A library (and Leiningen plugin, and Clojure CLI program) that, as its main feature, automatically downloads all available .jar
s with Java sources and javadocs for a given project, so that various tooling (typically IDEs) can access it.
This allows improved Java-facing IDE functionalities: navigation, documentation, completion and stacktraces.
It behaves gracefully even in face of :managed-dependencies
, :pedantic?
, in- and inter-process parallel invocations of Lein, etc.
For efficiency, it has caching that is shared across projects, and dependency resolution is parallel.
Importantly, it does not mutate the classpath via classloaders in any way, yielding a simple solution that guaranteed to work across all JDKs.
This is the set of things that enrich-classpath
can add to the classpath, when needed (depending on your JDK and build tool of choice):
Thread
class.:java-source-paths
from a Leiningen project
tools.jar
.As a quick example of you can do with it:
(defn class->source [class-object]
{:pre [(class? class-object)]}
(-> class-object pr-str munge (string/replace "." "/") (str ".java") (io/resource) slurp))
;; Usage: (-> Thread class->source println)
All what the plugin does is placing a source (and/or javadoc) .jar
in the classpath, so that (io/resource)
will return it (else it would return nil
).
A great real-world lib that would be enhanced by this program is Orchard's source-info.
NOTE: In general, you are not expected to add any dependency or plugin to project.clj or deps.edn. Please read the following instructions carefully.
cider-jack-in
If you use Emacs CIDER, customize cider-enrich-classpath
to t
and simply cider-jack-in
as normal.
It will work as usual, for Lein and tools.deps projects alike. There's a fallback to the normal commands, in case something went wrong.
cider-connect
If you want to cider-connect
, CIDER cannot automatically add enrich-classpath for you.
See the next section for a recipe.
You can enjoy a highly optimized setup as follows:
.DEFAULT_GOAL := lein-repl
to deps-repl
if you are a tools.deps user
LEIN_PROFILES
/DEPS_MAIN_OPTS
to match the profiles/aliases you intend to use during development
LEIN_PROFILES
/DEPS_MAIN_OPTS
as env vars, which will take precedence.make
:repl-options
will be honored, if found: :host :port :transport :nrepl-handler :socket :nrepl-middleware
-M
program (as specified in the Makefile which you should have edited)The suggested choice of Make might surprise you. However its caching (that can accurately be invalidated by modifying project.clj
, deps.edn
and a variety of similar files) is a very good fit for Make's offering.
The Clojure CLI popularized this style of caching (which doesn't use Makefiles internally, but is essentially equivalent).
Also note that, because we suggest that you can copy a Makefile, you can always modify it at will, and study its functioning for suggesting improvements or creating alternatives. Oftentimes tools aren't as transparent/inviting.
If you are a Leiningen user, you will also enjoy the following advantages (vs. a traditional lein
invocation)
java
processes
java
processes that aren't as easy to inspect as a Clojure CLI one.Running this program for the first time on a given project will be slow (think: anything between 1-3m). The more dependencies your project has, especially Java ones, the slower this run will be.
Each time a source or javadoc .jar
is found, the found artifact will be logged, so that you can see that the program is in fact doing something:
:cider.enrich-classpath/found [org.clojure/clojure "1.10.1" :classifier "sources"]
After a successful run, a cache file is written to ~/.cache/enrich-classpath-cache
(honoring XDG_CACHE_HOME
). This file is shared across all projects, and will automatically grow via merge. So the first few runs in a variety of projects will result in a slow dependency resolution, and after that it will stabilize in those projects (and best-case scenario, also in other projects)
Given a project with 100% cache hits (which eventually will be the case in all your projects, after a while), this program's runtime overhead will be essentially zero.
The ~/.cache/enrich-classpath-cache
file has a stable format. You can version-control it, so that if you setup a new machine you won't have cache misses.
This program observes a number of Lein configuration options under the :enrich-classpath
key:
:shorten
Default: false
for the legacy middleware, true
for the newer offerings.
If true
, most classpath entries will be added as a single, very thin .jar file,
which contents will consist of a single MANIFEST.MF
file which will point of all those classpath entries.
This results in a shorter java
process name, which avoids incurring into the length limitations that Linux programs can be subject to.
There isn't a visible difference in behavior around using this option: with or without it, entries will be added to the classpath effectively
in the same way, and e.g. clojure.java.io/resource
will keep pointing to the right jar (i.e. the final one, not the thin one that points to it).
:classifiers
By default, both sources and javadocs will be fetched. By specifying only sources
to be fetched, one gets a 2x performance improvement (because 0.5x as many items will be attempted to be resolved):
:enrich-classpath {:classifiers #{"sources"}}
You can also specify classifiers other than "sources", "javadoc"
, if that is useful to you.
:failsafe
By default, this program runs within a try/catch block and within a timeout. This wrapping is called the 'failsafe' and it has the goal of preventing the plugin from possibly disrupting REPL/IDE startup.
If an error or timeout occurs, REPL startup will continue, although no entries will be added to the classpath.
Generally you want to keep this default. By specifying :failsafe false
, you can disable this wrapping, which might ease troubleshooting.
:timeout
This is the timeout value in seconds that :failsafe
uses. It defaults to 215.
:repositories
The Maven repositories that this program will query, in search of sources and javadocs.
Defaults to your project's Lein :repositories, typically Maven Central + Clojars + any custom repositories you may have specified.
If you specify :repositories
, they will replace Lein's entirely.
In all cases, repositories detected as unreachable (because of DNS, auth, etc) will be removed.
:main
This option is specific to lein-enrich-classpath
(the newer offering for Lein).
String. Specifies a main program other than nrepl.cmdline
to be be run. Includes CLI arguments.
Example: "cognitect.test-runner --dir test"
If this program is not behaving as it should, you can debug it in isolation by prefixing DEBUG=true
to its invocation:
# Per Makefile linked to above
DEBUG=true make lein-repl
The following entries can be possibly logged:
:cider.enrich-classpath/resolving
- a request is being performed for resolving a specific dependency (of any kind: plain, source or javadoc):cider.enrich-classpath/found
- a source/jar artifact has been found, and will be added to the classpath.:cider.enrich-classpath/resolved
- a request has succeeded in resolving a specific dependency (of any kind: plain, source or javadoc) :cider.enrich-classpath/timed-out
- a given dependency request has timed out, or the program as a whole has timed out (per the :failsafe
option).:cider.enrich-classpath/failed-to-resolve
- the request for resolving a given dependency failed. :cider.enrich-classpath/omitting-empty-source
- a given source artifact (.jar) was found, but it didn't have actual Java sources in it, so it won't be added to the classpath.:cider.enrich-classpath/no-jdk-sources-found
- no JDK sources could be found. Your JDK distribution (on apt
, rpm
, etc) probably didn't include any sources, and they should be installed separately (e.g. sudo apt install openjdk-11-source
).If you wish to start from a clean slate (given that resolutions are cached, even in face of timeout), you can remove the ~/.cache/enrich-classpath-cache
file.
This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License 2.0.