* Add coc.nvim for language server document * Add psalm.xml.dist to coc.nvim's rootPatterns
3.5 KiB
Using Psalm’s Language Server
Psalm now has built-in Language Server Compatibility support so you can run it in your favourite IDE.
It currently supports diagnostics (i.e. finding errors and warnings), go-to-definition and hover.
It works well in a variety of editors (listed alphabetically):
Emacs
I got it working with eglot
This is the config I used:
(when (file-exists-p "vendor/bin/psalm-language-server")
(progn
(require 'php-mode)
(require 'eglot)
(add-to-list 'eglot-server-programs '(php-mode . ("php" "vendor/bin/psalm-language-server")))
(add-hook 'php-mode-hook 'eglot-ensure)
(advice-add 'eglot-eldoc-function :around
(lambda (oldfun)
(let ((help (help-at-pt-kbd-string)))
(if help (message "%s" help) (funcall oldfun)))))
)
)
PhpStorm
I've got it working with gtache/intellij-lsp
plugin (Jetbrains-approved version, latest version).
Setup is done via a GUI.
When you install the plugin, you should see a "Language Server Protocol" section under the "Languages & Frameworks" tab.
In the "Server definitions" tab you should add a definition for Psalm:
- Select
Executable
- Extension:
php
- Path:
<path-to-php-binary>
e.g./usr/local/bin/php
orC:\php\php.exe
- this should be an absolute path, not just
php
- this should be an absolute path, not just
- Args:
vendor/bin/psalm-language-server
(on Windows usevendor/vimeo/psalm/psalm-language-server
, or for a 'global' install '%APPDATA%' +\Composer\vendor\vimeo\psalm\psalm-language-server
, where the '%APPDATA%' environment variable is probably something likeC:\Users\<homedir>\AppData\Roaming\
)
In the "Timeouts" tab you can adjust the initialization timeout. This is important if you have a large project. You should set the "Init" value to the number of milliseconds you allow Psalm to scan your entire project and your project's dependencies. For opening a couple of projects that use large PHP frameworks, on a high end business laptop, try 240000
milliseconds for Init.
Sublime Text
I use the excellent Sublime LSP plugin with the following config:
"psalm":
{
"command": ["php", "vendor/bin/psalm-language-server"],
"scopes": ["source.php", "embedding.php"],
"syntaxes": ["Packages/PHP/PHP.sublime-syntax"],
"languageId": "php"
}
Vim & Neovim
ALE
ALE has support for Psalm (since v2.3.0).
let g:ale_linters = { 'php': ['php', 'psalm'] }
vim-lsp
I also got it working with vim-lsp
This is the config I used (for Vim):
au User lsp_setup call lsp#register_server({
\ 'name': 'psalm-language-server',
\ 'cmd': {server_info->[expand('vendor/bin/psalm-language-server')]},
\ 'whitelist': ['php'],
\ })
coc.nvim
It also works with coc.nvim.
Add settings to coc-settings.json
:
"languageserver": {
"psalmls": {
"command": "vendor/bin/psalm-language-server",
"filetypes": ["php"],
"rootPatterns": ["psalm.xml", "psalm.xml.dist"],
"requireRootPattern": true
}
}
VS Code
Get the Psalm plugin here (Requires VS Code 1.26+):