned concurrent-job groups of size 15 to speed up the update process. To activate, pass -p/--parallel to update, e.g.:

      zinit update -p
      zinit update --parallel
      # Increase the number of jobs in a concurrent-set to 40
      zinit update --parallel 40 
      

      See demos: asciicast1, asciicast2.

    • A new article is available on the Wiki — about the extract ice.

  • 19-02-2020

    The project has a fresh, new subreddit r/zinit. You can also visit the old subreddit r/zplugin.

  • 09-02-2020

    Note that the ice extract can handle files with spaces — to encode such a name use the non-breaking space (Right Alt + Space) in place of the in-filename spaces :).

  • 07-02-2020

    • A new ice extract which extracts:
      • all files with recognized archive extensions like zip, tar.gz, etc.,
      • if no such files will be found, then: all files with recognized archive types (examined with the file command),
      • OR, IF GIVEN — the given files, e.g.: extract'file1.zip file2.tgz',
      • the automatic searching for archives ignores files in sub-sub-directories and located deeper,
    • It has a ! flag — i.e.: extract'!…' — it'll cause the files to be moved one directory-level up upon unpacking,
    • and also a - flag — i.e.: extract'-…' — it'll prevent removal of the archive after unpacking; useful to allow comparing timestamps with the server in case of snippet-downloaded file,
    • the flags can be combined, e.g.: extract'!-',
    • also, the function ziextract has a new option --auto, which causes the automatic behavior identical to the empty extract ice.
  • 21-01-2020

    • A few tips for the project rename following the field reports (the issues created by users):
      • the ZPLGM hash is now ZINIT,
      • the annexes are moved under zinit-zsh organization.
  • 19-01-2020

    • The name has been changed to Zinit based on the results of the poll.
    • In general, you don't have to do anything after the name change.
    • Only a run of zinit update --all might be necessary.
    • You might also want to rename your zplugin calls in zshrc to zinit.
    • Zinit will reuse ~/.zplugin directory if it exists, otherwise it'll create ~/.zinit.
  • 15-01-2020

    • There's a new function, ziextract, which unpacks the given file. It supports many formats (notably also dmg images) — if there's a format that's unsupported please don't hesitate to make a request for it to be added. A few facts:
      • the function is available only at the time of the plugin/snippet installation,
      • it's to be used within atclone and atpull ices,
      • it has an optional --move option which moves all the files from a subdirectory up one level,
      • one other option --norm prevents the archive from being deleted upon unpacking.
    • snippets now aren't re-downloaded unless they're newer on the HTTP server; use this with the --norm option of ziextract to prevent unnecessary updates; for example, the firefox-dev package uses this option for this purpose,
    • GitHub doesn't report proper Last-Modified HTTP server for the files in the repositories so the feature doesn't yet work with such files.
  • 13-12-2019

    • The packages have been disconnected from NPM registry and now live only on Zsh Packages organization. Publishing to NPM isn't needed.

    • There are two interesting packages, any-gem and any-node. They allow to install any Gem(s) or Node module(s) locally in a newly created plugin directory. For example:

      zinit pack param='GEM -> rails' for any-gem
      zinit pack param='MOD -> doctoc' for any-node
      # To have the command in zshrc, add an id-as'' ice so that
      # Zinit knows that the package is already installed
      # (also: the Unicode arrow is allowed)
      zinit id-as=jekyll pack param='GEM → jekyll' for any-gem
      

      The binaries will be exposed without altering the PATH via shims (Bin-Gem-Node annex is needed). Shims are correctly removed when deleting a plugin with zinit delete ….

  • 11-12-2019

    • Zinit now supports installing special-Zsh NPM packages! Bye-bye the long and complex ice-lists! Check out the Wiki for an introductory document on the feature.
  • 25-11-2019

    • A new subcommand run that executes a command in the given plugin's directory. It has an -l option that will reuse the previously provided plugin. So that it's possible to do:

      zplg run my/plugin ls
      zplg run -l cat \*.plugin.zsh
      zplg run -l pwd
      
  • 07-11-2019

    • Added a prefix-char: @ that can be used before plugins if their name collides with one of the ice-names. For example sharkdp/fd collides with the sh ice (which causes the plugin to be loaded with the POSIX sh emulation applied). To load it, do e.g.:

      zinit as"null" wait"2" lucid from"gh-r" for \
          mv"exa* -> exa" sbin"exa"  ogham/exa \
          mv"fd* -> fd" sbin"fd/fd"  @sharkdp/fd \
          sbin"fzf" junegunn/fzf-bin
      

      i.e.: precede the plugin name with @. Note: sbin'' is an ice added by the z-a-bin-gem-node annex, it provides the command to the command line without altering $PATH.

      See the Zinit Wiki for more information on the for-syntax.

  • 06-11-2019

    • A new syntax, called for-syntax. Example:

       zinit as"program" atload'print Hi!' for \
           atinit'print First!' zdharma/null \
           atinit'print Second!' svn OMZ::plugins/git
      

      The output:

      First!
      Hi!
      Second!
      Hi!
      

      And also:

      % print -rl $path | egrep -i '(/git|null)'
      /root/.zinit/snippets/OMZ::plugins/git
      /root/.zinit/plugins/zdharma---null
      

      To load in light mode, use a new light-mode ice. More examples and information can be found on the Zinit Wiki.

  • 03-11-2019

    • A new value for the as'' ice — null. Specifying as"null" is like specifying pick"/dev/null" nocompletions, i.e.: it disables the sourcing of the default script file of a plugin or snippet and also disables the installation of completions.
  • 30-10-2019

    • A new ice trigger-load'' — create a function that loads given plugin/snippet, with an option (to use it, precede the ice content with !) to automatically forward the call afterwards. Example use:

      # Invoking the command `crasis' will load the plugin that
      # provides the function `crasis', and it will be then
      # immediately invoked with the same arguments
      zinit ice trigger-load'!crasis'
      zinit load zdharma/zinit-crasis
      
  • 22-10-2019

    • A new ice countdown — causes an interruptable (by Ctrl-C) countdown 5…4…3…2…1…0 to be displayed before running the atclone'', atpull'' and make ices.
  • 21-10-2019

    • The times command has a new option -m — it shows the moments of the plugin load times — i.e.: how late after loading Zinit a plugin has been loaded.
  • 20-10-2019

    • The zinit completion now completes also snippets! The command snippet, but also delete, recall, edit, cd, etc. all receive such completing.
    • The ice subcommand can now be skipped — just pass in the ices, e.g.:
      zinit atload"zicompinit; zicdreplay" blockf
      zinit light zsh-users/zsh-completions
      
    • The compile command is able to compile snippets.
    • The plugins that add their subdirectories into $fpath can be now blockf-ed — the functions located in the dirs will be correctly auto-loaded.
  • 12-10-2019

    • Special value for the id-as'' ice — auto. It sets the plugin/snippet ID automatically to the last component of its spec, e.g.:

      zinit ice id-as"auto"
      zinit load robobenklein/zinc
      

      will load the plugin as id-as'zinc'.

  • 14-09-2019

    • There's a Vim plugin which extends syntax highlighting of zsh scripts with coloring of the Zinit commands. Project homepage.
  • 13-09-2019

    • New ice aliases which loads plugin with the aliases mechanism enabled. Use for plugins that define and use aliases in their scripts.
  • 11-09-2019

    • New ice-mods sh,bash,ksh,csh that load plugins (and snippets) with the sticky emulation feature of Zsh — all functions defined within the plugin will automatically switch to the desired emulation mode before executing and switch back thereafter. In other words it is now possible to load e.g. bash plugins with Zinit, provided that the emulation level done by Zsh is sufficient, e.g.:

      zinit ice bash pick"bash_it.sh" \
              atinit"BASH_IT=${ZINIT[PLUGINS_DIR]}/Bash-it---bash-it" \
              atclone"yes n | ./install.sh"
      zinit load Bash-it/bash-it
      

      This script loads correctly thanks to the emulation, however it isn't functional because it uses type -t … to check if a function exists.

  • 10-09-2019

    • A new ice-mod reset'' that ivokes git reset --hard (or the provided command) before git pull and atpull'' ice. It can be used it to implement altering (i.e. patching) of the plugin's files inside the atpull'' ice — git will report no conflicts when doing pull, and the changes can be then again introduced by the atpull'' ice.

    • Three new Zinit annexes (i.e. extensions):

      • z-a-man

        Generates man pages and code-documentation man pages from plugin's README.md and source files (the code documentation is obtained from Zshelldoc).

      • z-a-test

        Runs tests (if detected test target in a Makefile or any *.zunit files) on plugin installation and non-empty update.

      • z-a-patch-dl

        Allows easy download and applying of patches, to e.g. aid building a binary program equipped in the plugin.

    • A new variable is being recognized by the installation script: $ZPLG_BIN_DIR_NAME. It configures the directory within $ZPLG_HOME to which Zinit should be cloned.

To see the full history check the changelog.

Zinit

Zinit is a flexible and fast Zshell plugin manager that will allow you to install everything from GitHub and other sites. Its characteristics are:

  1. Zinit is currently the only plugin manager out there that provides Turbo mode which yields 50-80% faster Zsh startup (i.e.: the shell will start up to 5 times faster!). Check out a speed comparison with other popular plugin managers here.

  2. The plugin manager gives reports from plugin loadings describing what aliases, functions, bindkeys, Zle widgets, zstyles, completions, variables, PATH and FPATH elements a plugin has set up. This allows to quickly familiarize oneself with a new plugin and provides rich and easy to digest information which might be helpful on various occasions.

  3. Supported is unloading of plugin and ability to list, (un)install and selectively disable, enable plugin's completions.

  4. The plugin manager supports loading Oh My Zsh and Prezto plugins and libraries, however the implementation isn't framework specific and doesn't bloat the plugin manager with such code (more on this topic can be found on the Wiki, in the Introduction).

  5. The system does not use $FPATH, loading multiple plugins doesn't clutter $FPATH with the same number of entries (e.g. 10, 15 or more). Code is immune to KSH_ARRAYS and other options typically causing compatibility problems.

  6. Zinit supports special, dedicated packages that offload the user from providing long and complex commands. See the Zsh-Packages organization for a growing, complete list of Zinit packages and the Wiki page for an article about the feature.

  7. Also, specialized Zinit extensions — called annexes — allow to extend the plugin manager with new commands, URL-preprocessors (used by e.g.: z-a-as-monitor annex), post-install and post-update hooks and much more. See the zinit-zsh organization for a growing, complete list of available Zinit extensions and refer to the Wiki article for an introduction on creating your own annex.

Zinit Wiki

The information in this README is complemented by the Zinit Wiki. The README is an introductory overview of Zinit while the Wiki gives a complete information with examples. Make sure to read it to get the most out of Zinit.

Installation

Option 1 - Automatic Installation (Recommended)

The easiest way to install Zinit is to execute:

sh -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zdharma/zinit/master/doc/install.sh)"

This will install Zinit in ~/.zinit/bin. .zshrc will be updated with three lines of code that will be added to the bottom. The lines will be sourcing zinit.zsh and setting up completion for command zinit. After installing and reloading the shell compile Zinit with zinit self-update.

Option 2 - Manual Installation

To manually install Zinit clone the repo to e.g. ~/.zinit/bin:

mkdir ~/.zinit
git clone https://github.com/zdharma/zinit.git ~/.zinit/bin

and source it from .zshrc (above compinit):

source ~/.zinit/bin/zinit.zsh

If you place the source below compinit, then add those two lines after the source:

autoload -Uz _zinit
(( ${+_comps} )) && _comps[zinit]=_zinit

Various paths can be customized, see section Customizing Paths.

After installing and reloading the shell compile Zinit with zinit self-update.

Usage

Introduction

Click here to read the introduction to Zinit. It explains basic usage and some of the more unique features of Zinit such as the Turbo mode. If you're new to Zinit we highly recommend you read it at least once.

Example Usage

After installing Zinit you can start adding some actions (load some plugins) to ~/.zshrc, at bottom. Some examples:

# Two regular plugins loaded without investigating.
zinit light zsh-users/zsh-autosuggestions
zinit light zdharma/fast-syntax-highlighting

# Plugin history-search-multi-word loaded with investigating.
zinit load zdharma/history-search-multi-word

# Load the pure theme, with zsh-async library that's bundled with it.
zinit ice pick"async.zsh" src"pure.zsh"
zinit light sindresorhus/pure

# A glance at the new for-syntax – load all of the above
# plugins with a single command. For more information see:
# https://zdharma.org/zinit/wiki/For-Syntax/
zinit for \
    light-mode  zsh-users/zsh-autosuggestions \
    light-mode  zdharma/fast-syntax-highlighting \
                zdharma/history-search-multi-word \
    light-mode pick"async.zsh" src"pure.zsh" \
                sindresorhus/pure

# Binary release in archive, from GitHub-releases page.
# After automatic unpacking it provides program "fzf".
zinit ice from"gh-r" as"program"
zinit load junegunn/fzf-bin

# One other binary release, it needs renaming from `docker-compose-Linux-x86_64`.
# This is done by ice-mod `mv'{from} -> {to}'. There are multiple packages per
# single version, for OS X, Linux and Windows – so ice-mod `bpick' is used to
# select Linux package – in this case this is actually not needed, Zinit will
# grep operating system name and architecture automatically when there's no `bpick'.
zinit ice from"gh-r" as"program" mv"docker* -> docker-compose" bpick"*linux*"
zinit load docker/compose

# Vim repository on GitHub – a typical source code that needs compilation – Zinit
# can manage it for you if you like, run `./configure` and other `make`, etc. stuff.
# Ice-mod `pick` selects a binary program to add to $PATH. You could also install the
# package under the path $ZPFX, see: http://zdharma.org/zinit/wiki/Compiling-programs
zinit ice as"program" atclone"rm -f src/auto/config.cache; ./configure" \
    atpull"%atclone" make pick"src/vim"
zinit light vim/vim

# Scripts that are built at install (there's single default make target, "install",
# and it constructs scripts by `cat'ing a few files). The make'' ice could also be:
# `make"install PREFIX=$ZPFX"`, if "install" wouldn't be the only, default target.
zinit ice as"program" pick"$ZPFX/bin/git-*" make"PREFIX=$ZPFX"
zinit light tj/git-extras

# Handle completions without loading any plugin, see "clist" command.
# This one is to be ran just once, in interactive session.
zinit creinstall %HOME/my_completions
# For GNU ls (the binaries can be gls, gdircolors, e.g. on OS X when installing the
# coreutils package from Homebrew; you can also use https://github.com/ogham/exa)
zinit ice atclone"dircolors -b LS_COLORS > c.zsh" atpull'%atclone' pick"c.zsh" nocompile'!'
zinit light trapd00r/LS_COLORS

You can see an extended explanation of LS_COLORS in the Wiki.

# make'!...' -> run make before atclone & atpull
zinit ice as"program" make'!' atclone'./direnv hook zsh > zhook.zsh' atpull'%atclone' src"zhook.zsh"
zinit light direnv/direnv

You can see an extended explanation of direnv in the Wiki.

If you're interested in more examples then check out the zinit-configs repository where users have uploaded their ~/.zshrc and Zinit configurations. Feel free to submit your ~/.zshrc there if it contains Zinit commands.

You can also check out the Gallery of Zinit Invocations for some additional examples.

Also, two articles on the Wiki present an example setup here and here.

Ice Modifiers

Following ice modifiers are to be passed to zinit ice ... to obtain described effects. The word ice means something that's added (like ice to a drink) – and in Zinit it means adding modifier to a next zinit command, and also something that's temporary because it melts – and this means that the modification will last only for a single next zinit command.

Some Ice-modifiers are highlighted and clicking on them will take you to the appropriate Wiki page for an extended explanation.

You may safely assume a given ice works with both plugins and snippets unless explicitly stated otherwise.

Cloning Options

Modifier Description
proto
Change protocol to git,ftp,ftps,ssh, rsync, etc. Default is https. Does not work with snippets.
from
Clone plugin from given site. Supported are from"github" (default), ..."github-rel", ..."gitlab", ..."bitbucket", ..."notabug" (short names: gh, gh-r, gl, bb, nb). Can also be a full domain name (e.g. for GitHub enterprise). Does not work with snippets.
ver
Used with from"gh-r" (i.e. downloading a binary release, e.g. for use with as"program") – selects which version to download. Default is latest, can also be explicitly ver"latest". Works also with regular plugins, checkouts e.g. ver"abranch", i.e. a specific version. Does not work with snippets.
bpick
Used to select which release from GitHub Releases to download, e.g. zini ice from"gh-r" as"program" bpick"*Darwin*"; zini load docker/compose. Does not work with snippets.
depth
Pass --depth to git, i.e. limit how much of history to download. Does not work with snippets.
cloneopts
Pass the contents of cloneopts to git clone. Defaults to --recursive. I.e.: change cloning options. Pass empty ice to disable recursive cloning. Does not work with snippets.
pullopts
Pass the contents of pullopts to git pull used when updating plugins. Does not work with snippets.
svn
Use Subversion for downloading snippet. GitHub supports SVN protocol, this allows to clone subdirectories as snippets, e.g. zinit ice svn; zinit snippet OMZP::git. Other ice pick can be used to select file to source (default are: *.plugin.zsh, init.zsh, *.zsh-theme). Does not work with plugins.

Selection of Files (To Source, …)

Modifier Description
pick
Select the file to source, or the file to set as command (when using snippet --command or the ice as"program"); it is a pattern, alphabetically first matched file is being chosen; e.g. zinit ice pick"*.plugin.zsh"; zinit load ….
src
Specify additional file to source after sourcing main file or after setting up command (via as"program"). It is not a pattern but a plain file name.
multisrc
Allows to specify multiple files for sourcing, enumerated with spaces as the separators (e.g. multisrc'misc.zsh grep.zsh') and also using brace-expansion syntax (e.g. multisrc'{misc,grep}.zsh'). Supports patterns.

Conditional Loading

Modifier Description
wait
Postpone loading a plugin or snippet. For wait'1', loading is done 1 second after prompt. For wait'[[ ... ]]', wait'(( ... ))', loading is done when given condition is meet. For wait'!...', prompt is reset after load. Zsh can start 80% (i.e.: 5x) faster thanks to postponed loading. Fact: when wait is used without value, it works as wait'0'.
load
A condition to check which should cause plugin to load. It will load once, the condition can be still true, but will not trigger second load (unless plugin is unloaded earlier, see unload below). E.g.: load'[[ $PWD = */github* ]]'.
unload
A condition to check causing plugin to unload. It will unload once, then only if loaded again. E.g.: unload'[[ $PWD != */github* ]]'.
cloneonly
Don't load the plugin / snippet, only download it
if
Load plugin or snippet only when given condition is fulfilled, for example: zinit ice if'[[ -n "$commands[otool]" ]]'; zinit load ....
has
Load plugin or snippet only when given command is available (in $PATH), e.g. zinit ice has'git' ...
subscribe / on-update-of
Postpone loading of a plugin or snippet until the given file(s) get updated, e.g. subscribe'{~/files-*,/tmp/files-*}'
trigger-load
Creates a function that loads the associated plugin/snippet, with an option (to use it, precede the ice content with !) to automatically forward the call afterwards, to a command of the same name as the function. Can obtain multiple functions to create – sparate with ;.

Plugin Output

Modifier Description
silent
Mute plugin's or snippet's stderr & stdout. Also skip Loaded ... message under prompt for wait, etc. loaded plugins, and completion-installation messages.
lucid
Skip Loaded ... message under prompt for wait, etc. loaded plugins (a subset of silent).
notify
Output given message under-prompt after successfully loading a plugin/snippet. In case of problems with the loading, output a warning message and the return code. If starts with ! it will then always output the given message. Hint: if the message is empty, then it will just notify about problems.

Completions

Modifier Description
blockf
Disallow plugin to modify fpath. Useful when a plugin wants to provide completions in traditional way. Zinit can manage completions and plugin can be blocked from exposing them.
nocompletions
Don't detect, install and manage completions for this plugin. Completions can be installed later with zinit creinstall {plugin-spec}.

Command Execution After Cloning, Updating or Loading

Modifier Description
mv
Move file after cloning or after update (then, only if new commits were downloaded). Example: mv "fzf-* -> fzf". It uses -> as separator for old and new file names. Works also with snippets.
cp
Copy file after cloning or after update (then, only if new commits were downloaded). Example: cp "docker-c* -> dcompose". Ran after mv.
atclone
Run command after cloning, within plugin's directory, e.g. zinit ice atclone"echo Cloned". Ran also after downloading snippet.
atpull
Run command after updating (only if new commits are waiting for download), within plugin's directory. If starts with "!" then command will be ran before mv & cp ices and before git pull or svn update. Otherwise it is ran after them. Can be atpull'%atclone', to repeat atclone Ice-mod.
atinit
Run command after directory setup (cloning, checking it, etc.) of plugin/snippet but before loading.
atload
Run command after loading, within plugin's directory. Can be also used with snippets. Passed code can be preceded with !, it will then be investigated (if using load, not light).
run-atpull
Always run the atpull hook (when updating), not only when there are new commits to be downloaded.
nocd
Don't switch the current directory into the plugin's directory when evaluating the above ice-mods atinit'',atload'', etc.
make
Run make command after cloning/updating and executing mv, cp, atpull, atclone Ice mods. Can obtain argument, e.g. make"install PREFIX=/opt". If the value starts with ! then make is ran before atclone/atpull, e.g. make'!'.
countdown
Causes an interruptable (by Ctrl-C) countdown 5…4…3…2…1…0 to be displayed before executing atclone'',atpull'' and make ices
reset
Invokes git reset --hard HEAD for plugins or svn revert for SVN snippets before pulling any new changes. This way git or svn will not report conflicts if some changes were done in e.g.: atclone'' ice. For file snippets and gh-r plugins it invokes rm -rf *.

Sticky-Emulation Of Other Shells

Modifier Description
sh, !sh
Source the plugin's (or snippet's) script with sh emulation so that also all functions declared within the file will get a sticky emulation assigned – when invoked they'll execute also with the sh emulation set-up. The !sh version switches additional options that are rather not important from the portability perspective.
bash, !bash
The same as sh, but with the SH_GLOB option disabled, so that Bash regular expressions work.
ksh, !ksh
The same as sh, but emulating ksh shell.
csh, !csh
The same as sh, but emulating csh shell.

Others

Modifier Description
as
Can be as"program" (also the alias: as"command"), and will cause to add script/program to $PATH instead of sourcing (see pick). Can also be as"completion" – use with plugins or snippets in whose only underscore-starting _* files you are interested in. The third possible value is as"null" – a shorthand for pick"/dev/null" nocompletions – i.e.: it disables the default script-file sourcing and also the installation of completions.
id-as
Nickname a plugin or snippet, to e.g. create a short handler for long-url snippet.
compile
Pattern (+ possible {...} expansion, like {a/*,b*}) to select additional files to compile, e.g. compile"(pure|async).zsh" for sindresorhus/pure.
nocompile
Don't try to compile pick-pointed files. If passed the exclamation mark (i.e. nocompile'!'), then do compile, but after make'' and atclone'' (useful if Makefile installs some scripts, to point pick'' at the location of their installation).
service
Make following plugin or snippet a service, which will be ran in background, and only in single Zshell instance. See zservices-organization page.
reset-prompt
Reset the prompt after loading the plugin/snippet (by issuing zle .reset-prompt). Note: normally it's sufficient to precede the value of wait'' ice with !.
bindmap
To hold ;-separated strings like Key(s)A -> Key(s)B, e.g. ^R -> ^T; ^A -> ^B. In general, bindmap''changes bindings (done with the bindkey builtin) the plugin does. The example would cause the plugin to map Ctrl-T instead of Ctrl-R, and Ctrl-B instead of Ctrl-A. Does not work with snippets.
trackbinds
Shadow but only bindkey calls even with zinit light ..., i.e. even with investigating disabled (fast loading), to allow bindmap to remap the key-binds. The same effect has zinit light -b ..., i.e. additional -b option to the light-subcommand. Does not work with snippets.
wrap-track
Takes a ;-separated list of function names that are to be investigated (meaning gathering report and unload data) once during execution. It works by wrapping the functions with a investigating-enabling and disabling snippet of code. In summary, wrap-track allows to extend the investigating beyond the moment of loading of a plugin. Example use is to wrap-track a precmd function of a prompt (like _p9k_precmd() of powerlevel10k) or other plugin that postpones its initialization till the first prompt (like e.g.: zsh-autosuggestions). Does not work with snippets.
aliases
Load the plugin with the aliases mechanism enabled. Use with plugins that define and use aliases in their scripts.
light-mode
Load the plugin without the investigating, i.e.: as if it would be loaded with the light command. Useful for the for-syntax, where there is no load nor light subcommand
extract
Performs archive extraction supporting multiple formats like zip, tar.gz, etc. and also notably OS X dmg images. If it has no value, then it works in the auto mode – it automatically extracts all files of known archive extensions IF they aren't located deeper than in a sub-directory (this is to prevent extraction of some helper archive files, typically located somewhere deeper in the tree). If no such files will be found, then it extracts all found files of known type – the type is being read by the file Unix command. If not empty, then takes names of the files to extract. Refer to the Wiki page for further information.
subst
Substitute the given string into another string when sourcing the plugin script, e.g.: zinit subst'autoload → autoload -Uz' ….
autoload
Autoload the given functions (from their files). Equvalent to calling atinit'autoload the-function'. Supports renaming of the function – pass '… → new-name' or '… -> new-name', e.g.: zinit autoload'fun → my-fun; fun2 → my-fun2'.

Order of Execution

Order of execution of related Ice-mods: atinit -> atpull! -> make'!!' -> mv -> cp -> make! -> atclone/atpull -> make -> (plugin script loading) -> src -> multisrc -> atload.

Zinit Commands

Following commands are passed to zinit ... to obtain described effects.

Help

Command Description
-h, --help, help
Usage information.
man
Manual.

Loading and Unloading

Command Description
load {plg-spec}
Load plugin, can also receive absolute local path.
light [-b] {plg-spec}
Light plugin load, without reporting/investigating. -b – investigate bindkey-calls only. There's also light-mode ice which can be used to induce the no-investigating (i.e.: light) loading, regardless of the command used.
unload [-q] {plg-spec}
Unload plugin loaded with zinit load .... -q – quiet.
snippet [-f] {url}
Source local or remote file (by direct URL). -f – don't use cache (force redownload). The URL can use the following shorthands: PZT:: (Prezto), PZTM:: (Prezto module), OMZ:: (Oh My Zsh), OMZP:: (OMZ plugin), OMZL:: (OMZ library), OMZT:: (OMZ theme), e.g.: PZTM::environment, OMZP::git, etc.

Completions

Command Description
clist [columns], completions [columns]
List completions in use, with columns completions per line. zpl clist 5 will for example print 5 completions per line. Default is 3.
cdisable {cname}
Disable completion cname.
cenable {cname}
Enable completion cname.
creinstall [-q] {plg-spec}
Install completions for plugin, can also receive absolute local path. -q – quiet.
cuninstall {plg-spec}
Uninstall completions for plugin.
csearch
Search for available completions from any plugin.
compinit
Refresh installed completions.
cclear
Clear stray and improper completions.
cdlist
Show compdef replay list.
cdreplay [-q]
Replay compdefs (to be done after compinit). -q – quiet.
cdclear [-q]
Clear compdef replay list. -q – quiet.

Tracking of the Active Session

Command Description
dtrace, dstart
Start investigating what's going on in session.
dstop
Stop investigating what's going on in session.
dunload
Revert changes recorded between dstart and dstop.
dreport
Report what was going on in session.
dclear
Clear report of what was going on in session.

Reports and Statistics

Command Description
times [-s] [-m]
Statistics on plugin load times, sorted in order of loading. -s – use seconds instead of milliseconds. -m – show plugin loading moments.
zstatus
Overall Zinit status.
report {plg-spec}|--all
Show plugin report. --all – do it for all plugins.
loaded [keyword], list [keyword]
Show what plugins are loaded (filter with 'keyword').
ls
List snippets in formatted and colorized manner. Requires tree program.
status {plg-spec}|URL|--all
Git status for plugin or svn status for snippet. --all – do it for all plugins and snippets.
recently [time-spec]
Show plugins that changed recently, argument is e.g. 1 month 2 days.
bindkeys
Lists bindkeys set up by each plugin.

Compiling

Command Description
compile {plg-spec}|--all
Compile plugin. --all – compile all plugins.
uncompile {plg-spec}|--all
Remove compiled version of plugin. --all – do it for all plugins.
compiled
List plugins that are compiled.

Other

Command Description
self-update
Updates and compiles Zinit.
update [-q] [-r] {plg-spec}|URL|--all
Git update plugin or snippet.
--all – update all plugins and snippets.
-q – quiet.
-r | --reset – run git reset --hard / svn revert before pulling changes.
ice <ice specification>
Add ice to next command, argument is e.g. from"gitlab".
delete {plg-spec}|URL|--clean|--all
Remove plugin or snippet from disk (good to forget wrongly passed ice-mods).
--all – purge.
--clean – delete plugins and snippets that are not loaded.
cd {plg-spec}
Cd into plugin's directory. Also support snippets if fed with URL.
edit {plg-spec}
Edit plugin's file with $EDITOR.
glance {plg-spec}
Look at plugin's source (pygmentize, {,source-}highlight).
stress {plg-spec}
Test plugin for compatibility with set of options.
changes {plg-spec}
View plugin's git log.
create {plg-spec}
Create plugin (also together with GitHub repository).
srv {service-id} [cmd]
Control a service, command can be: stop,start,restart,next,quit; next moves the service to another Zshell.
recall {plg-spec}|URL
Fetch saved ice modifiers and construct zinit ice ... command.
env-whitelist [-v] [-h] {env..}
Allows to specify names (also patterns) of variables left unchanged during an unload. -v – verbose.
module
Manage binary Zsh module shipped with Zinit, see zinit module help.
add-fpath|fpath [-f|--front] {plg-spec} [subdirectory]
Adds given plugin (not yet snippet) directory to $fpath. If the second argument is given, it is appended to the directory path. If the option -f/--front is given, the directory path is prepended instead of appended to $fpath. The {plg-spec} can be absolute path, i.e.: it's possible to also add regular directories.
run [-l] [plugin] {command}
Runs the given command in the given plugin's directory. If the option -l will be given then the plugin should be skipped – the option will cause the previous plugin to be reused.

Updating Zinit and Plugins

To update Zinit issue zinit self-update in the command line.

To update all plugins and snippets, issue zinit update. If you wish to update only a single plugin/snippet instead issue zinit update NAME_OF_PLUGIN. A list of commits will be shown:

Some plugins require performing an action each time they're updated. One way you can do this is by using the atpull ice modifier. For example, writing zinit ice atpull'./configure' before loading a plugin will execute ./configure after a successful update. Refer to Ice Modifiers for more information.

The ice modifiers for any plugin or snippet are stored in their directory in a ._zinit subdirectory, hence the plugin doesn't have to be loaded to be correctly updated. There's one other file created there, .zinit_lstupd – it holds the log of the new commits pulled-in in the last update.

Using Oh My Zsh Themes

To use themes created for Oh My Zsh you might want to first source the git library there:

zinit snippet http://github.com/ohmyzsh/ohmyzsh/raw/master/lib/git.zsh
# Or using OMZL:: shorthand:
zinit snippet OMZL::git.zsh

If the library will not be loaded, then similar to following errors will be appearing:

........:1: command not found: git_prompt_status
........:1: command not found: git_prompt_short_sha

Then you can use the themes as snippets (zinit snippet {file path or GitHub URL}). Some themes require not only Oh My Zsh's Git library, but also Git plugin (error about current_branch function can be appearing). Load this Git-plugin as single-file snippet directly from OMZ:

zinit snippet OMZP::git

Such lines should be added to .zshrc. Snippets are cached locally, use -f option to download a fresh version of a snippet, or zinit update {URL}. Can also use zinit update --all to update all snippets (and plugins).

Most themes require promptsubst option (setopt promptsubst in zshrc), if it isn't set, then prompt will appear as something like: ... $(build_prompt) ....

You might want to suppress completions provided by the git plugin by issuing zinit cdclear -q (-q is for quiet) – see below Ignoring Compdefs.

To summarize:

# Load OMZ Git library
zinit snippet OMZL::git.zsh

# Load Git plugin from OMZ
zinit snippet OMZP::git
zinit cdclear -q # <- forget completions provided up to this moment

setopt promptsubst

# Load theme from OMZ
zinit snippet OMZT::gnzh

# Load normal GitHub plugin with theme depending on OMZ Git library
zinit light NicoSantangelo/Alpharized

See also the Wiki page: Example Oh My Zsh Setup.

Completions

Calling compinit Without Turbo Mode

With no Turbo mode in use, compinit can be called normally, i.e.: as autoload compinit; compinit. This should be done after loading of all plugins and before possibly calling zinit cdreplay.

The cdreplay subcommand is provided to re-play all catched compdef calls. The compdef calls are used to define a completion for a command. For example, compdef _git git defines that the git command should be completed by a _git function.

The compdef function is provided by compinit call. As it should be called later, after loading all of the plugins, Zinit provides its own compdef function that catches (i.e.: records in an array) the arguments of the call, so that the loaded plugins can freely call compdef. Then, the cdreplay (compdef-replay) can be used, after compinit will be called (and the original compdef function will become available), to execute all detected compdef calls. To summarize:

source ~/.zinit/bin/zinit.zsh

zinit load "some/plugin"
...
compdef _gnu_generic fd  # this will be intercepted by Zinit, because as the compinit
                         # isn't yet loaded, thus there's no such function `compdef'; yet
                         # Zinit provides its own `compdef' function which saves the
                         # completion-definition for later possible re-run with `zinit
                         # cdreplay' or `zicdreplay' (the second one can be used in hooks
                         # like atload'', atinit'', etc.)
...
zinit load "other/plugin"

autoload -Uz compinit
compinit

zinit cdreplay -q   # -q is for quiet; actually run all the `compdef's saved before
                    #`compinit` call (`compinit' declares the `compdef' function, so
                    # it cannot be used until `compinit' is ran; Zinit solves this
                    # via intercepting the `compdef'-calls and storing them for later
                    # use with `zinit cdreplay')

This allows to call compinit once. Performance gains are huge, example shell startup time with double compinit: 0.980 sec, with cdreplay and single compinit: 0.156 sec.

Calling compinit With Turbo Mode

If you load completions using wait'' Turbo mode then you can add atinit'zicompinit' to syntax-highlighting plugin (which should be the last one loaded, as their (2 projects, z-sy-h & f-sy-h) documentation state), or atload'zicompinit' to last completion-related plugin. zicompinit is a function that just runs autoload compinit; compinit, created for convenience. There's also zicdreplay which will replay any caught compdefs so you can also do: atinit'zicompinit; zicdreplay', etc. Basically, the whole topic is the same as normal compinit call, but it is done in atinit or atload hook of the last related plugin with use of the helper functions (zicompinit,zicdreplay & zicdclear – see below for explanation of the last one). To summarize:

source ~/.zinit/bin/zinit.zsh

# Load using the for-syntax
zinit wait lucid for \
    "some/plugin"
zinit wait lucid for \
    "other/plugin"

zinit wait lucid atload"zicompinit; zicdreplay" blockf for \
    zsh-users/zsh-completions

Ignoring Compdefs

If you want to ignore compdefs provided by some plugins or snippets, place their load commands before commands loading other plugins or snippets, and issue zinit cdclear (or zicdclear, designed to be used in hooks like atload''):

source ~/.zinit/bin/zinit.zsh
zinit snippet OMZP::git
zinit cdclear -q # <- forget completions provided by Git plugin

zinit load "some/plugin"
...
zinit load "other/plugin"

autoload -Uz compinit
compinit
zinit cdreplay -q # <- execute compdefs provided by rest of plugins
zinit cdlist # look at gathered compdefs

The cdreplay is important if you use plugins like OMZP::kubectl or asdf-vm/asdf, because these plugins call compdef.

Disabling System-Wide compinit Call (Ubuntu)

On Ubuntu users might get surprised that e.g. their completions work while they didn't call compinit in their .zshrc. That's because the function is being called in /etc/zshrc. To disable this call – what is needed to avoid the slowdown and if user loads any completion-equipped plugins, i.e. almost on 100% – add the following lines to ~/.zshenv:

# Skip the not really helping Ubuntu global compinit
skip_global_compinit=1

Zinit Module

Motivation

The module is a binary Zsh module (think about zmodload Zsh command, it's that topic) which transparently and automatically compiles sourced scripts. Many plugin managers do not offer compilation of plugins, the module is a solution to this. Even if a plugin manager does compile plugin's main script (like Zinit does), the script can source smaller helper scripts or dependency libraries (for example, the prompt geometry-zsh/geometry does that) and there are very few solutions to that, which are demanding (e.g. specifying all helper files in plugin load command and investigating updates to the plugin – in Zinit case: by using compile ice-mod).

image

Installation

Without Zinit

To install just the binary Zinit module standalone (Zinit is not needed, the module can be used with any other plugin manager), execute:

sh -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zdharma/zinit/master/doc/mod-install.sh)"

This script will display what to add to ~/.zshrc (2 lines) and show usage instructions.

With Zinit

Zinit users can build the module by issuing following command instead of running above mod-install.sh script (the script is for e.g. zgen users or users of any other plugin manager):

zinit module build

This command will compile the module and display instructions on what to add to ~/.zshrc.

Measuring Time of sources

Besides the compilation-feature, the module also measures duration of each script sourcing. Issue zpmod source-study after loading the module at top of ~/.zshrc to see a list of all sourced files with the time the sourcing took in milliseconds on the left. This feature allows to profile the shell startup. Also, no script can pass-through that check and you will obtain a complete list of all loaded scripts, like if Zshell itself was investigating this. The list can be surprising.

Debugging

To enable debug messages from the module set:

typeset -g ZPLG_MOD_DEBUG=1

Hints and Tips

Customizing Paths

Following variables can be set to custom values, before sourcing Zinit. The previous global variables like $ZPLG_HOME have been removed to not pollute the namespace – there's single $ZINIT hash instead of 8 string variables. Please update your dotfiles.

declare -A ZINIT  # initial Zinit's hash definition, if configuring before loading Zinit, and then:
Hash Field Description
ZINIT[BIN_DIR]  Where Zinit code resides, e.g.: "~/.zinit/bin"
ZINIT[HOME_DIR]  Where Zinit should create all working directories, e.g.: "~/.zinit"
ZINIT[PLUGINS_DIR] Override single working directory – for plugins, e.g. "/opt/zsh/zinit/plugins"
ZINIT[COMPLETIONS_DIR] As above, but for completion files, e.g. "/opt/zsh/zinit/root_completions"
ZINIT[SNIPPETS_DIR]  As above, but for snippets
ZINIT[ZCOMPDUMP_PATH] Path to .zcompdump file, with the file included (i.e. its name can be different)
ZINIT[COMPINIT_OPTS] Options for compinit call (i.e. done by zicompinit), use to pass -C to speed up loading
ZINIT[MUTE_WARNINGS] If set to 1, then mutes some of the Zinit warnings, specifically the plugin already registered warning
ZINIT[OPTIMIZE_OUT_DISK_ACCESSES] If set to 1, then Zinit will skip checking if a Turbo-loaded object exists on the disk. By default Zinit skips Turbo for non-existing objects (plugins or snippets) to install them before the first prompt – without any delays, during the normal processing of zshrc. This option can give a performance gain of about 10 ms out of 150 ms (i.e.: Zsh will start up in 140 ms instead of 150 ms).

There is also $ZPFX, set by default to ~/.zinit/polaris – a directory where software with Makefile, etc. can be pointed to, by e.g. atclone'./configure --prefix=$ZPFX'.

Non-GitHub (Local) Plugins

Use create subcommand with user name _local (the default) to create plugin's skeleton in $ZINIT[PLUGINS_DIR]. It will be not connected with GitHub repository (because of user name being _local). To enter the plugin's directory use cd command with just plugin's name (without _local, it's optional).

If user name will not be _local, then Zinit will create repository also on GitHub and setup correct repository origin.

Extending Git

There are several projects that provide git extensions. Installing them with Zinit has many benefits:

  • all files are under $HOME – no administrator rights needed,
  • declarative setup (like Chef or Puppet) – copying .zshrc to different account brings also git-related setup,
  • easy update by e.g. zinit update --all.

Below is a configuration that adds multiple git extensions, loaded in Turbo mode, 1 second after prompt, with use of the Bin-Gem-Node annex:

zinit as"null" wait"1" lucid for \
    sbin    Fakerr/git-recall \
    sbin    cloneopts paulirish/git-open \
    sbin    paulirish/git-recent \
    sbin    davidosomething/git-my \
    sbin atload"export _MENU_THEME=legacy" \
            arzzen/git-quick-stats \
    sbin    iwata/git-now \
    make"PREFIX=$ZPFX install" \
            tj/git-extras \
    sbin"bin/git-dsf;bin/diff-so-fancy" \
            zdharma/zsh-diff-so-fancy \
    sbin"git-url;git-guclone" make"GITURL_NO_CGITURL=1" \
            zdharma/git-url

Target directory for installed files is $ZPFX (~/.zinit/polaris by default).

Getting Help and Community

Do you need help or wish to get in touch with other Zinit users?

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