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.
Each LSP connection now stores its configuration dictionary. It is
initially empty (`{}`) and is updated each time the LSP connection is
started. When a change is detected, the workspace/didChangeConfiguration
message is sent to the LSP servers with the updated configuration.
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.
* add prolog/swipl linter
* use load_files/2 instead of read_term/2
Because it also checks some semantic warnings / errors
not only syntactic warnings / errors.
e.g.:
* singleton warning
* discontiguous warning
* ...
cf. http://www.swi-prolog.org/pldoc/doc_for?object=style_check/1
* support error messages with no line number
:- module(module_name, [pred/0]).
causes
ERROR: Exported procedure module_name:pred/0 is not defined
* add test for prolog/swipl handler
* cosmetic fixes
* detect timeout using SIGALRM
* rename g:prolog_swipl_goals to g:prolog_swipl_load
* write doc for prolog/swipl linter
* update toc and README
* fix ignore patterns
* Only run stack if a stack.yaml config is found
It is necessary to check for a stack.yaml file to distinguish between
cabal-only projects or stack projects (which are also cabal projects
since stack is built on top of cabal).
* Test that stack is called if stack.yaml exists