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Now that the feature-set is relatively complete for running gopls in daemon mode, daemon.md is updated to reflect the new features and to remove some of the experimental warnings. Similarly the `-remote` flag is made more welcoming. The feature still needs more usage, but it shouldn't be considered experimental anymore. Fixes golang/go#34111 Change-Id: I994fc8f9f84bf856f24e1eadabd73c503267e804 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/222717 Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
173 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
173 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
# Running gopls as a daemon
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**Note: this feature is new. If you encounter bugs, please [file an
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issue](troubleshooting.md#file-an-issue).**
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If you just want to try this out, skip ahead to the [quickstart](#quickstart).
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## Background: gopls execution modes
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Gopls was originally implemented as an LSP sidecar: a process started by
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editors or editor plugins, and communicated with using jsonrpc 2.0 over
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stdin/stdout. By executing as a stateful process, gopls can maintain a
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significant amount of cache and can eagerly perform analysis on the source code
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being edited.
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This execution mode does not work as well when there are many separate editor
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processes or when editor processes are short-lived, as is often the case for
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users of non-IDE editors such as Vim or Emacs. Having many processes means
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having many caches, consuming a significant amount of system resources. Using
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short-lived sessions means paying a start-up cost each time a session is
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created.
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To support these types of workflows, a new mode of gopls execution is supported
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wherein a single, persistent, shared gopls "daemon" process is responsible for
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managing all gopls sessions. In this mode, editors still start a gopls sidecar,
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but this sidecar merely acts as a thin "forwarder", responsible for forwarding
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the LSP to the shared gopls instance and recording metrics, logs, and rpc
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traces.
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## Quickstart
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To use a shared gopls instance you must either manage the daemon process
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yourself, or let the gopls forwarder processes start the shared daemon as
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needed.
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### Running with `-remote=auto`
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Automatic management of the daemon is easiest, and can be done by passing the
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flag `-remote=auto` to the gopls process started by your editor. This will
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cause this process to auto-start the gopls daemon if needed, connect to it, and
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forward the LSP. For example, here is a reasonable gopls invocation, that sets
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some additional flags for easier [debugging](#debugging):
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```
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$ gopls -remote=auto -logfile=auto -debug=:0 -remote.debug=:0 -rpc.trace
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```
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Note that the shared gopls process will automatically shut down after one
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minute with no connected clients.
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### Managing the daemon manually
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To manage the gopls daemon process via external means rather than having the
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forwarders manage it, you must start a gopls daemon process with the
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`-listen=<addr>` flag, and then pass `-remote=<addr>` to the gopls processes
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started by your editor.
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For example, to host the daemon on the TCP port `37374`, do:
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```
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$ gopls -listen=:37374 -logfile=auto -debug=:0
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```
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And then from the editor, run
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```
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$ gopls -remote=:37374 -logfile=auto -debug=:0 -rpc.trace
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```
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If you are on a POSIX system, you can also use unix domain sockets by prefixing
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the flag values with `unix;`. For example:
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```
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$ gopls -listen="unix;/tmp/gopls-daemon-socket" -logfile=auto -debug=:0
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```
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And connect via:
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```
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$ gopls -remote="unix;/tmp/gopls-daemon-socket" -logfile=auto -debug=:0 -rpc.trace
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```
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(Note that these flag values MUST be enclosed in quotes, because ';' is a
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special shell character. For this reason, this syntax is subject to change in
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the future.)
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## Debugging
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Debugging a shared gopls session is more complicated than a singleton session,
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because there are now two gopls processes involved with handling the LSP. Here
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are some tips:
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### Finding logfiles and debug addresses
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When running in daemon mode, you can use the `gopls inspect sessions` command
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to find the logfile and debug port for your gopls daemon instance (as well as
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for all its connected clients). By default, this inspects the default daemon
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(i.e. `-remote=auto`). To inspect a different daemon, use the `-remote` flag
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explicitly: `gopls -remote=localhost:12345 inspect sessions`.
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This works whether or not you have enabled `-remote.debug`.
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### Traversing debug pages
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When `-debug=:0` is passed to gopls, it runs a webserver that serves stateful
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debug pages (see [troubleshooting.md](troubleshooting.md)). You can find the
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actual port hosting these pages by either using the `gopls inspect sessions`
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command, or by checking the start of the logfile -- it will be one of the first
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log messages. For example, if using `-logfile=auto`, find the debug address by
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checking `head /tmp/gopls-<pid>.log`.
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By default, the gopls daemon is not started with `-debug`. To enable it, set
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the `-remote.debug` flag on the forwarder instance, so that it invokes gopls
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with `-debug` when starting the daemon.
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The debug pages of the forwarder process will have a link to the debug pages of
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the daemon server process. Correspondingly, the debug pages of the daemon
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process will have a link to each of its clients.
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This can help you find metrics, traces, and log files for all of the various
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servers and clients.
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### Using logfiles
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The gopls daemon is started with `-logfile=auto` by default. To customize this,
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pass `-remote.logfile` to the gopls forwarder.
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By default, the gopls daemon is not started with the `-rpc.trace` flag, so its
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logfile will only contain actual debug logs from the gopls process.
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It is recommended to start the forwarder gopls process with `-rpc.trace`, so
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that its logfile will contain rpc trace logs specific to the LSP session.
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## Using multiple shared gopls instances
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There may be environments where it is desirable to have more than one shared
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gopls instance. If managing the daemon manually, this can be done by simply
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choosing different `-listen` addresses for each distinct daemon process.
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On POSIX systems, there is also support for automatic management of distinct
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shared gopls processes: distinct daemons can be selected by passing
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`-remote="auto;<id>"`. Any gopls forwarder passing the same value for `<id>`
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will use the same shared daemon.
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## FAQ
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**Q: Why am I not saving as much memory as I expected when using a shared gopls?**
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A: As described in [implementation.md](implementation.md), gopls has a concept
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of view/session/cache. Each session and view map onto exactly one editor
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session (because they contain things like edited but unsaved buffers). The
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cache contains things that are independent of any editor session, and can
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therefore be shared.
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When, for example, three editor session are sharing a single gopls process,
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they will share the cache but will each have their own session and view. The
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memory savings in this mode, when compared to three separate gopls processes,
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corresponds to the amount of cache overlap across sessions.
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Because this hasn't mattered much in the past, it is likely that there is state
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that can be moved out of the session/view, and into the cache, thereby
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increasing the amount of memory savings in the shared mode.
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**Q: How do I customize the daemon instance when using `-remote=auto`?**
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The daemon may be customized using flags of the form `-remote.*` on the
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forwarder gopls. This causes the forwarder to invoke gopls with these settings
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when starting the daemon. As of writing, we expose the following configuration:
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* `-remote.logfile`: the location of the daemon logfile
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* `-remote.debug`: the daemon's debug address
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* `-remote.listen.timeout`: the amount of time the daemon should wait for new
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connections while there are no current connections, before shutting down. If
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`0`, listen indefinitely.
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Note that once the daemon is already running, setting these flags will not
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change its configuration. These flags only matter for the forwarder process
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that actually starts the daemon.
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