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Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server
From: |
Tim Cross |
Subject: |
Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server |
Date: |
Mon, 14 Dec 2020 12:04:58 +1100 |
User-agent: |
mu4e 1.5.7; emacs 27.1.50 |
Gerry Agbobada <emacs-orgmode@gagbo.net> writes:
> On Sun, Dec 13, 2020, at 21:23, Jean Louis wrote:
>> * TEC <tecosaur@gmail.com> [2020-12-13 20:35]:
>> > > From a perspective that some server has to know what user is writing
>> > > it is advisable to use one own's servers. But if idea gets popular
>> > > some company will commercialize it and centralize user's data and
>> > > privacy is gone.
>> >
>> > FYI the nature of LSP (as I understand it) is that the "server" is a
>> > locally running service that responds to signals from a "client" (code
>> > editor / IDE).
>>
>> That is how it starts until corporation like Github or somebody else
>> takes it over. Just look at Github pattern. Git was decentralized
>> system that they centralized for 50 million developers and included
>> eye candies that one cannot self-host as one wants.
>>
>
> Hello,
>
> The "server" in Language Server Protocol is a program that answers to LSP
> requests that's all. It could just be a program written in a FOSS licence
> (like Palantir pyls
> https://github.com/palantir/python-language-server ) that needs to read the
> files on your computer in order to answer requests. Data (i.e your org files
> on your filesystem) does not need to be centralized for it to work.
>
> Git was eventually ""centralized"" by github because version control systems
> and software forges are based on sharing the data between multiple users, so
> someone can (and will) offer the tradeoff to make the sharing easier at the
> cost of privacy/freedom etc.
>
> LSP servers are just file indexers that implement a common protocol to make
> writing integrations easier. They are called servers because they are long
> running process listening to messages, but really everything could (and most
> of the time do) run offline, with file watches over your "project" and
> sockets for I/O with clients that run locally
>
>
Good clarification and content. It is important to separate
implementations from protocol. LSP is just a protocol to allow an
interface between an editor and a service which can provide additional
functionality in an editor independent manner.
--
Tim Cross
Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, Neil Jerram, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, TEC, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, Neil Jerram, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, TEC, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, Jean Louis, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, TEC, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, Russell Adams, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, TEC, 2020/12/14
- Re: Emacs as an Org LSP server, Russell Adams, 2020/12/14