Troubleshooting
How the Ruby LSP activation works
The Ruby LSP extension runs inside VS Code’s NodeJS runtime, like any other VS Code extension. This means that environment variables that are properly set in your shell may not exist inside the NodeJS process. To run the LSP server with the same Ruby version as your projects, we need to properly set these environment variables, which is done by invoking your Ruby version manager.
The extension runs a command using your shell’s interactive mode, so that version managers configured in files such as ~/.zshrc
are picked up automatically. The command then exports the environment information into JSON, so that we can inject it into the NodeJS process and appropriately set the Ruby version and gem installation paths.
As an example, the activation script for zsh
using rbenv
as a version manager will look something like this:
# Invoke zsh using interactive mode (loads ~/.zshrc) to run a single command
# The command is `rbenv exec ruby`, which automatically sets all relevant environment variables and selects the
# specified Ruby version
# We then print the activated environment as JSON. We read that JSON from the NodeJS process to insert the needed
# environment variables in order to run Ruby correctly
/bin/zsh -ic 'rbenv exec ruby -rjson -e "puts JSON.dump(ENV.to_h)"'
After activating the Ruby version, we then proceed to boot the server gem (ruby-lsp
). To avoid having users include the ruby-lsp
in their Gemfile
, we create a composed bundle under the .ruby-lsp
directory inside your project.
Common issues
There are several main sources of issues users typically face during activation: outdated version, shell problems, or Bundler related problems.
Outdated Version
If using VS Code, the version of the extension is distinct from that of the server (the
ruby-lsp
gem). You can check the server version in the status center.
In most cases, the server gem will be automatically updated. You can also trigger a manual update with the “Update language server gem” command in VS Code.
You can also attempt an update from the command line with BUNDLE_GEMFILE=.ruby-lsp/Gemfile bundle update ruby-lsp
If you’re using any add-on gem, such as ruby-lsp-rspec
, then ruby-lsp
will also be present in your Gemfile.lock
and it’s possible that an outdated add-on could prevent ruby-lsp
from updating.
Another possible scenario where the ruby-lsp
gem cannot be updated is when one of its runtime dependencies are constrained by another gem in the application. For example, Ruby LSP has a dependency on RBS v3. If another gem constrains the version of RBS to an older release, it will not be possible to use newer versions of Ruby LSP.
The 3 runtime dependencies of the Ruby LSP are rbs
, prism
and sorbet-runtime
. If any of them are being constrained by the application, the Ruby LSP may fail to update.
Running BUNDLE_GEMFILE=.ruby-lsp/Gemfile bundle outdated
may help with understanding what is being constrained.
Shell issues
When the extension invokes the shell and loads its config file (~/.zshrc
, ~/.bashrc
, etc), it is susceptible to issues that may be caused by how the shell or its plugins interact with the NodeJS process. For example
- Some plugins completely redirect the stderr pipe to implement their functionality (fixed on the Ruby LSP side by https://github.com/Shopify/vscode-ruby-lsp/pull/918)
- Some plugins fail immediately or end up in an endless loop if they detect there’s no UI attached to the shell process. In this case, it’s not possible to fix from the Ruby LSP side since a shell invoked by NodeJS will never have a UI
Additionally, some users experience an issue where VS Code selects the wrong shell, not respecting the SHELL
environment variable. This usually ends up in having /bin/sh
selected instead of your actual shell. If you are facing this problem, please try to
- Update VS Code to the latest version
- Completely close VS Code and launch it from the terminal with
code .
(instead of opening VS Code from the launch icon)
More context about this issue on https://github.com/Shopify/vscode-ruby-lsp/issues/901.
Bundler issues
If the extension successfully activated the Ruby environment, it may still fail when trying to compose the composed bundle to run the server gem. This could be a regular Bundler issue, like not being able to satisfy dependencies due to a conflicting version requirement, or it could be a configuration issue.
For example, if the project has its linter/formatter put in an optional Gemfile
group and that group is excluded in the Bundler configuration, the Ruby LSP will not be able to see those gems.
# Gemfile
# ...
# If Bundler is configured to exclude this group, the Ruby LSP will not be able to find `rubocop`
group :optional_group do
gem "rubocop"
end
If you experience Bundler related issues, double-check both your global and project-specific configuration to check if there’s anything that could be preventing the server from booting. You can print your Bundler configuration with
bundle config
Format on save dialogue won’t disappear
When VS Code requests formatting for a document, it opens a dialogue showing progress a couple of seconds after sending the request, closing it once the server has responded with the formatting result.
If you are seeing that the dialogue is not going away, this likely doesn’t mean that formatting is taking very long or hanging. It likely means that the server crashed or got into a corrupt state and is simply not responding to any requests, which means the dialogue will never go away.
This is always the result of a bug in the server. It should always fail gracefully without getting into a corrupt state that prevents it from responding to new requests coming from the editor. If you encounter this, please submit a bug report here including the steps that led to the server getting stuck.
Missing Features
If you find that some features are working (such as formatting), but others aren’t (such as go to definition), and are working on a codebase that uses Sorbet, then this may indicate the Sorbet LSP isn’t running. To avoid duplicate/conflicting behavior, Ruby LSP disables some features when a Sorbet codebase is detected, with the intention that Sorbet can provide better accuracy.
Gem installation locations and permissions
To launch the Ruby LSP server, the ruby-lsp
gem must be installed. And in order to automatically index your project’s dependencies, they must also be installed so that we can read, parse and analyze their source files. The ruby-lsp
gem is installed via gem install
(using RubyGems). The project dependencies are installed via bundle install
(using Bundler).
If you use a non-default path to install your gems, please remember that RubyGems and Bundler require separate configurations to achieve that.
For example, if you configure BUNDLE_PATH
to point to vendor/bundle
so that gems are installed inside the same directory as your project, bundle install
will automatically pick that up and install them in the right place. But gem install
will not as it requires a different setting to achieve it.
You can apply your preferred installed locations for RubyGems by using the ~/.gemrc
file. In that file, you can decide to either install it with --user-install
or select a specific installation directory with --install-dir
.
gem: --user-install
# Or
gem: --install-dir /my/preferred/path/for/gem/install
One scenario where this is useful is if the user doesn’t have permissions for the default gem installation directory and gem install
fails. For example, when using the system Ruby on certain Linux distributions.
Using non-default gem installation paths may lead to other integration issues with version managers. For example, for Ruby 3.3.1 the default GEM_HOME
is ~/.gem/ruby/3.3.0
(without the patch part of the version). However, chruby
(and potentially other version managers) override
GEM_HOME
to include the version patch resulting in~/.gem/ruby/3.3.1
. When you install a gem usinggem install --user-install
, RubyGems ignores theGEM_HOME
override and installs the gem inside~/.gem/ruby/3.3.0
. This results in executables not being found becausechruby
modified thePATH
to only include executables installed under~/.gem/ruby/3.3.1
.Similarly, the majority of version managers don’t read your
~/.gemrc
configurations. If you use a custom installation with--install-dir
, it’s unlikely that the version manager will know about it. This may result in the gem executables not being found.Incompatibilities between RubyGems and version managers like this one are beyond the scope of the Ruby LSP and should be reported either to RubyGems or the respective version manager.
Developing on containers
See the documentation.
Diagnosing the problem
Many activation issues are specific to how your development environment is configured. If you can reproduce the problem you are seeing, including information about these steps is the best way to ensure that we can fix the issue in a timely manner. Please include the steps taken to diagnose in your bug report.
Check if the server is running
Check the status center. Does the server status say it’s running? If it is running, but you are missing certain features, please check our features documentation to ensure we already added support for it.
If the feature is listed as fully supported, but not working for you, report an issue so that we can assist.
Check the VS Code output tab
Many of the activation steps taken are logged in the Ruby LSP
channel of VS Code’s Output
tab. Check the logs to see if any entries hint at what the issue might be. Did the extension select your preferred shell?
Did it select your preferred version manager? You can define which version manager to use with the "rubyLsp.rubyVersionManager"
setting.
Enable logging
You can enable logging to the VS Code output tab, as described in the CONTRIBUTING docs.
Environment activation failed
We listed version manager related information and tips in this documentation.
My preferred version manager is not supported
We default to supporting the most common version managers, but that may not cover every single tool available. For these cases, we offer custom activation support. More context in the version manager documentation.
Try to run the Ruby activation manually
If the extension is failing to activate the Ruby environment, try running the same command manually in your shell to see if the issue is exclusively related with the extension. The exact command used for activation is printed to the output tab.
Try booting the server manually
If the Ruby environment seems to activate properly, but the server won’t boot, try to launch is manually from the terminal with
# Do not use bundle exec
ruby-lsp
Is there any extra information given from booting the server manually? Or does it only fail when booting through the extension?
Indexing
When Ruby LSP starts, it attempts to index your code as well as your dependencies as described in Configuring code indexing.
In rare cases, Ruby LSP will encounter an error which prevents indexing from completing, which will result in incomplete information in the editor.
Firstly, ensure that you are using the latest release of the ruby-lsp
gem, as the problem may have been already fixed.
To diagnose the particular file(s) causing a problem, run ruby-lsp-check
. Please log an issue so that we can address it. If the code is not open source then please provide a minimal reproduction.
In the meantime, you can configure Ruby LSP to ignore a particular gem or file for indexing.
After troubleshooting
If after troubleshooting the Ruby LSP is still not initializing properly, please report an issue here so that we can assist in fixing the problem. Remember to include the steps taken when trying to diagnose the issue.