The main interface to rust-analyzer is the [LSP](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/) implementation. To install lsp server, use `cargo install-lsp`, which is a shorthand for `cargo install --package ra_lsp_server`. The binary is named `ra_lsp_server`, you should be able to use it with any LSP-compatible editor. We use custom extensions to LSP, so special client-side support is required to take full advantage of rust-analyzer. This repository contains support code for VS Code and Emacs. Rust Analyzer needs sources of rust standard library to work, so you might need to execute ``` $ rustup component add rust-src ``` See [./features.md](./features.md) document for a list of features that are available. ## VS Code Prerequisites: In order to build the VS Code plugin, you need to have node.js and npm with a minimum version of 10 installed. Please refer to [node.js and npm documentation](https://nodejs.org) for installation instructions. You will also need the most recent version of VS Code: we don't try to maintain compatibility with older versions yet. The experimental VS Code plugin can then be built and installed by executing the following commands: ``` $ git clone https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer.git --depth 1 $ cd rust-analyzer $ cargo install-code ``` The automatic installation is expected to *just work* for common cases, if it doesn't, report bugs! If you have an unusual setup (for example, `code` is not in the `PATH`), you should adapt these manual installation instructions: ``` $ git clone https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer.git --depth 1 $ cd rust-analyzer $ cargo install --path ./crates/ra_lsp_server/ --force $ cd ./editors/code $ npm install $ ./node_modules/vsce/out/vsce package $ code --install-extension ./ra-lsp-0.0.1.vsix ``` It's better to remove existing Rust plugins to avoid interference. Beyond basic LSP features, there are some extension commands which you can invoke via Ctrl+Shift+P or bind to a shortcut. See [./features.md](./features.md) for details. ### Settings * `rust-analyzer.highlightingOn`: enables experimental syntax highlighting * `rust-analyzer.showWorkspaceLoadedNotification`: to ease troubleshooting, a notification is shown by default when a workspace is loaded * `rust-analyzer.enableEnhancedTyping`: by default, rust-analyzer intercepts `Enter` key to make it easier to continue comments. Note that it may conflict with VIM emulation plugin. * `rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath`: path to `ra_lsp_server` executable * `rust-analyzer.enableCargoWatchOnStartup`: prompt to install & enable `cargo watch` for live error highlighting (note, this **does not** use rust-analyzer) * `rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.check-arguments`: cargo-watch check arguments. (e.g: `--features="shumway,pdf"` will run as `cargo watch -x "check --features="shumway,pdf""` ) * `rust-analyzer.trace.server`: enables internal logging * `rust-analyzer.trace.cargo-watch`: enables cargo-watch logging ## Emacs Prerequisites: `emacs-lsp`, `dash` and `ht` packages. Installation: * add [ra-emacs-lsp.el](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/blob/69ee5c9c5ef212f7911028c9ddf581559e6565c3/editors/emacs/ra-emacs-lsp.el) to load path and require it in `init.el` * run `lsp` in a rust buffer * (Optionally) bind commands like `rust-analyzer-join-lines` or `rust-analyzer-extend-selection` to keys ## Vim and NeoVim * Install coc.nvim by following the instructions at [coc.nvim] - You will need nodejs installed. - You may want to include some of the sample vim configurations [from here][coc-vim-conf] - Note that if you use a plugin manager other than `vim-plug`, you may need to manually checkout the `release` branch wherever your plugin manager cloned it. Otherwise you will get errors about a missing javascript file. * Add rust analyzer using: [coc.nvim wiki][coc-wiki] - Use `:CocConfig` in command mode to edit the config file. ```jsonc "languageserver": { "rust": { "command": "ra_lsp_server", "filetypes": ["rust"], "rootPatterns": ["Cargo.toml"] } } ``` For those not familiar with js, the whole file should be enclosed in `{` and `}`, with all of your config options in between. So for example, if rust-analyzer was your only language server, you could do the following: ```jsonc { "languageserver": { "rust": { "command": "ra_lsp_server", "filetypes": ["rust"], "rootPatterns": ["Cargo.toml"] } } } ``` [coc.nvim]: https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim [coc-wiki]: https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim/wiki/Language-servers#rust [coc-vim-conf]: https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim/#example-vim-configuration ## Sublime Text 3 Prequisites: `LSP` package. Installation: * Invoke the command palette with Ctrl+Shift+P * Type `LSP Settings` to open the LSP preferences editor * Add the following LSP client definition to your settings: ```json "rust-analyzer": { "command": ["rustup", "run", "stable", "ra_lsp_server"], "languageId": "rust", "scopes": ["source.rust"], "syntaxes": [ "Packages/Rust/Rust.sublime-syntax", "Packages/Rust Enhanced/RustEnhanced.sublime-syntax" ] } ``` * You can now invoke the command palette and type LSP enable to locally/globally enable the rust-analyzer LSP (type LSP enable, then choose either locally or globally, then select rust-analyzer)