How can I restore a vim file from the undo
file without hitting undo
?
I had a vim file that I saved while adding text. Then I ran a python comm
It is not exactly possible, as the undo file only contains the text that was changed in a single change. If you at some point reloaded the file, the undofile should contain the complete buffer for that and starting from there one could theorectically recover the file (by going through the undo states).
I have written about this before at the vim_use mailinglist here and here (which even contains a patch, that let's you force reading in the undo-file)
You could try to patch vim and see if you can recover at least some data.
You can't. The undo information is linked to Vim's last knowledge of the file's contents; when they don't correspond any more, Vim cannot re-apply the changes. This is documented at :help undo-persistence
:
Vim will detect if an undo file is no longer synchronized with the file it was written for (with a hash of the file contents) and ignore it when the file was changed after the undo file was written, to prevent corruption.
Best you can do is try to manually salvage recognizable bits in the undo file, e.g. with a hex editor, or Vim's binary mode.
A reminder that if you have set in your .vimrc file
set backupdir=$HOME/tmp
You may have temp copies of the files that are readable and that can be renamed
As the other answers have noted, you can't recover the whole file from vim's undo files, simply because vim seems to only keep diffs in the undo files, not the whole contents. (That makes a lot of sense, as it's space efficient.)
One thing you can try though, is to extract what's possible from your undo file:
$ strings <undo-file>
The output will not be pretty, but you could end up finding something that's valuable to you.