A language server that provides IDE-independent smart code completion, diagnostics, hover, document symbols, method signature help and more for Kotlin and a VSCode extension that uses the language server.
- See BUILDING.md for build instructions.
- See Roadmap for features, planned additions, bugfixes and changes
- See KotlinQuickStart for a sample project
- See KotlinDebugAdapter for debugging support on JVM
The original author created this project while he was considering using Kotlin in his work. He ended up deciding not to and is not really using Kotlin these days though this is a pretty fully-functional language server that just needs someone to use it every day for a while and iron out the last few pesky bugs.
There are two hard parts of implementing a language server:
- Figuring out the dependencies
- Incrementally re-compiling as the user types
The project uses the internal APIs of the Kotlin compiler.
Dependencies are determined by the findClassPath function, which invokes Maven or Gradle and tells it to output a list of dependencies. Currently, both Maven and Gradle projects are supported.
I get incremental compilation at the file-level by keeping the same KotlinCoreEnvironment
alive between compilations in Compiler.kt. There is a performance benchmark in OneFilePerformance.kt that verifies this works.
Getting incremental compilation at the expression level is a bit more complicated:
- Fully compile a file and store in CompiledFile:
val content: String
A snapshot of the source codeval parse: KtFile
The parsed ASTval compile: BindingContext
Additional information about the AST from typechecking
- After the user edits the file:
- Find the smallest section the encompasses all the user changes
- Get the
LexicalScope
encompassing this region from theBindingContext
that was generated by the full-compile - Create a fake, in-memory .kt file with just the expression we want to re-compile
- Add space at the top of the file so the line numbers match up
- Re-compile this tiny fake file
The incremental expression compilation logic is all in CompiledFile.kt. The Kotlin AST has a built-in repair API, which seems to be how IntelliJ works, but as far as I can tell this API does not work if the surrounding IntelliJ machinery is not present. Hence I created the "fake tiny file" incremental-compilation mechanism, which seems to be quite fast and predictable.
There is an extensive suite of behavioral tests, which are all implemented in terms of the language server protocol, so you should be able to refactor the code any way you like and the tests should still work.