New supported option called 'pinned' for the Plugin command. When set to
1, the plugin is added to rtp but no install/upgrade operation is
performed.
It not only allows vundle to do rtp management of plugins on VCS other
than git, it also allows leaving plugins that had previously been
managed by vundle in the current state, with no further updates.
Fixes#24, #397
Bundle configuration options that are inferred from the bundle specs
overwrite user provided ones. This used to prevent users from changing
the name of directory where the cloned bundle should go, for instance.
Keep the user provided options with a preference over inferred ones.
1. Fixed some lines which were wider than 78 characters.
2. Added a couple of more borders above all the sub-sections.
3. Moved about part above the TOC, seems unnecessary to have that as its
own section when it's so small. This also look more like a default vim
help file.
4. Changed "NOTE:" into "Note that" because that is more like how it's
used in default vim files.
5. Changed some wording like "the plug-in manager" to "a
plug-in manager".
6. Moved a couple of *tag names* below their headings so it's like that
everywhere in the file.
In Windows, some users set the Cygwin shell as their Vim shell, make
Vundle consider this when deciding which flavour of commands to run when
cloning. Roughly check if the shell contains `sh` in it, and assume a
Unix shell, even when on Windows.
Ignore .netrwhist" until rtp ordering is fixed
Because vundle modifies the directory that appears first in the rtp, some files that vim generates in the first directory in rtp end up in the vundle directory. This is a known issue in vundle but until it is resolved, ignore .netrwhhist when found in the vundle directory.
The wildignore setting affects the behaviour of the `= shorthand, so
this changeset replaces the last remaining use of such construct with a
call to exec.