clangd (Eclipse CDT Cloud Fork)
clangd helps developers write, understand and
improve C/C++ code by providing:
- code completion
- compile errors and warnings
- go-to-definition and cross references
- hover information and inlay hints
- include management
- code formatting
- simple refactorings
Full documentation for clangd is at clangd.llvm.org.
Eclipse CDT Cloud Fork
A fork of the clangd-vscode
extension that adds support to properly handle multiple projects in one workspace.
To achieve this each project is managed by a dedicated clangd client/server. This ensures that all resources that are associated with one project
are handled in an isolated context and keeps project indexes strictly separated from each other.
A central ProjectService
is used to identify each project in an open workspace/folder base on a defined ProjectResolution
strategy.
Adopters can define custom resolution strategies tailored to their needs (configurable via settings)
The project service also keeps track of the currently active project and exposes API to listen to project changes and/or manually change the
active project.
The multi-project support is fully opt-in and can be deactivated. If deactivated this extension will behave like the upstream clangd-vscode
extension.
Note that at the moment this project should be rather seen as a proof-of-concept implementation an is not (yet) a full-fledged replacement
for vscode-clangd
. The focus has been set on providing the core clangd LSP functionality. Customizations on top like the Type Hierarchy View
,
Memory Usage
etc. haven been disabled for now and do not working in clangd-vscode-multi-project
.
Releases
Setup
clangd
server
The extension requires the clangd
language server.
You will be prompted to download it if it's not found on your PATH.
(Automatic installation is possible on x86-64 Linux, Windows, and Mac).
If you have an old version of clangd installed on your system already, you can
run "Check for clangd language server update" from the command palette.
Project setup
clangd is based on the clang C++ compiler, and understands even complex C++
code. However, you must tell clangd how your project is built (compile flags).
A compile_commands.json
file
can usually be generated by your build system
(e.g. with CMake, by setting -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=1
).
See Project Setup
in the clangd documentation for details and alternatives.
Features
Code completion
Suggestions will appear as you type names, or after .
or ->
.
Because clangd uses a full C++ parser, code completion has access to precise
type information.
Errors, warnings, and clang-tidy
Code errors are shown as you type (both as red squiggle underlines, and in the
"Problems" panel). These are the same as produced by the clang compiler, and
suggested fixes can automatically be applied.
Most clang-tidy checks are supported (these can be enabled using a .clang-tidy
file).
Cross-references
Go-to-definition and find-references work across your code, using a project-wide
index.
Press Ctrl-P #
to quickly navigate to a symbol by name.
Hover and inlay hints
Clangd can describe almost any entity if you hover the mouse (or press Ctrl-KI).
Inlay hints for parameters and deduced types can be shown temporarily or
permanently (the editor.inlayHints.enabled
setting controls this).
Include management
Code completion works across your codebase and adds #include
directives where
needed. The •
shows includes that will be inserted.
clangd can suggest inserting missing #includes, where they cause errors.
It can warn on unused includes.
clangd uses the clang-format
engine. You can format a file or the selection.
When "Format on Type" is enabled in the settings, pressing enter will cause
clangd to format the old line and semantically reindent.
The style used for formatting (and certain other operations) is controlled by the project's
.clang-format file.
Refactoring
clangd supports some local refactorings. When you select an expression or
declaration, the lightbulb menu appears and you can choose a code action.
Current refactorings include:
- extract variable/function
- expand
auto
types and macros
- use raw strings
- rename (bound to
<F2>
, rather than a contextual code action)
Bugs/contributing
clangd is part of the LLVM project.
If you'd like to help out, reach out to clangd-dev@lists.llvm.org.
If you've found a bug in this extension, please file it at https://github.com/clangd/vscode-clangd/issues.
If you've found a bug in clangd, please file at https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues.