An adorable little framework and command line tool for interacting with SourceKit.
An adorable little framework and command line tool for interacting with SourceKit.
SourceKitten links and communicates with sourcekitd.framework
to parse the Swift AST, extract comment docs for Swift or Objective-C projects, get syntax data for a Swift file and lots more!
Building SourceKitten requires Xcode 13.3 or later or a Swift 5.6
toolchain or later with the Swift Package Manager.
SourceKitten typically supports previous versions of SourceKit.
Run brew install sourcekitten
.
Run swift build
in the root directory of this project.
Add the following to your WORKSPACE
file:
SOURCEKITTEN_VERSION = "SOME_VERSION"
SOURCEKITTEN_SHA = "SOME_SHA"
http_archive(
name = "com_github_jpsim_sourcekitten",
url = "https://github.com/jpsim/SourceKitten/archive/refs/tags/%s.tar.gz" % (SOURCEKITTEN_VERSION),
sha256 = SOURCEKITTEN_SHA,
strip_prefix = "SourceKitten-%s" % SOURCEKITTEN_VERSION
)
Then run: bazel run @com_github_jpsim_sourcekitten//:sourcekitten -- -h
Run make install
in the root directory of this project.
Download and open SourceKitten.pkg from the releases tab.
Once SourceKitten is installed, you may use it from the command line.
$ sourcekitten help
OVERVIEW: An adorable little command line tool for interacting with SourceKit
USAGE: sourcekitten <subcommand>
OPTIONS:
--version Show the version.
-h, --help Show help information.
SUBCOMMANDS:
complete Generate code completion options
doc Print Swift or Objective-C docs as JSON
format Format Swift file
index Index Swift file and print as JSON
module-info Obtain information about a Swift module and print as JSON
request Run a raw SourceKit request
structure Print Swift structure information as JSON
syntax Print Swift syntax information as JSON
version Display the current version of SourceKitten
See 'sourcekitten help <subcommand>' for detailed help.
SourceKitten searches for SourceKit in the following order:
$XCODE_DEFAULT_TOOLCHAIN_OVERRIDE
$TOOLCHAIN_DIR
xcrun -find swift
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain
/Applications/Xcode-beta.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain
~/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain
~/Applications/Xcode-beta.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain
On Linux, SourceKit is expected to be located in
/usr/lib/libsourcekitdInProc.so
or specified by the LINUX_SOURCEKIT_LIB_PATH
environment variable.
Running sourcekitten complete --file file.swift --offset 123
or
sourcekitten complete --text "0." --offset 2
will print out code completion
options for the offset in the file/text provided:
[{
"descriptionKey" : "advancedBy(n: Distance)",
"associatedUSRs" : "s:FSi10advancedByFSiFSiSi s:FPSs21RandomAccessIndexType10advancedByuRq_S__Fq_Fqq_Ss16ForwardIndexType8Distanceq_ s:FPSs16ForwardIndexType10advancedByuRq_S__Fq_Fqq_S_8Distanceq_ s:FPSs10Strideable10advancedByuRq_S__Fq_Fqq_S_6Strideq_ s:FPSs11_Strideable10advancedByuRq_S__Fq_Fqq_S_6Strideq_",
"kind" : "source.lang.swift.decl.function.method.instance",
"sourcetext" : "advancedBy(<#T##n: Distance##Distance#>)",
"context" : "source.codecompletion.context.thisclass",
"typeName" : "Int",
"moduleName" : "Swift",
"name" : "advancedBy(n: Distance)"
},
{
"descriptionKey" : "advancedBy(n: Self.Distance, limit: Self)",
"associatedUSRs" : "s:FeRq_Ss21RandomAccessIndexType_SsS_10advancedByuRq_S__Fq_FTqq_Ss16ForwardIndexType8Distance5limitq__q_",
"kind" : "source.lang.swift.decl.function.method.instance",
"sourcetext" : "advancedBy(<#T##n: Self.Distance##Self.Distance#>, limit: <#T##Self#>)",
"context" : "source.codecompletion.context.superclass",
"typeName" : "Self",
"moduleName" : "Swift",
"name" : "advancedBy(n: Self.Distance, limit: Self)"
},
...
]
To use the iOS SDK, pass -sdk
and -target
arguments preceded by --
:
sourcekitten complete --text "import UIKit ; UIColor." --offset 22 -- -target arm64-apple-ios9.0 -sdk /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS9.0.sdk
Running sourcekitten doc
will pass all arguments after what is parsed to
xcodebuild
(or directly to the compiler, SourceKit/clang, in the
--single-file
mode).
sourcekitten doc -- -workspace SourceKitten.xcworkspace -scheme SourceKittenFramework
sourcekitten doc --single-file file.swift -- -j4 file.swift
sourcekitten doc --module-name Alamofire -- -project Alamofire.xcodeproj
sourcekitten doc -- -workspace Haneke.xcworkspace -scheme Haneke
sourcekitten doc --objc Realm/Realm.h -- -x objective-c -isysroot $(xcrun --show-sdk-path) -I $(pwd)
Running sourcekitten structure --file file.swift
or sourcekitten structure --text "struct A { func b() {} }"
will return a JSON array of structure information:
{
"key.substructure" : [
{
"key.kind" : "source.lang.swift.decl.struct",
"key.offset" : 0,
"key.nameoffset" : 7,
"key.namelength" : 1,
"key.bodyoffset" : 10,
"key.bodylength" : 13,
"key.length" : 24,
"key.substructure" : [
{
"key.kind" : "source.lang.swift.decl.function.method.instance",
"key.offset" : 11,
"key.nameoffset" : 16,
"key.namelength" : 3,
"key.bodyoffset" : 21,
"key.bodylength" : 0,
"key.length" : 11,
"key.substructure" : [
],
"key.name" : "b()"
}
],
"key.name" : "A"
}
],
"key.offset" : 0,
"key.diagnostic_stage" : "source.diagnostic.stage.swift.parse",
"key.length" : 24
}
Running sourcekitten syntax --file file.swift
or sourcekitten syntax --text "import Foundation // Hello World"
will return a JSON array of syntax highlighting information:
[
{
"offset" : 0,
"length" : 6,
"type" : "source.lang.swift.syntaxtype.keyword"
},
{
"offset" : 7,
"length" : 10,
"type" : "source.lang.swift.syntaxtype.identifier"
},
{
"offset" : 18,
"length" : 14,
"type" : "source.lang.swift.syntaxtype.comment"
}
]
Running sourcekitten request --yaml [FILE|TEXT]
will execute a sourcekit request with the given yaml. For example:
key.request: source.request.cursorinfo
key.sourcefile: "/tmp/foo.swift"
key.offset: 8
key.compilerargs:
- "/tmp/foo.swift"
Most of the functionality of the sourcekitten
command line tool is actually encapsulated in a framework named SourceKittenFramework.
If you’re interested in using SourceKitten as part of another tool, or perhaps extending its functionality, take a look at the SourceKittenFramework source code to see if the API fits your needs.
Note: SourceKitten is written entirely in Swift, and the SourceKittenFramework API is not designed to interface with Objective-C.
MIT licensed.