mirror of
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer
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280 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
280 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
[github-releases]: https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/releases
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The main interface to rust-analyzer is the
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[LSP](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/) implementation. To
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install lsp server, you have three options:
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* **Preferred and default:** install the plugin/extension for your IDE and it will ask your permission to automatically download the latest lsp server for you from [GitHub releases][github-releases]. (See docs to find out whether this is implemented for your editor below).
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* Manually download prebuilt binaries from [GitHub releases][github-releases]
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* `ra_lsp_server-linux` for Linux
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* `ra_lsp_server-mac` for Mac
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* `ra_lsp_server-windows.exe` for Windows
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* Clone the repository and build from sources
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```bash
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$ git clone git@github.com:rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer && cd rust-analyzer
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$ cargo xtask install --server # or cargo install --path ./crates/ra_lsp_server
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```
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This way you will get a binary named `ra_lsp_server` (with os suffix for prebuilt binaries)
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which you should be able to use with any LSP-compatible editor.
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We make use of custom extensions to LSP, so special client-side support is required to take full
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advantage of rust-analyzer. This repository contains support code for VS Code.
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Rust Analyzer needs sources of rust standard library to work, so
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you might also need to execute
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```
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$ rustup component add rust-src
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```
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See [./features.md](./features.md) document for a list of features that are available.
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## VS Code
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### Prerequisites
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You will need the most recent version of VS Code: we don't try to
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maintain compatibility with older versions yet.
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### Installation from prebuilt binaries
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We ship prebuilt binaries for Linux, Mac and Windows via
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[GitHub releases][github-releases].
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In order to use them you need to install the client VSCode extension.
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Publishing to VS Code marketplace is currently WIP. Thus, you need to manually download
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`rust-analyzer-0.1.0.vsix` file from latest [GitHub release][github-releases].
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After you downloaded the `.vsix` file you can install it from the terminal
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```
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$ code --install-extension rust-analyzer-0.1.0.vsix
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```
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Or open VS Code, press <kbd>Ctrl+Shift+P</kbd>, and search for the following command:
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<img width="500px" alt="Install from VSIX command" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/36276403/74108225-c0c11d80-4b80-11ea-9b2a-0a43f09e29af.png">
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Press <kbd>Enter</kbd> and go to `rust-analyzer-0.1.0.vsix` file through the file explorer.
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Then open some Rust project and you should
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see an info message pop-up.
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<img height="140px" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/36276403/74103174-a40df100-4b52-11ea-81f4-372c70797924.png" alt="Download now message"/>
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Click `Download now`, wait until the progress is 100% and you are ready to go.
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For updates you need to remove installed binary
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```
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rm -rf ${HOME}/.config/Code/User/globalStorage/matklad.rust-analyzer
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```
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`"Download latest language server"` command for VSCode and automatic updates detection is currently WIP.
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### Installation from sources
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In order to build the VS Code plugin from sources, you need to have node.js and npm with
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a minimum version of 12 installed. Please refer to
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[node.js and npm documentation](https://nodejs.org) for installation instructions.
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The experimental VS Code plugin can be built and installed by executing the
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following commands:
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```
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$ git clone https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer.git --depth 1
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$ cd rust-analyzer
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$ cargo xtask install
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```
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After that you need to amend your `settings.json` file to explicitly specify the
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path to `ra_lsp_server` that you've just built.
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```json
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{
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"rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath": "ra_lsp_server"
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}
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```
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This should work on all platforms, otherwise if installed `ra_lsp_server` is not available through your `$PATH` then see how to configure it [here](#setting-up-the-PATH-variable).
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The automatic installation is expected to *just work* for common cases, if it
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doesn't, report bugs!
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**Note** [#1831](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/1831): If you are using the popular
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[Vim emulation plugin](https://github.com/VSCodeVim/Vim), you will likely
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need to turn off the `rust-analyzer.enableEnhancedTyping` setting.
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(// TODO: This configuration is no longer available, enhanced typing shoud be disabled via removing Enter key binding, [see this issue](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/3051))
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If you have an unusual setup (for example, `code` is not in the `PATH`), you
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should adapt these manual installation instructions:
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```
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$ git clone https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer.git --depth 1
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$ cd rust-analyzer
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$ cargo install --path ./crates/ra_lsp_server/ --force --locked
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$ cd ./editors/code
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$ npm install
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$ npm run package
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$ code --install-extension ./rust-analyzer-0.1.0.vsix
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```
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It's better to remove existing Rust plugins to avoid interference.
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Beyond basic LSP features, there are some extension commands which you can
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invoke via <kbd>Ctrl+Shift+P</kbd> or bind to a shortcut. See [./features.md](./features.md)
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for details.
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For updates, pull the latest changes from the master branch, run `cargo xtask install` again, and **restart** VS Code instance.
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See [microsoft/vscode#72308](https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/72308) for why a full restart is needed.
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### VS Code Remote
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You can also use `rust-analyzer` with the Visual Studio Code Remote extensions
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(Remote SSH, Remote WSL, Remote Containers). In this case, however, you have to
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manually install the `.vsix` package:
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1. Build the extension on the remote host using the instructions above (ignore the
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error if `code` cannot be found in your PATH: VSCode doesn't need to be installed
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on the remote host).
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2. In Visual Studio Code open a connection to the remote host.
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3. Open the Extensions View (`View > Extensions`, keyboard shortcut: `Ctrl+Shift+X`).
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4. From the top-right kebab menu (`···`) select `Install from VSIX...`
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5. Inside the `rust-analyzer` directory find the `editors/code` subdirectory and choose
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the `rust-analyzer-0.1.0.vsix` file.
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6. Restart Visual Studio Code and re-establish the connection to the remote host.
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In case of errors please make sure that `~/.cargo/bin` is in your `PATH` on the remote
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host.
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### Settings
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* `rust-analyzer.highlightingOn`: enables experimental syntax highlighting.
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Colors can be configured via `editor.tokenColorCustomizations`.
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As an example, [Pale Fire](https://github.com/matklad/pale-fire/) color scheme tweaks rust colors.
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* `rust-analyzer.enableEnhancedTyping`: by default, rust-analyzer intercepts the
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`Enter` key to make it easier to continue comments. Note that it may conflict with VIM emulation plugin.
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* `rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath`: path to `ra_lsp_server` executable, when absent or `null` defaults to prebuilt binary path
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* `rust-analyzer.enableCargoWatchOnStartup`: prompt to install & enable `cargo
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watch` for live error highlighting (note, this **does not** use rust-analyzer)
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* `rust-analyzer.excludeGlobs`: a list of glob-patterns for exclusion (see globset [docs](https://docs.rs/globset) for syntax).
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Note: glob patterns are applied to all Cargo packages and a rooted at a package root.
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This is not very intuitive and a limitation of a current implementation.
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* `rust-analyzer.useClientWatching`: use client provided file watching instead
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of notify watching.
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* `rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.command`: `cargo-watch` command. (e.g: `clippy` will run as `cargo watch -x clippy` )
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* `rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.arguments`: cargo-watch check arguments.
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(e.g: `--features="shumway,pdf"` will run as `cargo watch -x "check --features="shumway,pdf""` )
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* `rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.ignore`: list of patterns for cargo-watch to ignore (will be passed as `--ignore`)
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* `rust-analyzer.trace.server`: enables internal logging
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* `rust-analyzer.trace.cargo-watch`: enables cargo-watch logging
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* `RUST_SRC_PATH`: environment variable that overwrites the sysroot
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* `rust-analyzer.featureFlags` -- a JSON object to tweak fine-grained behavior:
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```jsonc
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{
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// Show diagnostics produced by rust-analyzer itself.
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"lsp.diagnostics": true,
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// Automatically insert `()` and `<>` when completing functions and types.
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"completion.insertion.add-call-parenthesis": true,
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// Enable completions like `.if`, `.match`, etc.
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"completion.enable-postfix": true,
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// Show notification when workspace is fully loaded
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"notifications.workspace-loaded": true,
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// Show error when no Cargo.toml was found
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"notifications.cargo-toml-not-found": true,
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}
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```
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## Emacs
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* install recent version of `emacs-lsp` package by following the instructions [here][emacs-lsp]
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* set `lsp-rust-server` to `'rust-analyzer`
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* run `lsp` in a Rust buffer
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* (Optionally) bind commands like `lsp-rust-analyzer-join-lines`, `lsp-extend-selection` and `lsp-rust-analyzer-expand-macro` to keys
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[emacs-lsp]: https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode
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## Vim and NeoVim (coc-rust-analyzer)
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* Install coc.nvim by following the instructions at [coc.nvim][] (nodejs required)
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* Run `:CocInstall coc-rust-analyzer` to install [coc-rust-analyzer], this extension implements _most_ of the features supported in the VSCode extension:
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- same configurations as VSCode extension, `rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath`, `rust-analyzer.enableCargoWatchOnStartup` etc.
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- same commands too, `rust-analyzer.analyzerStatus`, `rust-analyzer.startCargoWatch` etc.
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- highlighting and inlay_hints are not implemented yet
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[coc.nvim]: https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim
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[coc-rust-analyzer]: https://github.com/fannheyward/coc-rust-analyzer
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## Vim and NeoVim (LanguageClient-neovim)
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* Install LanguageClient-neovim by following the instructions [here][lang-client-neovim]
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- The github project wiki has extra tips on configuration
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* Configure by adding this to your vim/neovim config file (replacing the existing rust specific line if it exists):
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```vim
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let g:LanguageClient_serverCommands = {
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\ 'rust': ['ra_lsp_server'],
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\ }
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```
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[lang-client-neovim]: https://github.com/autozimu/LanguageClient-neovim
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## NeoVim (nvim-lsp)
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NeoVim 0.5 (not yet released) has built in language server support. For a quick start configuration
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of rust-analyzer, use [neovim/nvim-lsp](https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lsp#rust_analyzer).
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Once `neovim/nvim-lsp` is installed, use `lua require'nvim_lsp'.rust_analyzer.setup({})` in your `init.vim`.
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## Sublime Text 3
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Prequisites:
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`LSP` package.
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Installation:
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* Invoke the command palette with <kbd>Ctrl+Shift+P</kbd>
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* Type `LSP Settings` to open the LSP preferences editor
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* Add the following LSP client definition to your settings:
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```json
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"rust-analyzer": {
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"command": ["ra_lsp_server"],
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"languageId": "rust",
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"scopes": ["source.rust"],
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"syntaxes": [
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"Packages/Rust/Rust.sublime-syntax",
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"Packages/Rust Enhanced/RustEnhanced.sublime-syntax"
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],
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"initializationOptions": {
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"featureFlags": {
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}
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},
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}
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```
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* 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)
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<!-- Update links to this header when changing it! -->
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### Setting up the `PATH` variable
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On Unix systems, `rustup` adds `~/.cargo/bin` to `PATH` by modifying the shell's
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startup file. Depending on your configuration, your Desktop Environment might not
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actually load it. If you find that `rust-analyzer` only runs when starting the
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editor from the terminal, you will have to set up your `PATH` variable manually.
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There are a couple of ways to do that:
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- for Code, set `rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath` to `~/.cargo/bin` (the `~` is
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automatically resolved by the extension)
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- copy the binary to a location that is already in `PATH`, e.g. `/usr/local/bin`
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- on Linux, use PAM to configure the `PATH` variable, by e.g. putting
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`PATH DEFAULT=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/sbin:@{HOME}/.cargo/bin:@{HOME}/.local/bin`
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in your `~/.pam_environment` file; note that this might interfere with other
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defaults set by the system administrator via `/etc/environment`.
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