When a previous Vim session crashed, you are greeted with the "Swap file ... already exists!" for each and every file that was open in the previous session.

Can you make this Vim recovery prompt smarter? (Without switching off recovery!) Specifically, I'm thinking of:

  • If the swapped version does not contain unsaved changes and the editing process is no longer running, can you make Vim automatically delete the swap file?
  • Can you automate the suggested process of saving the recovered file under a new name, merging it with file on disk and then deleting the old swap file, so that minimal interaction is required? Especially when the swap version and the disk version are the same, everything should be automatic.

I discovered the SwapExists autocommand but I don't know if it can help with these tasks.

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See valmikam.blogspot.com/2010/09/… for a copy pastable solution. – sss Aug 28 '11 at 1:03
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5 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

I have vim store my swap files in a single local directory, by having this in my .vimrc:

set directory=~/.vim/swap,.

Among other benefits, this makes the swap files easy to find all at once. Now when my laptop loses power or whatever and I start back up with a bunch of swap files laying around, I just run my cleanswap script:

TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d) || exit 1
RECTXT="$TMPDIR/vim.recovery.$USER.txt"
RECFN="$TMPDIR/vim.recovery.$USER.fn"
trap 'rm -f "$RECTXT" "$RECFN"; rmdir "$TMPDIR"' 0 1 2 3 15
for q in ~/.vim/swap/.*sw? ~/.vim/swap/*; do
  [[ -f $q ]] || continue
  rm -f "$RECTXT" "$RECFN"
  vim -X -r "$q" \
      -c "w! $RECTXT" \
      -c "let fn=expand('%')" \
      -c "new $RECFN" \
      -c "exec setline( 1, fn )" \
      -c w\! \
      -c "qa"
  if [[ ! -f $RECFN ]]; then
    echo "nothing to recover from $q"
    rm -f "$q"
    continue
  fi
  CRNT="$(cat $RECFN)"
  if diff --strip-trailing-cr --brief "$CRNT" "$RECTXT"; then
      echo "removing redundant $q"
      echo "  for $CRNT"
      rm -f "$q"
  else
      echo $q contains changes
      vim -n -d "$CRNT" "$RECTXT"
      rm -i "$q" || exit
  fi
done

This will remove any swap files that are up-to-date with the real files. Any that don't match are brought up in a vimdiff window so I can merge in my unsaved changes.

--Chouser

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What if you edit two files of the same name, for instance in two branches of an SVN repository – Nathan Fellman Sep 15 '08 at 18:44
When editing more than one file with the same name, Vim will go backwards in the alphabet for the extensions (.swp, *.swo, *.swn, etc.). It should be noted that using this method disables the "swap file exists" feature. So you will *need to use the cleanswap script provided above. – sirlancelot Feb 5 '09 at 22:20
feedback

I just discovered this:

http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/diff.html#:DiffOrig

I copied and pasted the DiffOrig command into my .vimrc file and it works like a charm. This greatly eases the recovery of swap files. I have no idea why it isn't included by default in VIM.

Here's the command for those who are in a hurry:

 command DiffOrig vert new | set bt=nofile | r # | 0d_ | diffthis
 	\ | wincmd p | diffthis
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So after loading the swap file, you call DiffOrig? – Shurane Jun 11 '11 at 16:56
Yeah, so when the prompt comes up you hit "recover", and then type :DiffOrig. Then when you're done you save the buffer. Then to delete the swap file (because it'll still linger and bug you next time), you just type :e, which brings up the prompt again, and you can hit "delete". – Jack Senechal Jul 6 '11 at 20:53
feedback

The accepted answer is busted for a very important use case. Let's say you create a new buffer and type for 2 hours without ever saving, then your laptop crashes. If you run the suggested script it will delete your one and only record, the .swp swap file. I'm not sure what the right fix is, but it looks like the diff command ends up comparing the same file to itself in this case. The edited version below checks for this case and gives the user a chance to save the file somewhere.

#!/bin/bash

SWAP_FILE_DIR=~/temp/vim_swp
IFS=$'\n'

TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d) || exit 1
RECTXT="$TMPDIR/vim.recovery.$USER.txt"
RECFN="$TMPDIR/vim.recovery.$USER.fn"
trap 'rm -f "$RECTXT" "$RECFN"; rmdir "$TMPDIR"' 0 1 2 3 15
for q in $SWAP_FILE_DIR/.*sw? $SWAP_FILE_DIR/*; do
  echo $q
  [[ -f $q ]] || continue
  rm -f "$RECTXT" "$RECFN"
  vim -X -r "$q" \
      -c "w! $RECTXT" \
      -c "let fn=expand('%')" \
      -c "new $RECFN" \
      -c "exec setline( 1, fn )" \
      -c w\! \
      -c "qa"
  if [[ ! -f $RECFN ]]; then
    echo "nothing to recover from $q"
    rm -f "$q"
    continue
  fi
  CRNT="$(cat $RECFN)"
  if [ "$CRNT" = "$RECTXT" ]; then
      echo "Can't find original file. Press enter to open vim so you can save the file. The swap file will be deleted afterward!"
      read
      vim "$CRNT"
      rm -f "$q"
  else if diff --strip-trailing-cr --brief "$CRNT" "$RECTXT"; then
      echo "Removing redundant $q"
      echo "  for $CRNT"
      rm -f "$q"
  else
      echo $q contains changes, or there may be no original saved file
      vim -n -d "$CRNT" "$RECTXT"
      rm -i "$q" || exit
  fi
  fi
done
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Type two hours without saving? You should fix your attitude to saving, not accepted script. I save automatically when I pause to think. – ZyX Apr 30 '11 at 10:53
2  
Whether it's two hours or two seconds, silently losing data is unacceptable and he was absolutely right to fix it. There's no need to be condescending. – cecilkorik Jan 11 at 20:33
feedback

Great tip DiffOrig is perfect. Here is a bash script I use to run it on each swap file under the current directory:

#!/bin/bash

swap_files=`find . -name "*.swp"`

for s in $swap_files ; do
        orig_file=`echo $s | perl -pe 's!/\.([^/]*).swp$!/$1!' `
        echo "Editing $orig_file"
        sleep 1
        vim -r $orig_file -c "DiffOrig"
        echo -n "  Ok to delete swap file? [y/n] "
        read resp
        if [ "$resp" == "y" ] ; then
                echo "  Deleting $s"
                rm $s
        fi
done

Probably could use some more error checking and quoting but has worked so far.

-Mark

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feedback

This is just what i was looking for too! If you use it: recover the file when prompted and then run :DiffOrig

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