nvim/pack/acp/opt/nvim-lspconfig/lua/lspconfig/server_configurations/elixirls.lua

40 lines
1.3 KiB
Lua

local util = require 'lspconfig.util'
return {
default_config = {
filetypes = { 'elixir', 'eelixir' },
root_dir = function(fname)
return util.root_pattern('mix.exs', '.git')(fname) or vim.loop.os_homedir()
end,
},
docs = {
package_json = 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/elixir-lsp/vscode-elixir-ls/master/package.json',
description = [[
https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls
`elixir-ls` can be installed by following the instructions [here](https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls#building-and-running).
```bash
curl -fLO https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls/releases/latest/download/elixir-ls.zip
unzip elixir-ls.zip -d /path/to/elixir-ls
# Unix
chmod +x /path/to/elixir-ls/language_server.sh
```
**By default, elixir-ls doesn't have a `cmd` set.** This is because nvim-lspconfig does not make assumptions about your path. You must add the following to your init.vim or init.lua to set `cmd` to the absolute path ($HOME and ~ are not expanded) of your unzipped elixir-ls.
```lua
require'lspconfig'.elixirls.setup{
-- Unix
cmd = { "/path/to/elixir-ls/language_server.sh" };
-- Windows
cmd = { "/path/to/elixir-ls/language_server.bat" };
...
}
```
]],
default_config = {
root_dir = [[root_pattern("mix.exs", ".git") or vim.loop.os_homedir()]],
},
},
}