There are several ways of finding and fixing a bug or implementing a new feature:
clojure-lsp[.bat]
using bb debug-cli
each time you have made changes, and test it manually in your client. This is the slowest option.Whichever development path you choose: For final testing, it is good to rebuild the binary with bb debug-cli
.
There are two custom LSP methods clojure/serverInfo/log
and clojure/cursorInfo/log
. They can assist in debugging.
With a clojure-lsp + nREPL powered Clojure editor you can modify your editor session's clojure-lsp server using the Clojure REPL.
Here's demo video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UvT0yqBDw8
These are the steps:
bb debug-cli
- to build a clojure-lsp[.bat]
executable that includes cider-nrepl in the jar. This executable will be saved at the root of the project.clojure-lsp[.bat]
executableserverInfo
commandport
entry in the outputSeeing is believing. An easy way to convince yourself that you can actually change clojure-lsp mid-flight is to:
server-info
function in src/clojure_lsp/handlers.clj
:foo :bar
entry to the map returnedserver-info
function definitionserverInfo
command:foo :bar
in the outputYou have just modified the LSP server powering your editor while it was running! This is the Clojure way. No recompiling and restarting and reloading. That is some other, non-Clojure, way.
The details in how to perform these steps can vary a bit between the various Clojure editors/plugins.
This project comes with Calva configuration to use the clojure-lsp[.bat]
executable built in step 1 above. You can skip step 2, unless are running on MS-Widnows, in which case you should update the setting in .vscode/settings.json
to add the .bat
extension, i.e. "calva.clojureLspPath": "./clojure-lsp.bat"
.
To restart the clojure-lsp server, use the VS Code command Developer: Reload Window
The Hack away! step needs to start with you issuing the command Calva: Load Current File and Dependencies.
(setq lsp-clojure-custom-server-command '("~/path/to/clojure-lsp/clojure-lsp"))
, adjusting the path as necessary. If you add this to your Emacs config, you can skip this step in the future.lsp-workspace-restart
.lsp-clojure-server-info
.cider-connect-clj
, with "localhost" and the port.If you re-connect regulary, you may want to add this Emacs shortcut:
(defun lsp-clojure-nrepl-connect ()
"Connect to the running nrepl debug server of clojure-lsp."
(interactive)
(let ((info (lsp-clojure-server-info-raw)))
(save-match-data
(when-let (port (and (string-match "\"port\":\\([0-9]+\\)" info)
(match-string 1 info)))
(cider-connect-clj `(:host "localhost"
:port ,port))))))
coc-settings.json
(:CocConfig
) clojure-lsp: {command: "~/path/to/clojure-lsp/clojure-lsp"}
, adjusting the past as necessary.:CocRestart
:echo CocRequest('clojure-lsp', 'clojure/serverInfo/raw')['port']
:echo CocRequest('clojure-lsp', 'clojure/serverInfo/raw')['log-path']
:Connect <port>
If you re-connect regulary, you may want to add something like this to your vimrc:
" Copies the log-path to your clipboard
nnoremap <silent> crsl :call setreg('*', CocRequest('clojure-lsp', 'clojure/serverInfo/raw')['log-path'])<CR>
" Connects to nrepl
nnoremap <silent> crsp :execute 'Connect' CocRequest('clojure-lsp', 'clojure/serverInfo/raw')['port']<CR>
cmd
to "~/path/to/clojure-lsp/clojure-lsp", adjusting the path as necessary.:lua vim.lsp.stop_client(vim.lsp.get_active_clients())
:edit
:lua clients = vim.lsp.get_active_clients() for k, client_data in ipairs(clients) do id = client_data.id end client = vim.lsp.get_client_by_id(id) result = client.request_sync("clojure/serverInfo/raw", {}, 5000, 15) print('port = ' .. result.result.port) print('log-path = ' .. result.result['log-path'])
:ConjureConnect <port>
TBD. PR welcome.
The nREPL includes tools for debugging and profiling clojure-lsp. See cli/dev/clojure_lsp/debug.clj
.
If you're interested in using the profiling tools in that file, you'll need to be familiar with criterium and clj-async-profiler.
Note that the performance of clojure-lsp is highly dependent on the size of its db. If you load a repl with -A:build
, you'll have access to the debugging tools, but the db will be nearly empty. Follow the [steps][#the-clojure-way] above to connect to an nREPL which has a populated db.
Run bb tasks
for a list of available dev tasks.
The codebase consists of the lib/
library and the cli/
program which depends on it.
bb test-lib
,bb test-cli
, andbb test
(for both of the above).cli/
produces a standalone .jar
file that can be converted to a self contained clojure-lsp[.bat]
script or a clojure-lsp[.exe]
binary executable file.
bb prod-jar
-> cli\
standalone jar,bb prod-cli
-> executable script with embedded cli/
jar,bb debug-cli
-> same as prod-cli
but includes support for cider-nrepl
and clj-async-profile
, andbb native-cli
-> binary executable produced with graalvm
.There are also cli/
integration tests. They require ./clojure[.bat|.exe]
to have already been built with one of the above cli tasks (__NOTE:__always ensure that you rebuild the cli/
executable every time you make changes to lib/
or cli/
source code so tha the integration tests use an up to date executable).
bb integration-tests
The same development version can be used to lint all of the source code.
bb lint
A test should be able to run on all JDK versions in scope starting with 1.8 and across GNU/Linux
, macos
and MS-Windows
operating systems.
The test author should be aware of the following important differences between *nix and windows:
\n
.\r\n
./
as the path separator, absolute paths start with /
.\
as the path separator, absolute paths start either with a drive letter followed by :\
, i.e. [A-Za-Z]:\
(e.g. c:\temp
and D:\src
) or with a double \\
indicating a network path (e.g. \\computer39\temp
).Below are a few hints to assist with writing test that work accross the different platforms.
clojure-lsp.test-helper/string=
with \n
in your expected result.
(is (h/strings= "one\n" result)
instead of (is (= "one\r\n" result))
or (is (= "one\n" result))
.h/str-includes?
with \n
in the string to search for instead of clojure.string/includes?
.
(is (h/str-includes? (slurp "path") "something\n"))
instead of (is (str/includes? (slurp "path") "something\n"))
or (is (str/includes? (slurp "path") "something\r\n"))
.babashka.fs/canonicalize
when converting a relative path to an absolute path. Avoiding using any of java File/Path absolute or canonical equivalent fns. This ensures that the drive letter on windows is always in capitals (e.g. D:\
instead of d:\
). This is also the convention used throughout the codebase and it works as well with both existing and non-existing files.clojure-lsp.test-helper/file-path
, clojure-lsp.test-helper/file->uri
with *nix paths. They are converted to the format expected by the OS.
(load-code (h/file-path "/aaa.clj") "(ns aaa)")
instead of (load-code "/aaa.clj" "(ns aaa)")
or (load-code "c:\\aaa.clj" "(ns aaa)")
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Eric Dallo, Jacob Maine, Peter Strömberg, Daniel Habib Vieira da Silva, ikappaki & Case NelsonEdit on GitHub
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