Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jon Parise
b25794e81b elixir-ls now recognizes umbrella projects
Previously, elixir-ls would treat each sub-project within an umbrella as
standalone, which isn't desirable from a language server perspective.

Added ale#handlers#elixir#FindMixUmbrellaRoot, which locates the current
project's root and then continues searching upwards for a potential
umbrella project root. This literally looks just two levels up to keep
things simple while keeping in line with Elixir project conventions.

Use this new function to determine elixir-ls's LSP project root.
2018-11-04 06:40:25 -08:00
Jon Parise
4bee0f1743 Add configuration dictionary support to elixir-ls
This adds generic configuration dictionary support to the elixir-ls
linter. This is useful for disabling its built-in Dialyzer support, for
example, which can improve startup time.

The configuration dictionary is a little verbose. I considered reducing
the user configuration to only the nested settings dictionary (and
having the linter implementation wrap it in the top-level `elixirLS`
dictionary), but leaving it fully configurable simplifies the code and
removes any assumptions about current or future ElixirLS behavior.
2018-10-31 10:32:48 -07:00
Jon Parise
b5a7593577 Add a lsp_config_callback linter option
This is the callback-based variant of the existing `lsp_config` linter
option. It serves the same purpose but can be used when more complicated
processing is needed.

`lsp_config` and `lsp_config_callback` are mutually exclusive options;
if both an given, a linter preprocessing error will be raised.

The runtime logic has been wrapped in `ale#lsp_linter#GetConfig` for
convenience, similar to `ale#lsp_linter#GetOptions`.

This also adds documentation and an `AssertLSPConfig` test function for
completeness.
2018-10-31 08:42:42 -07:00
Jon Parise
7eae781291 Add elixir-ls language server support
ElixirLS (https://github.com/JakeBecker/elixir-ls) is an LSP server for
Elixir. It's distributed as a release package that can be downloaded
from https://github.com/JakeBecker/elixir-ls/releases or built locally.

The easiest way to start it is via Unix- and Win32-specific helper
scripts, so that's the basis of this command integration. Alternatively,
we could implement the contents of those platform-specific scripts in
the linter's command callback in a language-neutral way, but there isn't
any benefit to doing that aside from eliminating the platform check, and
that could prove to be too tight of a coupling going forward.
2018-10-11 08:31:12 -07:00