doomemacs/modules/lang/cc
Henrik Lissner 6be2262423 Bump :lang
200ok-ch/counsel-jq@153d70b -> 200ok-ch/counsel-jq@8cadd2e
Andersbakken/rtags@63f18ac -> Andersbakken/rtags@65113e2
Groovy-Emacs-Modes/groovy-emacs-modes@26da902 -> Groovy-Emacs-Modes/groovy-emacs-modes@99eaf70
NixOS/nix-mode@0023fc5 -> NixOS/nix-mode@3cca5b6
ProofGeneral/PG@f0f0476 -> ProofGeneral/PG@bc86736
Raku/raku-mode@8a6e17f -> Raku/raku-mode@7496ad3
StanfordLegion/terra-mode@1e5e824 -> StanfordLegion/terra-mode@eab9e59
TheBB/company-reftex@291c283 -> TheBB/company-reftex@42eb98c
agda/agda@ecb9323 -> agda/agda@af9c4b9
ananthakumaran/tide@ad6fa78 -> ananthakumaran/tide@ccff099
asok/projectile-rails@f1fe6e8 -> asok/projectile-rails@6a18ada
beancount/beancount-mode@3c04745 -> beancount/beancount-mode@02fe03e
brotzeit/rustic@ed68fd3 -> brotzeit/rustic@6ca73bb
cdominik/cdlatex@adf96ba -> cdominik/cdlatex@614a8d9
clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@a14671e -> clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@3e426b3
cython/cython@9decfca -> cython/cython@fae33cf
dgutov/robe@126650a -> dgutov/robe@e1304d1
diml/utop@711c246 -> diml/utop@c87b8b2
dominikh/go-mode.el@49a5380 -> dominikh/go-mode.el@3497434
elixir-editors/emacs-elixir@0212b06 -> elixir-editors/emacs-elixir@6bbc1e5
emacs-csharp/csharp-mode@f977800 -> emacs-csharp/csharp-mode@093f0f2
emacs-ess/ESS@126d344 -> emacs-ess/ESS@4fefd0f
emacs-lsp/lsp-dart@f3b70ec -> emacs-lsp/lsp-dart@01d89d4
emacs-lsp/lsp-haskell@7efbef3 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-haskell@eb37ac4
emacs-lsp/lsp-java@9685334 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-java@b66a075
emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@51a89c1 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@9f82ebe
emacs-lsp/lsp-pyright@65fb141 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-pyright@71a7976
emacs-lsp/lsp-sourcekit@aafa987 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-sourcekit@ae4aa87
emacs-php/php-mode@a2bca9b -> emacs-php/php-mode@cbf2723
emacs-php/phpactor.el@80788a8 -> emacs-php/phpactor.el@272217f
emacs-straight/auctex@1472d1d -> emacs-straight/auctex@ea410dc
erlang/otp@94c9738 -> erlang/otp@645ea81
ethereum/emacs-solidity@b4fd719 -> ethereum/emacs-solidity@5f6ef31
factor/factor@5bfeab6 -> factor/factor@b989a86
fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@78898a1 -> fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@93b1fbc
godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@16c631c -> godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@b7bfa6a
greghendershott/racket-mode@5115c47 -> greghendershott/racket-mode@7f12cb1
haskell/haskell-mode@1baa12a -> haskell/haskell-mode@98ba392
hhvm/hack-mode@847fd91 -> hhvm/hack-mode@f9315be
hlissner/emacs-pug-mode@685fd34 -> hlissner/emacs-pug-mode@d080904
hvesalai/emacs-sbt-mode@0bdc36b -> hvesalai/emacs-sbt-mode@e29464a
idris-hackers/idris-mode@80aabd2 -> idris-hackers/idris-mode@f52ad0b
immerrr/lua-mode@2d9a468 -> immerrr/lua-mode@2bd9077
iyefrat/evil-tex@5f0d6fb -> iyefrat/evil-tex@87445d4
jcollard/elm-mode@e9fcf9c -> jcollard/elm-mode@f2e2d00
joaotavora/sly@5966d68 -> joaotavora/sly@41f4d65
jorgenschaefer/pyvenv@9b3678b -> jorgenschaefer/pyvenv@045ff94
jrblevin/markdown-mode@ac9ea26 -> jrblevin/markdown-mode@359347b
jwiegley/emacs-async@d7e7f79 -> jwiegley/emacs-async@9a8cd0c
jyp/attrap@778382e -> jyp/attrap@a5bc695
leanprover/lean-mode@5c50338 -> leanprover/lean-mode@bf32bb9
ledger/ledger-mode@32fef09 -> ledger/ledger-mode@19b84dc
nathankot/company-sourcekit@abf9bc5 -> nathankot/company-sourcekit@a1860ad
necaris/conda.el@dce431b -> necaris/conda.el@6db0720
non-Jedi/eglot-jl@84cff9d -> non-Jedi/eglot-jl@49f170e
nonsequitur/inf-ruby@c6990a6 -> nonsequitur/inf-ruby@03dd9c9
ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@0ad8d0a -> ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@5dd6574
ocaml/dune@65e04ba -> ocaml/dune@75ecfe3
ocaml/merlin@635923d -> ocaml/merlin@5731826
ocaml/tuareg@37a6730 -> ocaml/tuareg@b59c422
pashky/restclient.el@abc307b -> pashky/restclient.el@2cc1fd3
polymode/polymode@b3871e9 -> polymode/polymode@7d1f822
pythonic-emacs/anaconda-mode@344727c -> pythonic-emacs/anaconda-mode@4f367c7
seagle0128/grip-mode@2855205 -> seagle0128/grip-mode@c0ca789
sebasmonia/sharper@d610b83 -> sebasmonia/sharper@08277b6
swift-emacs/swift-mode@ad12a30 -> swift-emacs/swift-mode@1b47a09
technomancy/fennel-mode@ba14a7d -> technomancy/fennel-mode@a908db8
tpapp/julia-repl@7ce38a9 -> tpapp/julia-repl@79e686e
ziglang/zig-mode@2d0eb23 -> ziglang/zig-mode@0babe7e

Closes #5221
2021-07-11 17:52:08 -04:00
..
autoload.el Add lookup-documentation handler for cmake-mode 2020-11-17 12:46:10 -05:00
config.el Use new CPU counter function in cc module 2021-03-02 10:02:12 +01:00
doctor.el lang/cc: fix false negatives from rc/rdm checks #1864 2019-10-23 16:07:59 -04:00
packages.el Bump :lang 2021-07-11 17:52:08 -04:00
README.org Update suggested clangd flags in lang/cc docs 2021-05-19 21:41:09 +02:00

lang/cc

Description

This module adds support for the C-family of languages: C, C++, and Objective-C.

  • Code completion (company-irony)
  • eldoc support (irony-eldoc)
  • Syntax-checking (flycheck-irony)
  • Code navigation (rtags)
  • File Templates (c-mode, c++-mode)
  • Snippets (cc-mode, c-mode, c++-mode)
  • Several improvements to C++11 indentation and syntax highlighting.

Module Flags

  • +lsp Disables irony+rtags and replaces them with LSP (ccls by default). This requires the :tools lsp module.

Prerequisites

This module's requirements change depending on how you use it.

  • If +lsp is enabled, you need one of clangd v9+ or ccls.
  • If +lsp is not enabled, you need irony-server and rtags.
  • Other features in this module depend on:

    • (optional) glslangValidator, for GLSL completion in glsl-mode
    • (optional) cmake, for code completion in cmake-mode
  • You will need a C/C++ compiler, like gcc or clang.

LSP servers

lsp-mode and eglot support a few LSP servers, but clangd and ccls are recommended.

clangd (must be v9 or newer)

clangd is included with llvm which should be available through your OS' package manager.

  • Linux:

    • Debian 11 & Ubuntu 20.10: # apt-get install clangd-11

    • Fedora & CentOS/RHEL 8+: # dnf install clang-tools-extra
    • openSUSE: # zypper install clang
    • Arch: # pacman -S clang
  • BSDs:

    • NetBSD & OpenBSD: # pkg_add clang-tools-extra
  • macOS: $ brew install llvm // 1GB+ installation! May take a while!
  • Windows: use the win64 installer from LLVM's GitHub release page.
ccls
Available in many OS' package managers as ccls. Otherwise, there are alternative install methods listed in the project's wiki.
cmake-language-server
available through pip on most distributions

irony-server

Irony powers the code completion, eldoc and syntax checking systems.

After installing its dependencies (Clang and CMake), run M-x irony-install-server in Emacs.

macOS

Due to linking issues, macOS users must compile irony-server manually:

brew install cmake
brew install llvm
git clone https://github.com/Sarcasm/irony-mode irony-mode
mkdir irony-mode/server/build
pushd irony-mode/server/build

DEST="$HOME/.emacs.d/.local/etc/irony-server/"
cmake -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/usr/local/opt/llvm \
      -DCMAKE_INSTALL_RPATH_USE_LINK_PATH=ON \
      -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$DEST" ../
cmake --build . --use-stderr --config Release --target install

install_name_tool -change @rpath/libclang.dylib \
    /usr/local/opt/llvm/lib/libclang.dylib \
    "$DEST/bin/irony-server"

# Cleanup
popd
rm -rf irony-mode

rtags

Code navigation requires an rtags server (rdm) installed. This should be available through your OS's package manager.

This module will auto-start rdm when you open C/C++ buffers (so long as one isn't already running). If you prefer to run it yourself:

rdm &
rc -J $PROJECT_ROOT  # loads PROJECT_ROOT's compile_commands.json

Configure

Project compile settings

By default, a set of default compile settings are defined in +cc-default-compiler-options for C, C++ and Objective C. Irony, rtags and flycheck will fall back to these. This variable does nothing for LSP users.

For a more universal solution: both LSP servers and irony will recognize a compilation database (a compile_commands.json file). There are many ways to generate one. Here is an example using CMake and bear:

# For CMake projects
cmake -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS=ON .
# For non-CMake projects
make clean
bear make

Use M-x +cc/reload-compile-db to reload your compile db in an already-open C/C++/ObjC buffer.

Known issues with bear on macOS

MacOS' System Integrity Protection (SIP) might interfere with bear if make is under /usr/bin/ which results in an empty compilation database.

From the bear readme:

Security extension/modes on different operating systems might disable library preloads. This case Bear behaves normally, but the result compilation database will be empty. (Please make sure it's not the case when reporting bugs.) Notable examples for enabled security modes are: OS X 10.11 (check with csrutil status | grep 'System Integrity Protection'), and Fedora, CentOS, RHEL (check with sestatus | grep 'SELinux status').

Workaround could be to disable the security feature while running Bear. (This might involve reboot of your computer, so might be heavy workaround.) Another option if the build tool is not installed under certain directories. Or use tools which are using compiler wrappers. (It injects a fake compiler which does record the compiler invocation and calls the real compiler too.) An example for such tool might be scan-build. The build system shall respect CC and CXX environment variables.

A workaround might be to install make via Homebrew which puts gmake under /usr/local/.

brew install make
make clean
bear gmake

Additional info:

Configure LSP servers

Search for your combination of (LSP client package, LSP server). You are using LSP-mode by default, eglot if you have :tools (lsp +eglot) active in your init.el file.

LSP-mode with clangd

(setq lsp-clients-clangd-args '("-j=3"
                                "--background-index"
                                "--clang-tidy"
                                "--completion-style=detailed"
                                "--header-insertion=never"
                                "--header-insertion-decorators=0"))
(after! lsp-clangd (set-lsp-priority! 'clangd 2))

This will both set your clangd flags and choose clangd as the default LSP server everywhere clangd can be used.

LSP-mode with ccls

(after! ccls
  (setq ccls-initialization-options '(:index (:comments 2) :completion (:detailedLabel t)))
  (set-lsp-priority! 'ccls 2)) ; optional as ccls is the default in Doom

This will both set your ccls flags and choose ccls as the default server. CCLS documentation lists available options, use t for true, :json-false for false, and :json-null for null.

Eglot with clangd

(set-eglot-client! 'cc-mode '("clangd" "-j=3" "--clang-tidy"))

This will both set your clangd flags and choose clangd as the default server (if it is the last set-eglot-client! 'cc-mode in your config).

Eglot with ccls

(set-eglot-client! 'cc-mode '("ccls" "--init={\"index\": {\"threads\": 3}}"))

This will both set your ccls flags and choose ccls as the default server (if it is the last set-eglot-client! 'cc-mode in your config). CCLS documentation lists available options

Appendix

Eglot specific bindings

When using +lsp and :tools (lsp +eglot), lsp-mode is replaced with eglot, and an additional function to get inheritance type hierarchy is added

Binding Description
<localleader> c t Display inheritance type hierarchy (upwards)
<prefix> <localleader> c t Display inheritance type hierarchy (downwards)