Swank Clojure is a server that allows SLIME (the Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs) to connect to Clojure projects. To use it you must launch a swank server, then connect to it from within Emacs.
Add Swank Clojure to your project as a development dependency to your project. If you are using Leiningen, add it to your project.clj file under :dev-dependencies:
:dev-dependencies [[swank-clojure "1.2.1"]]
Once you run "lein deps" you can launch a swank server from the command line:
$ lein swank [PORT=4005] [HOST=localhost]
Note that the lein-swank plugin now comes with Swank Clojure; it does not need to be specified as a separate dependency any more.
If you're using Maven, add this to your pom.xml under the <dependencies> section:
<dependency>
<groupId>swank-clojure</groupId>
<artifactId>swank-clojure</artifactId>
<version>1.2.1</version>
</dependency>
Then you can launch a swank server like so:
$ mvn -o clojure:swank
Note that due to a bug in clojure-maven-plugin, you currently cannot include it as a test-scoped dependency; it must be compile-scoped. You also cannot change the port from Maven; it's hard-coded to 4005.
Install the "slime-repl" package from ELPA using package.el. When you perform the installation, you will see warnings related to the byte-compilation of the packages. This is normal; the packages will work just fine even if there are problems byte-compiling it upon installation.
There is a known bug in the latest release of package.el that can cause packages to fail to install in certain circumstances. The version with the fixes applied is available on Github.
Then you should be able to connect to the swank server you launched:
M-x slime-connect
It will prompt you for your host (usually localhost) and port. It may also warn you that your SLIME version doesn't match your Swank version; this should be OK.
Having old versions of SLIME either manually installed or installed using a system-wide package manager like apt-get may cause issues.
Commonly-used SLIME commands:
- C-c TAB: Autocomplete symbol at point
- C-x C-e: Eval the form under the point
- C-c C-k: Compile the current buffer
- M-.: Jump to the definition of a var
- C-c S-i: Inspect a value
- C-c C-m: Macroexpand the call under the point
- C-c C-d C-d: Look up documentation for a var
- C-c C-z: Switch from a Clojure buffer to the repl buffer
- C-c M-p: Switch the repl namespace to match the current buffer
- C-c C-w c: List all callers of a given function
Pressing "v" on a stack trace a debug buffer will jump to the file and line referenced by that frame if possible.
Note that SLIME was designed to work with Common Lisp, which has a distinction between interpreted code and compiled code. Clojure has no such distinction, but many of the SLIME commands retain parallel load/compile commands that have the same effect in the context of Clojure.
You can embed Swank Clojure in your project, start the server from within your own code, and connect via Emacs to that instance:
(ns my-app
(:use [swank.swank :as swank]))
(swank/start-repl) ;; optionally takes a port argument
Then use M-x slime-connect to connect from within Emacs.
You can also start the server directly from the "java" command-line launcher if you AOT-compile it and specify "swank.swank" as your main class.
For now, see Hugo Duncan's blog for an explanation of this excellent feature. Further documentation to come.
Previous versions of Swank Clojure bundled an Elisp library called swank-clojure.el that provided ways to launch your swank server from within your Emacs process. While swank-clojure is still distributed with the project, it's a much more error-prone way of doing things than the method outlined above.
If you have configured your Emacs to use M-x swank-clojure-project then it should still work, but it's not recommended for new users.
The mailing list and clojure channel on Freenode are the best places to bring up questions/issues.
Contributions are preferred as either Github pull requests or using "git format-patch". Please use standard indentation with no tabs, trailing whitespace, or lines longer than 80 columns. See this post on submitting good patches for some tips. If you've got some time on your hands, reading this style guide wouldn't hurt either.
Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Jeffrey Chu, Phil Hagelberg, Hugo Duncan, and contributors
Licensed under the EPL. (See the file COPYING.)