nvim/pack/acp/opt/nvim-lspconfig/CONTRIBUTING.md

6.3 KiB

Requirements

  • Neovim 0.6 or later
  • Lint task requires luacheck and stylua. If using nix, you can use nix develop to install these to a local nix shell.
  • Documentation is generated by scripts/docgen.lua.
    • Only works on linux and macOS

Scope of lspconfig

The point of lspconfig is to provide the minimal configuration necessary for a server to act in compliance with the language server protocol. In general, if a server requires custom client-side commands or off-spec handlers, then the server configuration should be added without those in lspconfig and receive a dedicated plugin such as nvim-jdtls, nvim-metals, etc.

Pull requests (PRs)

  • To avoid duplicate work, create a draft pull request.
  • Avoid cosmetic changes to unrelated files in the same commit.
  • Use a feature branch instead of the master branch.
  • Use a rebase workflow for small PRs.
    • After addressing review comments, it's fine to rebase and force-push.

Adding a server to lspconfig

The general form of adding a new language server is to start with a minimal skeleton. This includes populated the config table with a default_config and docs table.

When choosing a server name, convert all dashes (-) to underscores (_) If the name of the server is a unique name (pyright, clangd) or a commonly used abbreviation (zls), prefer this as the server name. If the server instead follows the pattern x-language-server, prefer the convention x_ls (jsonnet_ls).

default_config should include, at minimum the following:

  • cmd: a list which includes the executable name as the first entry, with arguments constituting subsequent list elements (--stdio is common). Note that Windows has a limitation when it comes to directly invoking a server that's installed by npm or gem, so it requires additional handling.
local bin_name = 'typescript-language-server'
local cmd = { bin_name, '--stdio' }

if vim.fn.has 'win32' == 1 then
  cmd = { 'cmd.exe', '/C', bin_name, '--stdio' }
end
  • filetypes: a list for filetypes a
  • root_dir: a function (or function handle) which returns the root of the project used to determine if lspconfig should launch a new language server, or attach a previously launched server when you open a new buffer matching the filetype of the server. Note, lspconfig does not offer a dedicated single file mode (this is not codified in the spec). Do not add vim.fn.cwd or util.path.dirname in root_dir. A future version of lspconfig will provide emulation of a single file mode until this is formally codified in the specification. A good fallback is util.find_git_ancestor, see other configurations for examples.

Additionally, the following options are often added:

  • init_options: a table sent during initialization, corresponding to initializationOptions sent in initializeParams as part of the first request sent from client to server during startup.
  • settings: a table sent during workspace/didChangeConfiguration shortly after server initialization. This is an undocumented convention for most language servers. There is often some duplication with initOptions.

A minimal example for adding a new language server is shown below for pyright, a python language server included in lspconfig:

-- Only `configs` must be required, util is optional if you are using the root resolver functions, which is usually the case.
local configs = require 'lspconfig.configs'
local util = require 'lspconfig.util'

-- Having server name defined here is the convention, this is often times also the first entry in the `cmd` table.
local server_name = 'pyright'

configs[server_name] = {
  default_config = {
    -- This should be executable on the command line, arguments (such as `--stdio`) are additional entries in the list.
    cmd = { 'pyright-langserver' },
    -- These are the filetypes that the server will either attach or start in response to opening. The user must have a filetype plugin matching the filetype, either via the built-in runtime files or installed via plugin.
    filetypes = { 'python' },
    -- The root directory that lspconfig uses to determine if it should start a new language server, or attach the current buffer to a previously running language server.
    root_dir = util.find_git_ancestor
    end,
  },
  docs = {
    -- extremely important: the package.json that contains language server settings, not the package.json that contains javascript dependencies for the project, or the package.json that contains vscode specific settings
    package_json = 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/microsoft/pyright/master/packages/vscode-pyright/package.json',

    -- The description should include at minimum the link to the github project, and ideally the steps to install the language server.
    description = [[
https://github.com/microsoft/pyright

`pyright`, a static type checker and language server for python

`pyright` can be installed via `npm`
`npm install -g pyright`
]],
  },
}

Commit style

lspconfig, like neovim core, follows the conventional commit style please submit your commits accordingly. Generally commits will be of the form:

feat: add lua-language-server support
fix(lua-language-server): update root directory pattern
docs: update README.md

with the commit body containing additional details.

Lint

PRs are checked with luacheck, StyLua and selene. Please run the linter locally before submitting a PR:

make lint

Generating docs

Github Actions automatically generates server_configurations.md. Only modify scripts/README_template.md or the docs table in the server config (the lua file). Do not modify server_configurations.md directly.

To preview the generated server_configurations.md locally, run scripts/docgen.lua from nvim (from the project root):

nvim -R -Es +'set rtp+=$PWD' +'luafile scripts/docgen.lua'