A language server for Jedi!
Project description
jedi-language-server
A Python Language Server powered by the latest version of Jedi.
Installation
Some frameworks, like coc-jedi and vscode-python, will install and manage jedi-language-server for you. If you're setting up manually, you can run the following from your command line (bash / zsh):
pip install -U jedi-language-server
Alternatively (and preferably), use pipx to keep jedi-language-server and its dependencies isolated from your other Python dependencies. Don't worry, jedi is smart enough to figure out which Virtual environment you're currently using!
Editor Setup
The following instructions show how to use jedi-language-server with your development tooling. The instructions assume you have already installed jedi-language-server.
Vim / Neovim
Users may choose 1 of the following options:
- Neovim's native LSP client. See here for an example configuration.
- coc.nvim with coc-jedi.
- ALE.
- vim-lsp.
Note: this list is non-exhaustive. If you know of a great choice not included in this list, please submit a PR!
Emacs
Users may choose one of the following options:
Note: this list is non-exhaustive. If you know of a great choice not included in this list, please submit a PR!
Visual Studio Code (vscode)
Starting from the October 2021 release, set the python.languageServer
setting to Jedi
to use jedi-language-server.
See: https://github.com/pappasam/jedi-language-server/issues/50#issuecomment-781101169
Configuration
jedi-language-server supports the following initializationOptions:
{
"initializationOptions": {
"codeAction": {
"nameExtractVariable": "jls_extract_var",
"nameExtractFunction": "jls_extract_def"
},
"completion": {
"disableSnippets": false,
"resolveEagerly": false,
"ignorePatterns": []
},
"diagnostics": {
"enable": false,
"didOpen": true,
"didChange": true,
"didSave": true
},
"hover": {
"enable": true,
"disable": {
"class": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"function": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"instance": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"keyword": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"module": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"param": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"path": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"property": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] },
"statement": { "all": false, "names": [], "fullNames": [] }
}
},
"jediSettings": {
"autoImportModules": [],
"caseInsensitiveCompletion": true,
"debug": false
},
"markupKindPreferred": "markdown",
"workspace": {
"extraPaths": [],
"environmentPath": "/path/to/venv/bin/python",
"symbols": {
"ignoreFolders": [".nox", ".tox", ".venv", "__pycache__", "venv"],
"maxSymbols": 20
}
}
}
}
The different sections of the InitializationOptions are explained below, in detail. Section headers use a .
to separate nested JSON-object keys.
markupKindPreferred
The preferred MarkupKind for all jedi-language-server messages that take MarkupContent.
- type:
string
- accepted values:
"markdown"
,"plaintext"
If omitted, jedi-language-server defaults to the client-preferred configuration. If there is no client-preferred configuration, jedi language server users "plaintext"
.
jediSettings.autoImportModules
Modules that jedi will directly import without analyzing. Improves autocompletion but loses goto definition.
- type:
string[]
- default:
[]
If you're noticing that modules like numpy
and pandas
are taking a super long time to load, and you value completions / signatures over goto definition, I recommend using this option like this:
{
"jediSettings": {
"autoImportModules": ["numpy", "pandas"]
}
}
jediSettings.caseInsensitiveCompletion
Completions are by default case-insensitive. Set to false
to make completions case-sensitive.
- type:
boolean
- default:
true
{
"jediSettings": {
"caseInsensitiveCompletion": false
}
}
jediSettings.debug
Print jedi debugging messages to stderr.
- type:
boolean
- default:
false
{
"jediSettings": {
"debug": false
}
}
codeAction.nameExtractFunction
Function name generated by the 'extract_function' codeAction.
- type:
string
- default:
"jls_extract_def"
codeAction.nameExtractVariable
Variable name generated by the 'extract_variable' codeAction.
- type:
string
- default:
"jls_extract_var"
completion.disableSnippets
If your language client supports CompletionItem
snippets but you don't like them, disable them by setting this option to true
.
- type:
boolean
- default:
false
completion.resolveEagerly
Return all completion results in initial completion request. Set to true
if your language client does not support completionItem/resolve
.
- type:
boolean
- default:
false
completion.ignorePatterns
A list of regular expressions. If any regular expression in ignorePatterns matches a completion's name, that completion item is not returned to the client.
- type:
string[]
- default:
[]
In general, you should prefer the default value for this option. Jedi is very good at filtering values for end users. That said, there are situations where IDE developers, or some programmers in some code bases, may want to filter some completions by name. This flexible interface is provided to accommodate these advanced use cases. If you have one of these advanced use cases, see below for some example patterns (and their corresponding regular expression).
All Private Names
Matches | Non-Matches |
---|---|
_hello , __world |
__dunder__ |
Regular Expression:
^_{1,3}$|^_[^_].*$|^__.*(?<!__)$
Only private mangled names
Matches | Non-Matches |
---|---|
__world |
_hello , __dunder__ |
Regular Expression:
^_{2,3}$|^__.*(?<!__)$
Only dunder names
Matches | Non-Matches |
---|---|
__dunder__ |
_hello , __world |
Regular Expression:
^__.*?__$
All names beginning with underscore
Matches | Non-Matches |
---|---|
_hello , __world , __dunder__ |
regular |
Regular Expression:
^_.*$
diagnostics.enable
Enables (or disables) diagnostics provided by Jedi.
- type:
boolean
- default:
true
diagnostics.didOpen
When diagnostics are enabled, run on document open
- type:
boolean
- default:
true
diagnostics.didChange
When diagnostics are enabled, run on in-memory document change (eg, while you're editing, without needing to save to disk)
- type:
boolean
- default:
true
diagnostics.didSave
When diagnostics are enabled, run on document save (to disk)
- type:
boolean
- default:
true
hover.enable
Enable (or disable) all hover text. If set to false
, will cause the hover method not to be registered to the language server.
- type:
boolean
- default:
true
hover.disable.*
The following options are available under this prefix:
- hover.disable.class.all
- hover.disable.class.names
- hover.disable.class.fullNames
- hover.disable.function.all
- hover.disable.function.names
- hover.disable.function.fullNames
- hover.disable.instance.all
- hover.disable.instance.names
- hover.disable.instance.fullNames
- hover.disable.keyword.all
- hover.disable.keyword.names
- hover.disable.keyword.fullNames
- hover.disable.module.all
- hover.disable.module.names
- hover.disable.module.fullNames
- hover.disable.param.all
- hover.disable.param.names
- hover.disable.param.fullNames
- hover.disable.path.all
- hover.disable.path.names
- hover.disable.path.fullNames
- hover.disable.property.all
- hover.disable.property.names
- hover.disable.property.fullNames
- hover.disable.statement.all
- hover.disable.statement.names
- hover.disable.statement.fullNames
hover.disable.[jedi-type].all
Disable all hover text of jedi-type specified.
- type:
bool
- default:
false
hover.disable.[jedi-type].names
Disable hover text identified by name in list of jedi-type specified.
- type:
string[]
- default:
[]
hover.disable.[jedi-type].fullNames
Disable hover text identified by the fully qualified name in list of jedi-type specified. If no fully qualified name can be found, jedi-language-server will default to the name to prevent any unexpected behavior for users (relevant for jedi types like keywords that don't have full names).
- type:
string[]
- default:
[]
workspace.extraPaths
Add additional paths for Jedi's analysis. Useful with vendor directories, packages in a non-standard location, etc. You probably won't need to use this, but you'll be happy it's here when you need it!
- type:
string[]
- default:
[]
Non-absolute paths are relative to your project root. For example, let's say your Python project is structured like this:
├── funky
│ └── haha.py
├── poetry.lock
├── pyproject.toml
├── test.py
Assume that funky/haha.py
contains 1 line, x = 12
, and your build system does some wizardry that makes haha
importable just like os
or pathlib
. In this example, if you want to have this same non-standard behavior with jedi-language-server
, put the following in your coc-settings.json
:
{
"workspace": {
"extraPaths": ["funky"]
}
}
When editing test.py
, you'll get completions, goto definition, and all other lsp features for the line from haha import ...
.
Again, you probably don't need this.
workspace.environmentPath
The Python executable path, typically the path of a virtual environment.
- type:
string
If omitted, defaults to the active Python environment.
workspace.symbols.maxSymbols
Maximum number of symbols returned by a call to workspace/symbols
.
- type:
number
- default: 20
{
"workspace": {
"symbols": {
"maxSymbols": 20
}
}
}
A value less than or equal to zero removes the maximum and allows jedi-language-server to return all workplace symbols found by jedi.
workspace.symbols.ignoreFolders
Performance optimization that sets names of folders that are ignored for workspace/symbols
.
- type:
string[]
- default:
[".nox", ".tox", ".venv", "__pycache__", "venv"]
{
"workspace": {
"symbols": {
"ignoreFolders": ["hello", "world"]
}
}
}
If you manually set this option, it overrides the default. Setting it to an empty array will result in no ignored folders.
Diagnostics
Diagnostics are provided by Python's built-in compile
function.
If you would like additional diagnostics (from pylint, mypy, etc.), we recommend using other tools (like diagnostic-language-server) to complement jedi-language-server
.
Code Formatting
Again, we recommend that you use diagnostic-language-server. It also supports code formatting.
Command line usage
jedi-language-server can be run directly from the command line.
$ jedi-language-server --help
usage: jedi-language-server [-h] [--version] [--tcp] [--ws] [--host HOST] [--port PORT] [--log-file LOG_FILE] [-v]
If testing sending requests over stdio manually from the command line, you must include Windows-style line endings: \r\n
. For an example, from within this project, run the following:
$ jedi-language-server < ./example-initialization-request.txt
INFO:pygls.server:Starting IO server
...
If testing interactively, be sure to manually insert carriage returns. Although this may differ between shell environments, within most bash terminals, you can explicitly insert the required line endings by typing <C-v><C-m>
, which will insert a ^M
. See:
$ jedi-language-server 2>logs
Content-Length: 1062^M
^M
...
Technical capabilities
jedi-language-server aims to support Jedi's capabilities and expose them through the Language Server Protocol. It supports the following Language Server capabilities:
Language Features
- completionItem/resolve
- textDocument/codeAction (refactor.inline, refactor.extract)
- textDocument/completion
- textDocument/definition
- textDocument/documentHighlight
- textDocument/documentSymbol
- textDocument/typeDefinition
- textDocument/hover
- textDocument/publishDiagnostics
- textDocument/references
- textDocument/rename
- textDocument/signatureHelp
- workspace/symbol
Text Synchronization (for diagnostics)
Local Development
To build and run this project from source:
Dependencies
Install the following tools manually:
Recommended
Get source code
Fork this repository and clone the fork to your development machine:
git clone https://github.com/<YOUR-USERNAME>/jedi-language-server
cd jedi-language-server
Set up development environment
make setup
Run tests
make test
Inspiration
Palantir's python-language-server inspired this project. In fact, for consistency's sake, many of python-language-server's CLI options are used as-is in jedi-language-server.
Unlike python-language-server, jedi-language-server:
- Uses pygls instead of creating its own low-level Language Server Protocol bindings
- Supports one powerful 3rd party static analysis / completion / refactoring library: Jedi. By only supporting Jedi, we can focus on supporting all Jedi features without exposing ourselves to too many broken 3rd party dependencies (I'm looking at you, rope).
- Is supremely simple because of its scope constraints. Leave complexity to the Jedi master. If the force is strong with you, please submit a PR!
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