lazy.nvim is a modern plugin manager for Neovim.
- ๐ฆ Manage all your Neovim plugins with a powerful UI
- ๐ Fast startup times thanks to automatic caching and bytecode compilation of lua modules
- ๐พ Partial clones instead of shallow clones
- ๐ Automatic lazy-loading of lua modules and lazy-loading on events, commands, filetypes, and key mappings
- โณ Automatically install missing plugins before starting up Neovim, allowing you to start using it right away
- ๐ช Async execution for improved performance
- ๐ ๏ธ No need to manually compile plugins
- ๐งช Correct sequencing of dependencies
- ๐ Configurable in multiple files
- ๐ Generates helptags of the headings in
README.md
files for plugins that don't have vimdocs - ๐ป Dev options and patterns for using local plugins
- ๐ Profiling tools to optimize performance
- ๐ Lockfile
lazy-lock.json
to keep track of installed plugins - ๐ Automatically check for updates
- ๐ Commit, branch, tag, version, and full Semver support
- ๐ Statusline component to see the number of pending updates
- Neovim >= 0.8.0 (needs to be built with LuaJIT)
- Git >= 2.19.0 (for partial clones support)
- a Nerd Font (optional)
You can add the following Lua code to your init.lua
to bootstrap lazy.nvim
local lazypath = vim.fn.stdpath("data") .. "/lazy/lazy.nvim"
if not vim.loop.fs_stat(lazypath) then
vim.fn.system({
"git",
"clone",
"--filter=blob:none",
"--single-branch",
"https://github.com/folke/lazy.nvim.git",
lazypath,
})
end
vim.opt.runtimepath:prepend(lazypath)
Next step is to add lazy.nvim to the top of your init.lua
require("lazy").setup(plugins, opts)
- plugins: this should be a
table
or astring
table
: a list with your Plugin Specstring
: a Lua module name that contains your Plugin Spec. See Structuring Your Plugins
- opts: see Configuration (optional)
-- example using a list of specs with the default options
vim.g.mapleader = " " -- make sure to set `mapleader` before lazy so your mappings are correct
require("lazy").setup({
"folke/which-key.nvim",
{ "folke/neoconf.nvim", cmd = "Neoconf" },
"folke/neodev.nvim",
})
โน๏ธ It is recommended to run :checkhealth lazy
after installation
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
[1] |
string? |
Short plugin url. Will be expanded using config.git.url_format |
dir | string? |
A directory pointing to a local plugin |
url | string? |
A custom git url where the plugin is hosted |
name | string? |
A custom name for the plugin used for the local plugin directory and as the display name |
dev | boolean? |
When true , a local plugin directory will be used instead. See config.dev |
lazy | boolean? |
When true , the plugin will only be loaded when needed. Lazy-loaded plugins are automatically loaded when their lua modules are required , or when one of the laz-loading handlers triggers |
enabled | boolean? or fun():boolean |
When false , or if the function returns false, then this plugin will not be used |
dependencies | LazySpec[] |
A list of plugin specs that should be loaded when the plugin loads. Dependencies are always lazy-loaded unless specified otherwise |
init | fun(LazyPlugin) |
init functions are always executed during startup |
config | fun(LazyPlugin) |
config is executed when the plugin loads |
build | fun(LazyPlugin) |
build is executed when a plugin is installed or updated |
branch | string? |
Branch of the repository |
tag | string? |
Tag of the repository |
commit | string? |
Commit of the repository |
version | string? |
Version to use from the repository. Full Semver ranges are supported |
pin | boolean? |
When true , this plugin will not be included in updates |
event | string? or string[] |
Lazy-load on event |
cmd | string? or string[] |
Lazy-load on command |
ft | string? or string[] |
Lazy-load on filetype |
keys | string? or string[] or LazyKeys[] |
Lazy-load on key mapping |
module | false? |
Do not automatically load this lua module when it's required somewhere |
lazy.nvim automagically lazy-loads Lua modules, so it is not needed to
specify module=...
everywhere in your plugin specification. This mean that if
you have a plugin A
that is lazy-loaded and a plugin B
that requires a
module of plugin A
, then plugin A
will be loaded on demand as expected.
If you don't want this behavior for a certain plugin, you can specify that with module=false
.
You can then manually load the plugin with :Lazy load foobar.nvim
.
You can configure lazy.nvim to lazy-load all plugins by default with config.defaults.lazy = true
.
Additionally, you can also lazy-load on events, commands, file types and key mappings.
Plugins will be lazy-loaded when one of the following is true
:
- the plugin only exists as a dependency in your spec
- it has an
event
,cmd
,ft
orkeys
key - it defines an
init
method config.defaults.lazy == true
The keys
property can be a string
or string[]
for simple normal-mode mappings, or it
can be a LazyKeys
table with the following key-value pairs:
- [1]: (
string
) lhs (required) - [2]: (
string|fun()
) rhs (optional) - mode: (
string|string[]
) mode (optional, defaults to"n"
) - any other option valid for
vim.keymap.set
Key mappings will load the plugin the first time they get executed.
When [2]
is nil
, then the real mapping has to be created by the config()
function.
-- Example for neo-tree.nvim
{
"nvim-neo-tree/neo-tree.nvim",
keys = {
{ "<leader>ft", "<cmd>Neotree toggle<cr>", desc = "NeoTree" },
},
config = function()
require("neo-tree").setup()
end,
}
If you want to install a specific revision of a plugin, you can use commit
,
tag
, branch
, version
.
The version
property supports Semver ranges.
Click to see some examples
*
: latest stable version (this excludes pre-release versions)1.2.x
: any version that starts with1.2
, such as1.2.0
,1.2.3
, etc.^1.2.3
: any version that is compatible with1.2.3
, such as1.3.0
,1.4.5
, etc., but not2.0.0
.~1.2.3
: any version that is compatible with1.2.3
, such as1.2.4
,1.2.5
, but not1.3.0
.>1.2.3
: any version that is greater than1.2.3
, such as1.3.0
,1.4.5
, etc.>=1.2.3
: any version that is greater than or equal to1.2.3
, such as1.2.3
,1.3.0
,1.4.5
, etc.<1.2.3
: any version that is less than1.2.3
, such as1.1.0
,1.0.5
, etc.<=1.2.3
: any version that is less than or equal to1.2.3
, such as1.2.3
,1.1.0
,1.0.5
, etc
You can set config.defaults.version = "*"
to install the latest stable
version of plugins that support Semver.
return {
-- the colorscheme should be available when starting Neovim
"folke/tokyonight.nvim",
-- I have a separate config.mappings file where I require which-key.
-- With lazy the plugin will be automatically loaded when it is required somewhere
{ "folke/which-key.nvim", lazy = true },
{
"nvim-neorg/neorg",
-- lazy-load on filetype
ft = "norg",
-- custom config that will be executed when loading the plugin
config = function()
require("neorg").setup()
end,
},
{
"dstein64/vim-startuptime",
-- lazy-load on a command
cmd = "StartupTime",
},
{
"hrsh7th/nvim-cmp",
-- load cmp on InsertEnter
event = "InsertEnter",
-- these dependencies will only be loaded when cmp loads
-- dependencies are always lazy-loaded unless specified otherwise
dependencies = {
"hrsh7th/cmp-nvim-lsp",
"hrsh7th/cmp-buffer",
},
config = function()
-- ...
end,
},
-- you can use the VeryLazy event for things that can
-- load later and are not important for the initial UI
{ "stevearc/dressing.nvim", event = "VeryLazy" },
{
"cshuaimin/ssr.nvim",
-- init is always executed during startup, but doesn't load the plugin yet.
-- init implies lazy loading
init = function()
vim.keymap.set({ "n", "x" }, "<leader>cR", function()
-- this require will automatically load the plugin
require("ssr").open()
end, { desc = "Structural Replace" })
end,
},
{
"monaqa/dial.nvim",
-- lazy-load on keys
keys = { "<C-a>", "<C-x>" },
},
-- local plugins need to be explicitly configured with dir
{ dir = "~/projects/secret.nvim" },
-- you can use a custom url to fetch a plugin
{ url = "git@github.com:folke/noice.nvim.git" },
-- local plugins can also be configure with the dev option.
-- This will use {config.dev.path}/noice.nvim/ instead of fetching it from Github
-- With the dev option, you can easily switch between the local and installed version of a plugin
{ "folke/noice.nvim", dev = true },
}
lazy.nvim comes with the following defaults:
{
root = vim.fn.stdpath("data") .. "/lazy", -- directory where plugins will be installed
defaults = {
lazy = false, -- should plugins be lazy-loaded?
version = nil,
-- version = "*", -- enable this to try installing the latest stable versions of plugins
},
lockfile = vim.fn.stdpath("config") .. "/lazy-lock.json", -- lockfile generated after running update.
concurrency = nil, ---@type number limit the maximum amount of concurrent tasks
git = {
-- defaults for the `Lazy log` command
-- log = { "-10" }, -- show the last 10 commits
log = { "--since=3 days ago" }, -- show commits from the last 3 days
timeout = 120, -- kill processes that take more than 2 minutes
url_format = "https://github.com/%s.git",
},
dev = {
-- directory where you store your local plugin projects
path = "~/projects",
---@type string[] plugins that match these patterns will use your local versions instead of being fetched from GitHub
patterns = {}, -- For example {"folke"}
},
install = {
-- install missing plugins on startup. This doesn't increase startup time.
missing = true,
-- try to load one of these colorschemes when starting an installation during startup
colorscheme = { "habamax" },
},
ui = {
-- a number <1 is a percentage., >1 is a fixed size
size = { width = 0.8, height = 0.8 },
-- The border to use for the UI window. Accepts same border values as |nvim_open_win()|.
border = "none",
icons = {
cmd = "๎ฏ ",
config = "๏",
event = "๎ช",
ft = "๏ ",
init = "๏ ",
keys = "๏ ",
plugin = "๏ ",
runtime = "๎
",
source = "๏ก ",
start = "๎ซ",
task = "โ ",
},
throttle = 20, -- how frequently should the ui process render events
},
checker = {
-- automatically check for plugin updates
enabled = false,
concurrency = nil, ---@type number? set to 1 to check for updates very slowly
notify = true, -- get a notification when new updates are found
frequency = 3600, -- check for updates every hour
},
change_detection = {
-- automatically check for config file changes and reload the ui
enabled = true,
notify = true, -- get a notification when changes are found
},
performance = {
cache = {
enabled = true,
path = vim.fn.stdpath("state") .. "/lazy/cache",
-- Once one of the following events triggers, caching will be disabled.
-- To cache all modules, set this to `{}`, but that is not recommended.
-- The default is to disable on:
-- * VimEnter: not useful to cache anything else beyond startup
-- * BufReadPre: this will be triggered early when opening a file from the command line directly
disable_events = { "VimEnter", "BufReadPre" },
},
reset_packpath = true, -- reset the package path to improve startup time
rtp = {
reset = true, -- reset the runtime path to $VIMRUNTIME and your config directory
---@type string[]
paths = {}, -- add any custom paths here that you want to indluce in the rtp
---@type string[] list any plugins you want to disable here
disabled_plugins = {
-- "gzip",
-- "matchit",
-- "matchparen",
-- "netrwPlugin",
-- "tarPlugin",
-- "tohtml",
-- "tutor",
-- "zipPlugin",
},
},
},
-- lazy can generate helptags from the headings in markdown readme files,
-- so :help works even for plugins that don't have vim docs.
-- when the readme opens with :help it will be correctly displayed as markdown
readme = {
root = vim.fn.stdpath("state") .. "/lazy/readme",
files = { "README.md" },
-- only generate markdown helptags for plugins that dont have docs
skip_if_doc_exists = true,
},
}
If you don't want to use a Nerd Font, you can replace the icons with Unicode symbols.
{
ui = {
icons = {
cmd = "โ",
config = "๐ ",
event = "๐
",
ft = "๐",
init = "โ",
keys = "๐",
plugin = "๐",
runtime = "๐ป",
source = "๐",
start = "๐",
task = "๐",
},
},
}
Plugins are managed with the :Lazy
command.
Open the help with <?>
to see all the key mappings.
You can press <CR>
on a plugin to show its details. Most properties
can be hovered with <K>
to open links, help files, readmes,
git commits and git issues.
Lazy can automatically check for updates in the background. This feature
can be enabled with config.checker.enabled = true
.
Any operation can be started from the UI, with a sub command or an API function:
Command | Lua | Description |
---|---|---|
:Lazy check [plugins] |
require("lazy").check(opts?) |
Check for updates and show the log (git fetch) |
:Lazy clean [plugins] |
require("lazy").clean(opts?) |
Clean plugins that are no longer needed |
:Lazy clear |
require("lazy").clear() |
Clear finished tasks |
:Lazy debug |
require("lazy").debug() |
Show debug information |
:Lazy help |
require("lazy").help() |
Toggle this help page |
:Lazy home |
require("lazy").home() |
Go back to plugin list |
:Lazy install [plugins] |
require("lazy").install(opts?) |
Install missing plugins |
:Lazy load {plugins} |
require("lazy").load(opts) |
Load a plugin that has not been loaded yet. Similar to :packadd . Like :Lazy load foo.nvim |
:Lazy log [plugins] |
require("lazy").log(opts?) |
Show recent updates for all plugins |
:Lazy profile |
require("lazy").profile() |
Show detailed profiling |
:Lazy restore [plugins] |
require("lazy").restore(opts?) |
Updates all plugins to the state in the lockfile |
:Lazy sync [plugins] |
require("lazy").sync(opts?) |
Run install, clean and update |
:Lazy update [plugins] |
require("lazy").update(opts?) |
Update all plugins. This will also update the lockfile |
Any command can have a bang to make the command wait till it finished. For example, if you want to sync lazy from the cmdline, you can use:
$ nvim --headless "+Lazy! sync" +qa
opts
is a table with the following key-values:
- wait: when true, then the call will wait till the operation completed
- show: when false, the UI will not be shown
- plugins: a list of plugin names to run the operation on
- concurrency: limit the
number
of concurrently running tasks
If you want to display the number of plugins on your dashboard, you can use this simple API:
local plugins = require("lazy").stats().count
lazy.nvim provides a statusline component that you can use to show the number of pending updates.
Make sure to enable config.checker.enabled = true
to make this work.
Example of configuring lualine.nvim
require("lualine").setup({
sections = {
lualine_x = {
{
require("lazy.status").updates,
cond = require("lazy.status").has_updates,
color = { fg = "#ff9e64" },
},
},
},
})
After every update, the local lockfile is updated with the installed revisions. It is recommended to have this file under version control.
If you use your Neovim config on multiple machines, using the lockfile, you can ensure that the same version of every plugin is installed.
On the other machine, you can do Lazy restore
, to update all your plugins to
the version from the lockfile
Great care has been taken to make the startup code (lazy.core
) as efficient as possible.
During startup, all lua files used before VimEnter
or BufReadPre
are byte-compiled and cached,
similar to what impatient.nvim does.
My config for example loads in about 11ms
with 93
plugins. I do a lot of lazy-loading though :)
lazy.nvim comes with an advanced profiler :Lazy profile
to help you improve performance.
The profiling view shows you why and how long it took to load your plugins.
See an overview of active lazy-loading handlers and what's in the module cache
lazy.nvim does NOT use Neovim packages and even disables plugin loading
completely (vim.go.loadplugins = false
). It takes over the complete
startup sequence for more flexibility and better performance.
In practice this means that step 10 of Neovim Initialization is done by Lazy:
- all plugins with
lazy=false
are loaded. This includes sourcing/plugin
and/ftdetect
files. (/after
will not be sourced yet) - all files from
/plugin
and/ftdetect
directories in you rtp are sourced (excluding/after
) - all
/after/plugin
files are sourced (this inludes/after
from plugins) - all the plugins'
init()
functions are executed
Files from runtime directories are always sourced in alphabetical order.
Some users may want to split their plugin specs in multiple files.
Instead of passing a spec table to setup()
, you can use a lua module.
The specs from the module and any sub-modules will be merged together in the final spec,
so it is not needed to add require
calls in your main plugin file to the other files.
The benefits of using this approach:
- simple to add new plugin specs. Just create a new file in your plugins module.
- allows for caching of all your plugin specs. This becomes important if you have a lot of smaller plugin specs.
- spec changes will automatically be reloaded when they're updated, so the
:Lazy
UI is always up to date
Example:
~/.config/nvim/init.lua
require("lazy").setup("plugins")
~/.config/nvim/lua/plugins.lua
or~/.config/nvim/lua/plugins/init.lua
(this file is optional)
return {
"folke/neodev.nvim",
"folke/which-key.nvim",
{ "folke/neoconf.nvim", cmd = "Neoconf" },
}
- any lua file in
~/.config/nvim/lua/plugins/*.lua
will be automatically merged in the main plugin spec
For a real-life example, you can check my personal dots:
- init.lua where I require
config.lazy
- config.lazy where I bootstrap and setup lazy.nvim
- config.plugins is my main plugin config module
- Any submodule of config.plugins (submodules) will be automatically loaded as well.
setup
โก๏ธinit
requires
โก๏ธdependencies
as
โก๏ธname
opt
โก๏ธlazy
run
โก๏ธbuild
lock
โก๏ธpin
module
is auto-loaded. No need to specify
as
โก๏ธname
opt
โก๏ธlazy
run
โก๏ธbuild
To uninstall lazy.nvim, you need to remove the following files and directories:
- data:
~/.local/share/nvim/lazy
- state:
~/.local/state/nvim/lazy
- lockfile:
~/.config/nvim/lazy-lock.json
paths can differ if you changed
XDG
environment variables.