Why Yet Another HowTo For Integrating Metals with Doom Emacs???
A quick web-search will quickly reveal that there's at least two blog posts on this already (the ones I found were from 2019 and 2020). So... why am I creating another one? Believe it or not, despite the fact that both of these blog posts were incredibly useful in helping me to get up and running with Metals as the language server backend for Scala development in Doom Emacs, I did not find that either article covered everything necessary for me to be able to get things set-up properly on my machine without doing a fair amount of my own troubleshooting. In an attempt to save some people from some of the frustration I've had to go through I, therefore, decided to write this blog post in an attempt to fill in some more of the gaps.
For sections that I believe many of you may want to skip, I'll leave you a nice TLDR notification at the beginning indicating what the section contains and why some of you readers may not care to read it.
A Few Notes About this Article's Scope
(TLDR: this is mostly disclaimers. Please skip it if you don't care)
- I only run Ubuntu 20.04 based Linux distros, currently. As such, this post only covers material that pertains to getting Metals integrated with Doom Emacs through the LSP on Ubuntu.
- To help avoid needing to mess with the differences between different flavors and derivatives of Ubuntu 20.04, everything in this article will be done through the CLI. This is because the CLI is relatively consistent across Ubuntu-based distros when compared to the GUI desktop enviornments which could be anything from vanilla XFCE, Gnome, KDE, Maté, etc. to some customized version of any of those (for example, Pop!_OS ships with a fairly customized version of Gnome).
- I will be covering my experience in getting this working, only. I have not done, nor do I plan to do, the leg-work necessary to tinker around and try to find all the things that could go wrong in Ubuntu 20.04 when trying to configure Doom Emacs to use Metals as the LSP backend.
- For those of you that use Chemacs, you may be interested to know I use Chemacs 2 to switch between Doom Emacs, Spacemacs, and vanilla Emacs. As such, the instructions in this article will work even if you installed Doom Emacs to its own directory and not straight into the
~/.emacs.d/
directory. - I will be using this article for my own reference. Therefore, I will most likely be keeping it up-to-date according to what I need to work effectively as a Scala developer so long as I'm working regularly in Scala and still using Doom Emacs as my primary editor for Scala development. However, I make no promises or commitments to keep this article up-to-date in any case. I reserve the right to neglect updating this article, switch to another editor (like Vim or VSCode), stop working on Scala for a while, etc. without notice.
Installing Metals
I installed Metals using Coursier via the following process:
- You will need a JDK for this to work (hopefully you don't find this to be unexpected since Scala is a JVM language, so one would rightly expect Metals and potentially even Coursier to be using a JDK in its analysis of Scala files). I installed Open JDK 11 and then followed the instructions here to set the
JAVA_HOME
environment variable. However, so that this article can stand on its own, I'll copy the stepwise instructions from the aforementioned article below (Note that these instructions are for Ubuntu, you may need to do your own digging to figure out how to do this for a different Linux distribution if that's your need).- In a terminal window, run
sudo su
. - Run
updatedb
to update your system's database - Run
locate openjdk
to find your Java installation. It's a bit of an art parsing through the wall of text this command outputs, but the instructions on the WikiHow site served me well - look at what base directory/prefix most of the outputs return, and use the majority output. For me, that was/usr/lib/jvm/java-11-openjdk-amd64
. - To permanently set
$JAVA_HOME
to this, add the lineJAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-11-openjdk-amd64
(or whatever your installation path was) to/etc/environment
. If you don't have root access on your machine, you may alternatively add this to your shell's RC file (for example,~/.bashrc
). - After this, you may log out of your session and back in again, or alternatively sourcing your shell's RC file would work if you took that approach in hte previous step (e.g.
source ~/.bashrc
).
- In a terminal window, run
- Install Coursier I found I had to follow the official site instructions to install Coursier and ignore what Siaw Young's article told me to do entirely.
# first, let's check where this redirects to curl -sI https://git.io/coursier-cli-"$(uname | tr LD ld)" | grep Location # Should return something like "Location: https://github.com/coursier/launchers/raw/master/cs-x86_64-pc-linux" # Assuming all is good, proceed with the install curl -fLo cs https://git.io/coursier-cli-"$(uname | tr LD ld)" chmod +x cs ./cs install cs rm cs
- Next, you'll want to use Coursier to install Metals. I used the following command to perform the installation:
sudo cs bootstrap \ --java-opt -Xss4m \ --java-opt -Xms100m \ --java-opt -Dmetals.client=emacs \ org.scalameta:metals_2.12:0.10.1 \ -r bintray:scalacenter/releases \ -r sonatype:snapshots \ -o /usr/local/bin/metals-emacs -f -v -v -v
- The 2020 article indicates that there used to be a bug which made it more difficult or impossible to install Metals via the Coursier CLI launcher for Linux. This issue seems to have been fixed by the community, I did not run into the problem Siaw Young did.
Installing/Updating Doom Emacs
- Of course, make sure you have a recent version of Emacs installed. I'm using Emacs version 28.0.50 on Pop!_OS 20.04 LTS, which is based on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS.
- From here, I have installed Chemacs 2 to my
~/.emacs.d
directory as instructed in the Chemacs 2 README. - Next, I cloned Doom Emacs into
~/.doom.emacs.d
using the install instructions in the README- NOTE: Actually, when I started this process of integratiing Metals with Doom Emacs, I had already had Doom Emacs and Chemacs 2 installed as described above and I found myself in need of actually updating Doom Emacs. When I tried
doom upgrade
however as specified in the README, I kept running into errors such as this one. As it turned out, I was able to fix the problem by running the following git commands to force a fresh pull from the Doom Emacs remote:
YMMV, and you may find that you may need to wipe yourgit fetch git reset --hard origin/develop ./bin/doom install
~/.doom.emacs.d
directory and do a fresh clone of the Doom Emacs git branch or tag into that directory depending how how messy or divergent your setup has become over time.
- NOTE: Actually, when I started this process of integratiing Metals with Doom Emacs, I had already had Doom Emacs and Chemacs 2 installed as described above and I found myself in need of actually updating Doom Emacs. When I tried
- You can then tell Chemacs 2 to switch between the Doom and vanilla Emacs versions by adding the following to your
~/.emacs-profiles.el
(("default" . ((user-emacs-directory . "~/.emacs.d"))) ("doom" . ((user-emacs-directory . "~/.doom.emacs.d"))) )
Configuring Doom Emacs (a.k.a. the easy part)
- Finally, you'll want to configure Doom to use
lsp
. This was actually fairly straightforward. You can do this by opening~/.doom.d/init.el
(this file was created bydoom install
, earlier) and in the(doom! :input
section/scope addlsp
and(scala +lsp)
to the list of plugins, there. - Go back to
~/.doom.d/bin/
and run./doom sync
to make sure the new layers your configured in the previous step get downloaded and installed. - Restart Doom Emacs and you should be good to go for having Doom Emacs use Metals as the LSP backend for analyzing Scala code.
Closing Remarks
All in all, I did not find the installation and configuration of Doom Emacs to use Metals as the LSP backend for Scala too difficult, but there were some gotchas that made it a bit less straightforward than just installing the Metals application and editing the Doom config files to use it. I hope by posting this article, here, somebody else's time can be saved and their life can be made just a bit easier by having this small instructional article, here.
If you benefited from this article, please give it a clap, or vote, or thumbs-up depending on the platform you encounter this on.
This article has been replicated on Write.as and Medium.com for the sake of redundancy. Feel free to check it out on those platforms, if you like.
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Thank you to the author for this material. Something I knew before, but nevertheless something useful I learned for myself. So thank you. In general, the world of programming is an interesting world. Every day you learn something new. Another good thing is that not everyone understands programming)). Factor in the multitude of tasks and work.
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Programming is indeed a constantly evolving field, and there is always something new to learn. It's great that you find it interesting, and I wish you success in your programming journey. And yes, the diversity of tasks and work in programming is definitely one of its many appealing aspects.
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