The main interface to rust-analyzer is the
LSP implementation. To
install lsp server, clone the repository and then run cargo xtask install --server (which is shorthand for cargo install --path ./crates/ra_lsp_server). This will produce a binary named ra_lsp_server which
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.
$ git clone git@github.com:rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer && cd rust-analyzer
$ cargo xtask install --server
Rust Analyzer needs sources of rust standard library to work, so you might also need to execute
$ rustup component add rust-src
See ./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 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 xtask install
The automatic installation is expected to just work for common cases, if it doesn't, report bugs!
Note #1831: If you are using the popular
Vim emulation plugin, you will likely
need to turn off the rust-analyzer.enableEnhancedTyping setting.
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 --locked
$ 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 for details.
For updates, pull the latest changes from the master branch, run cargo xtask install again, and restart VS Code instance.
See microsoft/vscode#72308 for why a full restart is needed.
VS Code Remote
You can also use rust-analyzer with the Visual Studio Code Remote extensions
(Remote SSH, Remote WSL, Remote Containers). In this case, however, you have to
manually install the .vsix package:
- Build the extension on the remote host using the instructions above (ignore the
error if
codecannot be found in your PATH: VSCode doesn't need to be installed on the remote host). - In Visual Studio Code open a connection to the remote host.
- Open the Extensions View (
View > Extensions, keyboard shortcut:Ctrl+Shift+X). - From the top-right kebab menu (
···) selectInstall from VSIX... - Inside the
rust-analyzerdirectory find theeditors/codesubdirectory and choose thera-lsp-0.0.1.vsixfile. - Restart Visual Studio Code and re-establish the connection to the remote host.
In case of errors please make sure that ~/.cargo/bin is in your PATH on the remote
host.
Settings
rust-analyzer.highlightingOn: enables experimental syntax highlighting. Colors can be configured viaeditor.tokenColorCustomizations. As an example, Pale Fire color scheme tweaks rust colors.rust-analyzer.enableEnhancedTyping: by default, rust-analyzer intercepts.Enterkey to make it easier to continue comments. Note that it may conflict with VIM emulation plugin.rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath: path tora_lsp_serverexecutablerust-analyzer.enableCargoWatchOnStartup: prompt to install & enablecargo watchfor live error highlighting (note, this does not use rust-analyzer)rust-analyzer.excludeGlobs: a list of glob-patterns for exclusion (see globset docs for syntax). Note: glob patterns are applied to all Cargo packages and a rooted at a package root. This is not very intuitive and a limitation of a current implementation.rust-analyzer.useClientWatching: use client provided file watching instead of notify watching.rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.command:cargo-watchcommand. (e.g:clippywill run ascargo watch -x clippy)rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.arguments: cargo-watch check arguments. (e.g:--features="shumway,pdf"will run ascargo watch -x "check --features="shumway,pdf"")rust-analyzer.cargo-watch.ignore: list of patterns for cargo-watch to ignore (will be passed as--ignore)rust-analyzer.trace.server: enables internal loggingrust-analyzer.trace.cargo-watch: enables cargo-watch loggingRUST_SRC_PATH: environment variable that overwrites the sysrootrust-analyzer.featureFlags-- a JSON object to tweak fine-grained behavior:{ // Show diagnostics produced by rust-analyzer itself. "lsp.diagnostics": true, // Automatically insert `()` and `<>` when completing functions and types. "completion.insertion.add-call-parenthesis": true, // Enable completions like `.if`, `.match`, etc. "completion.enable-postfix": true, // Show notification when workspace is fully loaded "notifications.workspace-loaded": true, }
Emacs
Prerequisites:
emacs-lsp, dash and ht packages.
Installation:
- add
ra-emacs-lsp.el
to load path and require it in
init.el - run
lspin a rust buffer - (Optionally) bind commands like
rust-analyzer-join-lines,rust-analyzer-extend-selectionandrust-analyzer-expand-macroto keys, and enablerust-analyzer-inlay-hints-modeto get inline type hints
Vim and NeoVim (coc-rust-analyzer)
- Install coc.nvim by following the instructions at coc.nvim (nodejs required)
- Run
:CocInstall coc-rust-analyzerto install coc-rust-analyzer, this extension implements most of the features supported in the VSCode extension:- same configurations as VSCode extension,
rust-analyzer.raLspServerPath,rust-analyzer.enableCargoWatchOnStartupetc. - same commands too,
rust-analyzer.analyzerStatus,rust-analyzer.startCargoWatchetc. - highlighting and inlay_hints are not implemented yet
- same configurations as VSCode extension,
Vim and NeoVim (LanguageClient-neovim)
-
Install LanguageClient-neovim by following the instructions here
- The github project wiki has extra tips on configuration
-
Configure by adding this to your vim/neovim config file (replacing the existing rust specific line if it exists):
let g:LanguageClient_serverCommands = {
\ 'rust': ['ra_lsp_server'],
\ }
NeoVim (nvim-lsp)
NeoVim 0.5 (not yet released) has built in language server support. For a quick start configuration
of rust-analyzer, use neovim/nvim-lsp.
Once neovim/nvim-lsp is installed, you can use call nvim_lsp#setup("rust_analyzer", {})
or lua require'nvim_lsp'.rust_analyzer.setup({}) to quickly get set up.
Sublime Text 3
Prequisites:
LSP package.
Installation:
- Invoke the command palette with Ctrl+Shift+P
- Type
LSP Settingsto open the LSP preferences editor - Add the following LSP client definition to your settings:
"rust-analyzer": {
"command": ["ra_lsp_server"],
"languageId": "rust",
"scopes": ["source.rust"],
"syntaxes": [
"Packages/Rust/Rust.sublime-syntax",
"Packages/Rust Enhanced/RustEnhanced.sublime-syntax"
],
"initializationOptions": {
"featureFlags": {
}
},
}
- 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)
Setting up the PATH variable
On Unix systems, rustup adds ~/.cargo/bin to PATH by modifying the shell's
startup file. Depending on your configuration, your Desktop Environment might not
actually load it. If you find that rust-analyzer only runs when starting the
editor from the terminal, you will have to set up your PATH variable manually.
There are a couple of ways to do that:
- for Code, set
rust-analyzer.raLspServerPathto~/.cargo/bin(the~is automatically resolved by the extension) - copy the binary to a location that is already in
PATH, e.g./usr/local/bin - on Linux, use PAM to configure the
PATHvariable, by e.g. puttingPATH DEFAULT=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/sbin:@{HOME}/.cargo/bin:@{HOME}/.local/binin your~/.pam_environmentfile; note that this might interfere with other defaults set by the system administrator via/etc/environment.