Repository for NPM module to connect Monaco editor with language servers and NPM module which implements communication between a jsonrpc client and server over WebSocket.
Click here for a detail explanation how to connect the Monaco editor to your language server.
- Monaco Language Client & VSCode WebSocket Json RPC
All code has been transformed to esm and npm packages are now of type module. cjs bundles are no longer available.
The monaco-converter
has been removed.
monaco-vscode-api was created by CGNonofr and this library is now based on it and the old implementation was removed.
We added the independent vscode-ws-jsonrpc as sub-package into this repository.
From release 1.0.0 onward the project switched to npm workspaces. We no longer require yarn, lerna and webpack. Mostly therefore the list of devDependencies
is substantially shorter. All code has been moved to ./packages directory.
As before the library code is just compiled with the TypeScript compiler and the library is now packaged with npm. The need for bundling does no longer exist for the example. The compiled code is either executed by node or the web/client related code/pages are served with vite.js. We added a verification example for the web client example using webpack.
The default and protected branch is now main
.
On your local machine you can prepare your dev environment as follows. From CLI in root of the project run:
git clone https://github.com/TypeFox/monaco-languageclient.git
cd monaco-languageclient
npm i
# Cleans-up, compiles and builds everything
npm run build
Use a fresh dev environment in Gitpod by pressing the code now badge above.
The main package.json contains script entries applicable to the whole workspace like clean
and compile
, but it also has entries for launching script from the packages (lib and examples).
For example if you want to rebuild the monaco-languageclient or vscode-ws-jsonrpc library you can do it in different ways. From CLI run one of:
# from the root
npm run build:client
# it performs the following what you could execute manually as well
npm --workspace packages/client run build
# instruct npm to execute in different directory
npm --prefix packages/client run build
# or manually got to packages/client and run th build there
cd packages/client && npm run build
Hint: Use vscode-ws-jsonrpc instead of client for the other lib.
There are a couple of different examples that demonstrate how the monaco-languageclient
can be used:
-
The server example located in ./packages/examples/server runs a Node.js Express app where web sockets are used to enable communication between the language server process and the client web application. The language server can be started as internal or external process.
-
The client example located in ./packages/examples/client contains the client web app which connects to the language server therefore requires the node server app to be run in parallel.
-
The browser-lsp example located in ./packages/examples/browser-lsp contains both the language client and the langauge server implementation running in a web worker. They communicate via
vscode-languageserver-protocol/browser
instead of a web socket used in the server/client examples. -
The browser example located in ./packages/examples/browser demonstrates how a language service written in JavaScript can be used in a Monaco Editor contained in a simple HTML page. This example can now be considered legacy as the web worker option eases client side language server implementation and separation.
-
The react-client example located in ./packages/examples/react-client contains the React client. It does the same as the regular client example but inside a React Functional Component.
-
The angular-client example located in ./packages/examples/angular-client contains the Angular client. It does the same as the regular client example but inside an Angular Component.
-
The webpack verification example located in ./packages/verify/webpack demonstrates how bundling can be achieved with webpack. You find the configuration here: webpack.config.js.
-
The vite verification example located in ./packages/verify/vite demonstrates how bundling can be achieved with vite. There is no configuration required
Start the Vite dev server. It is assumed you ran the build as described in Getting Started:
npm run dev
Vite serves all client code at localhost. You can go to the index.html and navigate to all client examples from there. You can edit the client example code directly (TypeScript) and Vite ensures it automatically made available.
For the client or the client-webpack examples you need to ensure the server example is running:
# start the express server with the language server running in the same process.
npm run start:example:server
# alternative: start the express server with language server running in the external process.
npm run start:example:server:ext
For everything else Vite is sufficient. If you want to reach the verification examples from the vite dev server index page you need to run the following additional http-servers beforehand (this is also indicated on the page itself):
# Serve the webpack verification example on http://localhost:8081
npm run start:verify:webpack
# Serve the vite verification example on http://localhost:8082
npm run start:verify:vite
You can as well run vscode tasks to start and debug the server in different modes and the client.
The following table describes which version of monaco-languageclient and monaco-vscode-api are compatible with a specific version of monaco-editor. The listing starts with version 2.0.0 because monaco-vscode-api was introduced for the first time.
monaco-languageclient | monaco-vscode-api | monaco-editor | comment |
---|---|---|---|
4.0.3 | 1.69.13 | 0.34.1 | |
4.0.1 | 1.69.12 | 0.34.1 | |
4.0.0 | 1.69.10 | 0.34.0 | |
3.0.1 | 1.69.9 | 0.34.0 | |
3.0.0 | 1.69.0 | 0.34.0 | |
2.1.0 | 1.67.20 | 0.33.0 | monaco-editor and vscode compatible again |
2.0.0 - 2.0.2 | 1.68.4 | 0.33.0 | monaco-editor and vscode incompatible |
If you use monaco-languageclient make sure you have a version of monaco-editor installed in your project that is compliant with monaco-languageclient and its peer dependency monaco-vscode-api.
Ensure monaco-editor and monaco-languageclient are imported before you do any monaco-editor intialization. This ensures monaco
and vscode
(from monaco-vscode-api) are imported beforehand. This is for example done like this in all examples contained in this repository.
There are Volta instructions in the package.json
files. When you have Volta available it will ensure the exactly specified node
and npm
versions are used.
Originally monaco-languageclient was dependent on monaco-editor-core, but we changed this with version 1.0.0. If your project requires to use monaco-editor-core and you want to stay compatible with 1.0.0 of monaco-languageclient you can install monaco-editor-core as monaco-editor:
npm install monaco-editor@npm:monaco-editor-core
Or if you are using Webpack you can alternatively add this alias to its config:
resolve: {
alias: {
// This doesn't pull any languages into bundles and works as monaco-editor-core was installed
'monaco-editor$': 'monaco-editor-core$',
'monaco-editor/': 'monaco-editor-core/',
}
}
If you use monaco-editor as dependency, but only want to have the content of monaco-editor-core than just only import:
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/edcore.main.js';
Add the monaco-editor import at the top of your editor component file source:
import * as monaco from "monaco-editor";
import { loader } from "@monaco-editor/react";
loader.config({ monaco });