Please visit haskell/lsp instead (Don't worry though, it's still mantained and still lives under the same lsp-test package on hackage)
lsp-test is a functional testing framework for Language Server Protocol servers.
import Language.LSP.Test
main = runSession "hie" fullCaps "proj/dir" $ do
doc <- openDoc "Foo.hs" "haskell"
skipMany anyNotification
symbols <- getDocumentSymbols doc
describe "diagnostics" $
it "report errors" $ runSession "hie" fullCaps "test/data" $ do
openDoc "Error.hs" "haskell"
[diag] <- waitForDiagnosticsSource "ghcmod"
liftIO $ do
diag ^. severity `shouldBe` Just DsError
diag ^. source `shouldBe` Just "ghcmod"
replaySession "hie" "test/data/renamePass"
skipManyTill loggingNotification publishDiagnosticsNotification
count 4 (message :: Session ApplyWorkspaceEditRequest)
anyRequest <|> anyResponse
Try out the example tests in the example
directory with cabal test
.
For more examples check the Wiki, or see this introductory blog post.
Whilst writing your tests you may want to debug them to see what's going wrong.
You can set the logMessages
and logStdErr
options in SessionConfig
to see what the server is up to.
There are also corresponding environment variables so you can turn them on from the command line:
LSP_TEST_LOG_MESSAGES=1 LSP_TEST_LOG_STDERR=1 cabal test
The tests for lsp-test use a dummy server found in test/dummy-server/
.
Run the tests with cabal test
or stack test
.
Tip: If you want to filter the tests, use cabal run test:tests -- -m "foo"
Seeing funny stuff when running lsp-test via stack? If your server is built upon Haskell tooling, keep in mind that stack sets some environment variables related to GHC, and you may want to unset them.