This project contains an implementation of an LSP server for OCaml and a standalone implementation of the LSP protocol.
We recommend to install the server via a project such as opam or esy.
To install the lsp server in a particular opam switch:
$ opam pin add ocaml-lsp-server https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lsp.git
$ opam install ocaml-lsp-server
Note that you will need to run install the lsp server in every switch where you'd like to use it.
To add the lsp server to an esy project, add the following lines to your
project's package.json
:
"devDependencies": {
"@opam/ocaml-lsp-server": "ocaml/ocaml-lsp:ocaml-lsp-server.opam"
}
This project uses submodules to handle dependencies. This is done so that users who install ocaml-lsp-server into their sandbox will not share constraints on the same dependencies that ocaml-lsp-server is using.
$ git clone --recurse-submodules http://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lsp.git
$ cd ocaml-lsp
$ make build
Once ocaml-lsp-server
is installed, the executable is called ocamllsp
.
For now, the server can only be used through the standard file descriptors stdin
and stdout
.
For an example of usage of the server in a VSCode extension, see here.
The server supports the following queries:
-
textDocument/completion
-
completionItem/resolve
-
textdocument/hover
-
textDocument/signatureHelp
-
textDocument/declaration
-
textDocument/definition
-
textDocument/typeDefinition
-
textDocument/implementation
-
textDocument/codeLens
-
textDocument/documentHighlight
-
textDocument/documentSymbol
-
textDocument/references
-
textDocument/documentColor
-
textDocument/colorPresentation
-
textDocument/formatting
-
textDocument/rangeFormatting
-
textDocument/onTypeFormatting
-
textDocument/prepareRename
-
textDocument/foldingRange
-
textDocument/selectionRange
-
workspace/symbol
Note that degrees of support for each LSP request are varying.
# clone repo with submodules
git clone --recursive git@github.com:ocaml/ocaml-lsp.git
# if you already cloned, pull submodules
git submodule update --init --recursive
# create local switch (or use global one)
opam switch create . ocaml-base-compiler.4.09.1
# install dependencies
opam install . --deps-only --with-test
# build
make build
# install ocamllsp
make lsp-server
To run tests execute:
$ make test
Note that tests require Node.js and Yarn installed.
The lsp server uses merlin under the hood, but users are not required to have merlin installed. We vendor merlin because we currently heavily depend on some implementation details of merlin that make infeasible to upgrade the lsp server and merlin independently.
The implementation of the lsp protocol itself was taken from facebook's hack
Previously, this lsp server was a part of merlin, until it was realized that the lsp protocol covers a wider scope than merlin.
Note that the comparisons below make no claims of being objective and may be entirely out of date:
-
reason-language-server This server supports bucklescript & reason. However, this project does not use merlin which means that it supports less versions of OCaml and offers less "smart" functionality - especially in the face of sources that do not yet compile.
-
ocaml-language-server This project is extremely similar in the functionality it provides because it also reuses merlin on the backend. The essential difference is that this project is written in typescript, while our server is in OCaml. We feel that it's best to use OCaml to maximize the contributor pool.