NAME
PLS - Perl Language Server
DESCRIPTION
The Perl Language Server implements a subset of the Language Server Protocol for the Perl language. Features currently implemented are:
Go to definition (for packages, subroutines, and variables)
Listing all symbols in a document
Hovering to show documentation
Signature help (showing parameters for a function as you type)
Formatting
Range Formatting
Auto-completion
Syntax checking
Linting (using perlcritic)
Sorting imports
OPTIONS
This application does not take any command line options. The following settings may be configured using your text editor:
- pls.cmd - path to pls
-
Make sure that
pls.cmd
is set to the path to thepls
script on your system. If you rely on your$PATH
, ensure that your editor is configured with the correct path, which may not be the same one that your terminal uses. - pls.args - args to pass to the pls command
-
Add any additional arguments needed to execute
pls
to thepls.args
setting. For example, if you runpls
in a docker container,pls.cmd
would bedocker
, andpls.args
would be["run", "--rm", "-i", "<image name>", "pls"]
. - pls.inc - a list of paths to add to
@INC
-
You can use the
$ROOT_PATH
mnemonic to stand in for your project's root directory, for example$ROOT_PATH/lib
. If you are using multiple workspace folders and use$ROOT_PATH
, the path will be multiplied by the number of workspace folders, and will be replaced that many times. This is useful if you use SVN and check out each branch to a different directory. - pls.cwd - the working directory to use for pls
-
If you use
$ROOT_PATH
, it will be replaced by your workspace's first or only folder. - pls.perltidy.perltidyrc - the location of your
.perltidyrc
file. -
Defaults to
~/.perltidyrc
if not configured. - pls.perlcritic.enabled - whether to enable linting using perlcritic.
- pls.perlcritic.perlcriticrc - the location of your
.perlcriticrc
file. -
Defaults to
~/.perlcriticrc
if not configured. - pls.syntax.enabled - whether to enable syntax checking.
- pls.syntax.perl - path to an alternate
perl
to use for syntax checking. -
Defaults to the
perl
used to run PLS. - pls.syntax.args - additional arguments to pass when syntax checking.
-
This is useful if there is a BEGIN block in your code that changes behavior depending on the contents of @ARGV.
You may configure a .plsignore file in your project's root directory, with a list of Perl glob patterns which you do not want pls to index.
By default, PLS will index all files ending with `.pl`, `.pm`, or have `perl` in the shebang line that are not `.t` files.
CAVEATS
pls is known to be compatible with Visual Studio Code, Neovim, and BBEdit.
pls will perform much better if you have an XS JSON module installed. If you install Cpanel::JSON::XS or JSON::XS, it will use one of those before falling back to JSON::PP, similar to JSON::MaybeXS.
NOTES
Refer to this README for instructions on configuring your specific editor: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=FractalBoy.pls
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2022 Marc Reisner
LICENSE
This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.