clojure-lsp logs most of what is doing to a file which location could be found:
:log-path if specified in your clojure-lsp config, for example: {:log-path "/tmp/clojure-lsp.out"}/tmp/clojure-lsp.<TIMESTAMP>.out or /var/folders/... for MacOS.M-x lsp-clojure-server-log.
All LSP clients should provide a way to get the jsonrpc logs between client and server, this helps debug the requests and responses content and time.
Check below how to get the logs for most used clients:
An alternative is to pass --trace-level verbose to clojure-lsp during process start and clojure-lsp will log the communication to the server-log.
clojure-lsp has a custom command that prints useful information about the current running clojure-lsp for the current project, it's called clojure/serverInfo/log, some clients already have ways to call that automatically:
lsp-clojure-server-info command.Calva Diagnostics: Clojure-lsp Server Info command.Settings Tools Clojure LSP Copy server info to clipboard option.clojure-lsp uses clj-kondo to analyze the classpath during server initialize for most features work, so make sure you don't see any "Error while looking up classpath..." on clojure-lsp log file.
Please note that clojure-lsp comes bundled with clj-kondo, so you do not have to install it separately.
For more information, check the Classpath scan settings section.
By default clojure-lsp knows how to scan most common clojure projects using the following rules:
project.clj file, it'll run lein classpath to get the classpath.deps.edn file, it'll run clojure -Spath to get the classpath.build.boot file, it'll run boot show --fake-classpath to get the classpath.shadow-cljs.edn file, it'll run npx shadow-cljs classpath to get the classpath.If your project doesn't follow the above rules or you need a custom command to get the classpath you need to configure the project-specs clojure-lsp setting, for more details check the settings section.
By default clojure-lsp get source-paths from classpath, for more details check settings section.
If the definition lives under a different source dir, you can define source-aliases or source-paths setting as mentioned on settings section.
It is also important to get your project-root correct in your client otherwise the source paths will not be found, check the project-root via your LSP client.
If you are using deps and using a :local/root dependency to reference another project, i.e.,
{:deps {foo.bar/baz {:local/root "/path/to/foo/project/containing/a/deps.edn"}}}
gotoDefinition isn't working when attempting to jump to the namespace in the referenced project, then
it could be that your ~/.config/clojure-lsp/config.edn (or legacy ~/.lsp/config.edn) has a source paths entry, i.e., :source-paths ["src" "test"]. This will prevent the lookup from working, as it restricts clojure-lsp to only scan those folders in the
current project for sources, and not the other project referenced via the :local/root deps entry. It can be fixed by removing
the :source-paths from the config (as clojure-lsp has good defaults anyway). If you do require more specific source paths,
then those can be added at the project level..clj-kondo/.cache dir, try to remove that folder if you think it's not linting correctly.lsp/.cache/ folder, if you have issues with some specific feature,
try to remove that dir and restart the server.Add require... on code actions when using CoC and (neo)vimIf you find, when executing the command
(coc-codeaction-line) (or (coc-codeaction-selected) or
(coc-codeaction-cursor)), that you aren't getting back
all of the code actions you might expect, please ensure that you have,
in your coc-settings.json the line disableDiagnostics set to
false or better yet, don't have the line there at all :-
---)
Make sure you have the most recent version of clojure-lsp
Check if the executable is working running it from the command line, it should start up and start reading from stdin.
Type Content-Length: 51\n\n{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"foo","id":1,"params":{}}. After a few moments you should get something like:
$ ./clojure-lsp
Content-Length: 51
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"foo","id":1,"params":{}}
Content-Length: 101
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"error":{"code":-32601,"message":"Method not found","data":{"method":"foo"}}}
If that is ok, clojure-lsp logs to /tmp/clojure-lsp.*.out, so watch that file and start your editor.
LSP Clients also generally have a way to trace server interactions. Turn that on and attach both server and client logs to an issue if it's not obvious what's going on.
trace.server is set to verbose in your coc-settings.json file,
e.g.,
"languageserver": {
"clojure-lsp": {
"command": "clojure-lsp",
"filetypes": ["clojure"],
"disableDiagnostics": false,
"rootPatterns": ["deps.edn", "project.clj"],
"additionalSchemes": ["jar", "zipfile"],
"trace.server": "verbose",
"initializationOptions": {
"project-specs": [{
"project-path": "deps.edn",
"classpath-cmd": ["clj", "-Spath"]
}],
"use-metadata-for-privacy?": true,
}
}
}
Then, once vim has loaded (and clojure-lsp has initialised), you can issue this command:
:CocCommand workspace.showOutput
This will show the JSON request/response bodies that go between vim and clojure-lsp. Please capture that information if you need help in tracking down the problem you are experiencing (either by reporting github issues, or talking with someone in Slack/Discord or whatever...)
clojure-lsp uses a native image that helps a lot with memory usage, but there is no hard limit so for huge Clojure projects or projects with lots of dependencies, memory may be a issue because of multiple analysis (keywords, function usages, java class/members etc).
It's possible to retrieve the project analysis of a running clojure-lsp process via the serverInfo command, a :analysis map will contain both internal (your project) and external (project dependencies) count of each analysis used by clojure-lsp, extremally high count of elements (> hundred thousand) tends to increase memory usage + cache size (.lsp/.cache).
As last resource if your project has a enormous number of some specific elements, it's possible to disable some analysis which should help decrease memory usage and even increase performance via the :analysis setting, but keep in mind that some features related to those analysis may not work, for example, {:analysis {:keywords false}} will remove support for find-references of keywords, or {:analysis {:java {:class-definitions false :member-definitions false}}} will completly disable java features like auto completion of java elements.
In some version of MacOS, Apple restrict the binary to run, to fix that run: xattr -d com.apple.quarantine /path/to/clojure-lsp
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Eric Dallo, David Harrigan, Jacob Maine, ikappaki, Brandon Ringe, dcfrankel & caseEdit on GitHub
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