Provides an abstract interface that allows LLMs to connect to fact sources such as LSPs, code diagnostics, symbol definitions/references, links, and frontmatter; currently includes an MCP implementation.
- Installation
- Quick Start
- MCP Tools
- Tool Callbacks
- MCP Resources
- Auto-Complete for File Paths
- Subscription and Change Notifications
- Symbol Resolution
- Pipe IPC (Out-of-Process)
- LSP Client (Built-in)
- Requirements
- License
npm install @opticlm/connector
# or
pnpm add @opticlm/connectorProviders are installed onto an MCP server using install() from @opticlm/connector/mcp. Each call registers the tools and resources for that specific provider. Providers that depend on file access (definition, references, hierarchy, edit) receive a fileAccess option.
You can pass a single provider or an array of providers of the same type. When an array is given, their results are merged automatically — array-returning methods (e.g. provideDefinition) are concatenated, void methods are called on all providers in parallel, and callback registrars (e.g. onDiagnosticsChanged) are registered on every provider in the array.
import { McpServer } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js'
import { StdioServerTransport } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/stdio.js'
import { install } from '@opticlm/connector/mcp'
import * as fs from 'fs/promises'
// 1. Create your MCP server
const server = new McpServer({
name: 'my-ide-mcp-server',
version: '1.0.0'
})
// 2. Implement File Access
const fileAccess = {
readFile: async (uri: string) => {
return await fs.readFile(uri, 'utf-8')
},
readDirectory: (uri: string) => yourIDE.workspace.readDirectory(uri),
}
// 3. Implement Edit Provider
const edit = {
// Show diff in your IDE and get user approval
previewAndApplyEdits: async (operation) => {
return await showDiffDialog(operation)
},
}
// 4. Implement LSP Capability Providers
const definition = {
provideDefinition: async (uri, position) => {
return await lspClient.getDefinition(uri, position)
},
}
const diagnostics = {
provideDiagnostics: async (uri) => {
return await lspClient.getDiagnostics(uri)
},
getWorkspaceDiagnostics: async () => {
return await lspClient.getWorkspaceDiagnostics()
},
onDiagnosticsChanged: (callback) => {
yourIDE.onDiagnosticsChanged((uri) => callback(uri))
},
}
const outline = {
provideDocumentSymbols: async (uri) => {
return await lspClient.getDocumentSymbols(uri)
},
}
// 5. Install providers onto the server
// fileAccess is installed first; others receive it as an option when needed
install(server, fileAccess)
install(server, edit, { fileAccess })
install(server, definition, { fileAccess })
install(server, diagnostics, { fileAccess })
install(server, outline, { fileAccess })
// You can also pass an array to merge multiple providers of the same type:
// install(server, [definition, anotherDefinition], { fileAccess })
// install(server, [diagnostics, anotherDiagnostics], { fileAccess })
// 6. Connect to transport (you control the server lifecycle)
const transport = new StdioServerTransport()
await server.connect(transport)Each install() call is independent — only install the providers your IDE actually supports. The fileAccess option is required for providers that read files (edit, definition, references, hierarchy) and is used optionally by others for path auto-complete.
The SDK automatically registers tools based on which providers you install:
Navigate to the definition of a symbol.
Find all references to a symbol.
Find all references to a file across the workspace (e.g., all files that import or link to the given file).
Only registered when your ReferencesProvider implements the optional provideFileReferences method.
Get call hierarchy for a function or method.
Apply a text edit to a file using hashline references (requires user approval).
The files:// resource returns file content in hashline format — each line is prefixed with <line>:<hash>|, where the hash is a 2-char CRC16 digest of the line's content. To edit a file, reference lines by these hashes. If the file has changed since the last read, the hashes won't match and the edit is rejected, preventing stale overwrites.
Search for text across the entire workspace.
Get all links in the workspace, showing relationships between documents.
Add a link to a document by finding a text pattern and replacing it with a link.
Get frontmatter property values across documents.
Set a frontmatter property on a document.
Each provider with tools accepts optional onInput and onOutput callbacks in its install options. These fire synchronously around each tool invocation — onInput before processing, onOutput after a successful result (not on errors).
Use them for logging, telemetry, or testing:
import { install } from '@opticlm/connector/mcp'
// EditProvider — apply_edit
install(server, editProvider, {
fileAccess,
onEditInput: (input) => {
console.log('edit requested:', input.uri, input.description)
},
onEditOutput: (output) => {
console.log('edit result:', output.success, output.message)
},
})
// DefinitionProvider — goto_definition + goto_type_definition
install(server, definitionProvider, {
fileAccess,
onDefinitionInput: (input) => log('goto_definition', input),
onDefinitionOutput: (output) => log('goto_definition result', output.snippets.length),
onTypeDefinitionInput: (input) => log('goto_type_definition', input),
onTypeDefinitionOutput: (output) => log('goto_type_definition result', output.snippets.length),
})The SDK automatically registers resources based on which providers you install:
Get diagnostics (errors, warnings) for a specific file.
Resource URI Pattern: diagnostics://{+path}
Example: diagnostics://src/main.ts
Returns diagnostics formatted as markdown with location, severity, and message information.
Subscription Support: If your DiagnosticsProvider implements onDiagnosticsChanged, these resources become subscribable. When diagnostics change, the driver sends resource update notifications.
Get diagnostics across the entire workspace.
Resource URI: diagnostics://workspace
Only available if your DiagnosticsProvider implements the optional getWorkspaceDiagnostics() method.
Returns workspace diagnostics grouped by file, formatted as markdown.
Subscription Support: If your DiagnosticsProvider implements onDiagnosticsChanged, this resource becomes subscribable.
Get the document outline (symbol tree) for a file.
Resource URI Pattern: outline://{+path}
Example: outline://src/components/Button.tsx
Returns document symbols formatted as a hierarchical markdown outline, including:
- Symbol names and kinds (class, function, method, etc.)
- Source locations
- Nested children (e.g., methods within classes)
No subscription support for this resource (read-only).
For directories: returns directory children (git-ignored files excluded, similar to ls). For files: returns content in hashline format with optional line range and regex filtering.
Hashline format: Each line is prefixed with <line>:<hash>|, where <line> is the 1-based line number and <hash> is a 2-char CRC16 hex digest of the line content. For example:
1:a3|function hello() {
2:f1| return "world"
3:0e|}
These hashes serve as content-addressed anchors for the apply_edit tool — if the file changes between read and edit, the hash mismatch is detected and the edit is safely rejected.
Resource URI Pattern: files://{+path}
Example: files://src, files://src/index.ts, files://src/index.ts#L1-L2, files://src/index.ts?pattern=^import, files://src/index.ts?pattern=TODO#L10-L50
No subscription support for this resource (read-only).
Get outgoing links from a specific file.
Resource URI Pattern: outlinks://{+path}
Example: outlinks://notes/index.md
Returns a JSON array of links originating from the specified document.
No subscription support for this resource (read-only).
Get incoming links (backlinks) to a specific file.
Resource URI Pattern: backlinks://{+path}
Example: backlinks://notes/topic-a.md
Returns a JSON array of links pointing to the specified document.
No subscription support for this resource (read-only).
Get frontmatter metadata for a specific file.
Resource URI Pattern: frontmatter://{+path}
Example: frontmatter://notes/index.md
Returns a JSON object containing all frontmatter properties and values for the document.
No subscription support for this resource (read-only).
All resource templates with a {+path} variable (files://, diagnostics://, outline://, outlinks://, backlinks://, frontmatter://) support MCP auto-completion. When an MCP client calls completion/complete with a partial file path, the SDK uses readDirectory from your FileAccessProvider to suggest matching entries.
- Completion is case-insensitive and splits input into a directory and prefix (e.g.,
src/serreadssrc/and filters byser) - If
readDirectoryfails (e.g., the directory doesn't exist), an empty list is returned - Results are capped at 100 items by the MCP SDK
This works automatically — no additional configuration is needed.
Providers can implement optional onDiagnosticsChanged and onFileChanged callbacks to make resources subscribable:
import { install } from '@opticlm/connector/mcp'
install(server, {
readFile: async (uri) => { /* ... */ },
readDirectory: async (path) => { /* ... */ },
onFileChanged: (callback) => {
yourIDE.onFileChanged((uri) => callback(uri))
},
})
install(server, {
provideDiagnostics: async (uri) => { /* ... */ },
getWorkspaceDiagnostics: async () => { /* ... */ },
onDiagnosticsChanged: (callback) => {
yourIDE.onDiagnosticsChanged((uri) => callback(uri))
},
})When diagnostics or files change, call the registered callback with the affected file URI. The driver will send MCP resource update notifications to subscribers.
The SDK uses a robust algorithm to handle imprecise LLM positioning:
- Target the
lineHint(converting 1-based to 0-based) - Search for
symbolNamein that line - Robustness Fallback: If not found, scan +/- 2 lines (configurable)
- Use
orderHintto select the Nth occurrence if needed
Configure the search radius via the resolverConfig option:
install(server, definitionProvider, {
fileAccess,
resolverConfig: {
lineSearchRadius: 5, // Default: 2
},
})When the MCP server runs in a separate process from the IDE plugin (e.g., spawned via stdio transport), the Pipe IPC layer lets the two communicate over a named pipe.
IDE plugin side — expose providers:
import { servePipe } from '@opticlm/connector/pipe'
const server = await servePipe({
pipeName: 'my-ide-lsp',
fileAccess: { /* ... */ },
definition: { /* ... */ },
// ...
// Add only the providers your IDE supports
})
// server.pipePath — the resolved pipe path
// server.connectionCount — number of connected clients
// await server.close() — shut downMCP server side — connect and install proxy providers:
import { McpServer } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js'
import { connectPipe } from '@opticlm/connector/pipe'
import { install } from '@opticlm/connector/mcp'
const conn = await connectPipe({
pipeName: 'my-ide-lsp',
connectTimeout: 5000, // optional, default 5000ms
})
// conn exposes proxy providers as named fields:
// conn.fileAccess, conn.definition, conn.diagnostics, etc.
// conn.availableMethods lists all methods the server exposes
const mcpServer = new McpServer({ name: 'my-mcp', version: '1.0.0' })
if (conn.fileAccess) install(mcpServer, conn.fileAccess)
if (conn.definition && conn.fileAccess)
install(mcpServer, conn.definition, { fileAccess: conn.fileAccess })
// ...
// Install whichever proxy providers are available
// When done:
conn.disconnect()The handshake automatically discovers which providers the server exposes and builds typed proxies. Change notifications are forwarded as push notifications to all connected clients. Multiple clients can connect to the same pipe simultaneously.
For standalone MCP servers that need to communicate directly with an LSP server (e.g., when not running inside an IDE plugin), LspClient spawns a language server process and automatically creates capability providers based on the server's reported capabilities.
import { McpServer } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/mcp.js'
import { StdioServerTransport } from '@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/server/stdio.js'
import { createLspClient } from '@opticlm/connector'
import { install } from '@opticlm/connector/mcp'
import * as fs from 'fs/promises'
// 1. Create and start the LSP client
const lsp = createLspClient({
command: 'typescript-language-server',
args: ['--stdio'],
workspacePath: '/path/to/project',
readFile: (path) => fs.readFile(path, 'utf-8'),
})
await lsp.start()
// 2. Wire providers into MCP
const server = new McpServer({ name: 'my-mcp', version: '1.0.0' })
const fileAccess = {
readFile: (uri: string) => fs.readFile(uri, 'utf-8'),
readDirectory: async () => [],
}
// Providers are automatically created based on server capabilities
install(server, fileAccess)
if (lsp.definition) install(server, lsp.definition, { fileAccess })
const transport = new StdioServerTransport()
await server.connect(transport)interface LspClientOptions {
command: string // LSP server command to spawn
args?: string[] // Command arguments (e.g., ['--stdio'])
workspacePath: string // Absolute path to the workspace root
readFile: (path: string) => Promise<string> // File reader for document sync
env?: Record<string, string> // Additional environment variables
initializationOptions?: unknown // LSP initializationOptions
documentIdleTimeout?: number // Auto-close open docs after ms (default: 30000)
requestTimeout?: number // Timeout for LSP requests in ms (default: 30000)
}start()spawns the LSP server process and performs the initialize/initialized handshake- The server's
ServerCapabilitiesresponse determines which providers are created - Providers that the server does not support remain
undefined - Documents are automatically opened/closed with the server on demand, with an idle timeout for cleanup
const lsp = createLspClient({ /* ... */ })
lsp.getState() // 'idle'
await lsp.start()
lsp.getState() // 'running'
// Use lsp.definition, lsp.references, etc.
await lsp.stop()
lsp.getState() // 'dead'- Node.js >= 18.0.0
- TypeScript >= 5.7.0
MIT