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CONFIG.md

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Installing and configuring null-ls

You can install null-ls using any package manager. Here is a simple example showing how to install it and its dependencies using packer.nvim:

use({
    "jose-elias-alvarez/null-ls.nvim",
    config = function()
        require("null-ls").setup()
    end,
    requires = { "nvim-lua/plenary.nvim" },
})

As shown above, the plugin depends on plenary.nvim, so make sure you've installed that plugin, too.

Below is a simple example demonstrating how you might configure null-ls. See BUILTINS for a list of built-in sources like the ones in the example below and BUILTIN_CONFIG for information on how to configure these sources.

local null_ls = require("null-ls")

null_ls.setup({
    sources = {
        null_ls.builtins.formatting.stylua,
        null_ls.builtins.diagnostics.eslint,
        null_ls.builtins.completion.spell,
    },
})

Options

The following code block shows the available options and their defaults.

local defaults = {
    border = nil,
    cmd = { "nvim" },
    debounce = 250,
    debug = false,
    default_timeout = 5000,
    diagnostic_config = {},
    diagnostics_format = "#{m}",
    fallback_severity = vim.diagnostic.severity.ERROR,
    log_level = "warn",
    notify_format = "[null-ls] %s",
    on_attach = nil,
    on_init = nil,
    on_exit = nil,
    root_dir = require("null-ls.utils").root_pattern(".null-ls-root", "Makefile", ".git"),
    should_attach = nil,
    sources = nil,
    temp_dir = nil,
    update_in_insert = false,
}

null-ls allows configuring a subset of the options used by nvim-lspconfig's setup method (shared with vim.lsp.start_client), as described here. If an option you want to use is missing, open an issue or PR.

Note that setting autostart = true is unnecessary (and unsupported), as null-ls will always attempt to attach to buffers automatically if you've configured and registered sources.

border (table|string, optional)

Defines the border to use for the :NullLsInfo UI window. Uses NullLsInfoBorder highlight group (see Highlight Groups). Accepts same border values as nvim_open_win(). See :help nvim_open_win() for more info.

cmd (table)

Defines the command used to start the null-ls server. If you do not have an nvim binary available on your $PATH, you should change this to an absolute path to the binary.

debounce (number)

The debounce setting controls the amount of time between the last change to a buffer and the next textDocument/didChange notification. These notifications cause null-ls to generate diagnostics, so this setting indirectly controls the rate of diagnostic generation (affected by update_in_insert, described below).

Lowering debounce will result in quicker diagnostic refreshes at the cost of running diagnostic sources more frequently, which can affect performance. The default value should be enough to provide near-instantaneous feedback from most sources without unnecessary resource usage.

debug (boolean)

Displays all possible log messages and writes them to the null-ls log, which you can view with the command :NullLsLog. This option can slow down Neovim, so it's strongly recommended to disable it for normal use.

debug = true is the same as setting log_level to "trace".

default_timeout (number)

Sets the amount of time (in milliseconds) after which built-in sources will time out. Note that built-in sources can define their own timeout period and that users can override the timeout period on a per-source basis, too (see BUILTIN_CONFIG.md).

Specifying a timeout with a value less than zero will prevent commands from timing out.

diagnostic_config (table, optional)

Specifies diagnostic display options for null-ls sources, as described in :help vim.diagnostic.config(). (null-ls uses separate namespaces for each source, so server-wide configuration will not work as expected.)

You can also configure diagnostic_config per built-in by using the with method, described in BUILTIN_CONFIG.

diagnostics_format (string)

Sets the default format used for diagnostics. The plugin will replace the following special components with the relevant diagnostic information:

  • #{m}: message
  • #{s}: source name (defaults to null-ls if not specified)
  • #{c}: code (if available)

For example, setting diagnostics_format to the following:

diagnostics_format = "[#{c}] #{m} (#{s})"

Formats diagnostics as follows:

[2148] Tips depend on target shell and yours is unknown. Add a shebang or a 'shell' directive. (shellcheck)

You can also configure diagnostics_format per built-in by using the with method, described in BUILTIN_CONFIG.

fallback_severity (number)

Defines the severity used when a diagnostic source does not explicitly define a severity. See :help diagnostic-severity for available values.

log_level (string, one of "off", "error", "warn", "info", "debug", "trace")

Enables or disables logging to file.

Plugin logs messages on several logging levels to following destinations:

  • file, can be inspected by :NullLsLog.
  • neovim's notification area.

notify_format (string, optional)

Sets the default format for vim.notify() messages. Can be used to customize 3rd party notification plugins like nvim-notify.

on_attach (function, optional)

Defines an on_attach callback to run whenever null-ls attaches to a buffer. If you have a common on_attach you're using for LSP servers, you can reuse that here, use a custom callback for null-ls, or leave this undefined.

on_init (function, optional)

Defines an on_init callback to run when null-ls initializes. From here, you can make changes to the client (the first argument) or initialize_result (the second argument, which as of now is not used).

on_exit (function, optional)

Defines an on_exit callback to run when the null-ls client exits.

root_dir (function)

Determines the root of the null-ls server. On startup, null-ls will call root_dir with the full path to the first file that null-ls attaches to.

local root_dir = function(fname)
    return fname:match("my-project") and "my-project-root"
end

If root_dir returns nil, the root will resolve to the current working directory.

should_attach (function, optional)

A user-defined function that controls whether to enable null-ls for a given buffer. Receives bufnr as its first argument.

To cut down potentially expensive calls, null-ls will call should_attach after its own internal checks pass, so it's not guaranteed to run on each new buffer.

require("null-ls.nvim").setup({
    should_attach = function(bufnr)
        return not vim.api.nvim_buf_get_name(bufnr):match("^git://")
    end,
})

sources (table, optional)

Defines a list (array-like table) of sources for null-ls to register. Users can add built-in sources (see BUILTINS.md) or custom sources (see MAIN.md).

If you've installed an integration that provides its own sources and aren't interested in built-in sources, you don't have to define any sources here. The integration will register them independently.

temp_dir (string, optional)

Defines the directory used to create temporary files for sources that rely on them (a workaround used for command-based sources that do not support stdio).

To maximize compatibility, null-ls defaults to creating temp files in the same directory as the parent file. If this is causing issues, you can set it to /tmp (or another appropriate directory) here. Otherwise, there is no need to change this setting.

Note: some null-ls built-in sources expect temp files to exist within a project for context and so will not work if this option changes.

You can also configure temp_dir per built-in by using the with method, described in BUILTIN_CONFIG.

update_in_insert (boolean)

Controls whether diagnostic sources run in insert mode. If set to false, diagnostic sources will run upon exiting insert mode, which greatly improves performance but can create a slight delay before diagnostics show up. Set this to true if you don't experience performance issues with your sources.

Note that by default, Neovim will not display updated diagnostics in insert mode. Together with the option above, you need to pass update_in_insert = true to vim.diagnostic.config for diagnostics to work as expected. See :help vim.diagnostic.config for more info.

Highlight Groups

Below are the highlight groups that you can override for the :NullLsInfo window.

  • NullLsInfoHeader Window header
  • NullLsInfoTitle Titles
  • NullLsInfoBorder Window border
  • NullLsInfoSources Sources names

Explicitly defining the project root

Create an empty file .null-ls-root in the directory you want to mark as the project root for null-ls.