lsp-dead-code
À propos
La compétence lsp-dead-code identifie les exportations inutilisées dans un fichier en énumérant les symboles et en vérifiant l'absence de références dans l'espace de travail. Elle aide les développeurs à auditer le code mort, à nettoyer les API et à déterminer quelles exportations peuvent être supprimées en toute sécurité. Cette compétence nécessite le serveur MCP agent-lsp et utilise des opérations LSP telles que list_symbols et find_references.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add blackwell-systems/agent-lsp -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/blackwell-systems/agent-lspgit clone https://github.com/blackwell-systems/agent-lsp.git ~/.claude/skills/lsp-dead-codeCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Requires the agent-lsp MCP server.
lsp-dead-code
Audit an exported symbol list for zero-reference candidates. Calls
list_symbols to enumerate symbols, then checks each exported
symbol with find_references to find callers. Produces a classified report.
When to Use
Use this skill when you want to identify dead code in a file — exported symbols that are defined but never called anywhere in the workspace. Common use cases:
- Cleaning up APIs before a release
- Identifying legacy exports that can be safely removed
- Auditing a package for unused public surface area
Important: This skill surfaces candidates. Always review results manually before deleting anything. See the Caveats section below.
What counts as "exported"
| Language | Exported means... |
|---|---|
| Go | Identifier starts with an uppercase letter (e.g. MyFunc, MyType) |
| TypeScript | Has export keyword; or is a public class member (no private) |
| Python | Not prefixed with _; or explicitly listed in __all__ |
| Java/C# | Has public or protected visibility modifier |
| Rust | Has pub keyword |
Prerequisites
If LSP is not yet initialized, call mcp__lsp__start_lsp with the
workspace root first:
mcp__lsp__start_lsp({ "root_dir": "/your/workspace" })
agent-lsp supports auto-inference from file paths, so explicit start is only required when switching workspaces or on a cold session.
Step 0 — Verify indexing is complete (mandatory)
Do not skip this step. An under-indexed workspace returns [] for
symbols that ARE referenced, producing false dead-code candidates.
Pick one symbol you know is actively used (e.g. the primary constructor,
a widely-called utility function). Call find_references on it:
mcp__lsp__find_references({
"file_path": "/abs/path/to/file.go",
"line": <known-active symbol line>,
"column": <known-active symbol column>,
"include_declaration": false
})
If this returns []: the workspace is not indexed. Wait 3–5 seconds
and retry. Do not proceed until a known-active symbol returns ≥1 reference.
If it never returns results after 15 seconds, restart the LSP server with
mcp__lsp__restart_lsp_server and re-open the target file.
Step 1 — Open the file and enumerate symbols
Open the file so the language server tracks it, then fetch all symbols:
mcp__lsp__open_document({ "file_path": "/abs/path/to/file.go" })
mcp__lsp__list_symbols({ "file_path": "/abs/path/to/file.go" })
Collect the full symbol list. Filter to exported symbols only using the language-appropriate rule from the table above.
Coordinate note: list_symbols returns 1-based coordinates.
Pass selectionRange.start.line and selectionRange.start.character
directly to find_references — no conversion needed.
"no identifier found" error: This means the column points to whitespace
or a keyword rather than the identifier name. This happens with methods
whose receiver prefix shifts the name rightward (e.g. func (c *Client) MethodName
— the name starts at column 21, not column 1). Fix: grep the declaration
line for the symbol name to find its exact column:
grep -n "MethodName" file.go
# count characters to find the 1-based column of the name
Then retry find_references with the corrected column.
Step 2 — Check references for each exported symbol
For each exported symbol, call find_references with
include_declaration: false so the definition site itself is excluded
from the count. A count of 0 means no callers, not no occurrences.
mcp__lsp__find_references({
"file_path": "/abs/path/to/file.go",
"line": <selectionRange.start.line>,
"column": <selectionRange.start.character>,
"include_declaration": false
})
Record the result for each symbol:
{ symbol_name, kind, line, reference_count, locations[] }
Batching note: For files with many exported symbols (>20), process in batches of 5–10 to avoid overwhelming the LSP server.
Zero-reference cross-check (required before classifying as dead):
When find_references returns [] for a symbol that looks foundational
(a handler, a constructor, a type used as a field), do not trust LSP alone.
LSP can miss references made through value-passing, interface satisfaction,
or function registration patterns (e.g. server.AddResource(HandleFoo)).
Before classifying as dead, run a text search in the primary wiring files:
grep -r "SymbolName" main.go server.go cmd/ internal/
If grep finds the name in a registration or assignment context, the symbol is active — LSP just couldn't resolve the indirect reference. Update your classification accordingly.
Step 3 — Classify and report
Classify each exported symbol by reference count:
- Zero references (LSP + grep) — confirmed dead candidate. Flag with WARNING.
- Zero LSP, found by grep — active via registration/value pattern. Mark as ACTIVE.
- 1–2 references — review manually. May be test-only usage.
- 3+ references — active symbol. Not dead code.
For test-only references: if all locations are in _test.go files (Go) or
files named *.test.* / *.spec.*, mark the symbol as "test-only" in
the report rather than "zero-reference".
Produce the Dead Code Report using the format in references/patterns.md.
Caveats
The following cases produce zero LSP references even though the symbol IS used at runtime. Do not delete any zero-reference candidate without manual review:
-
Incomplete indexing.
find_referencesonly searches files open or indexed by the language server. If the workspace is partially indexed, results may be incomplete. The Step 0 warm-up check catches this. -
Registration patterns. Symbols passed as values to registration functions (e.g.
server.AddTool(HandleFoo),http.HandleFunc("/", handler)) appear as zero LSP references from the definition site because gopls tracks the call to the registrar, not the handler name. Always grep wiring files for zero-reference handlers before classifying as dead. -
Reflection and dynamic dispatch. Symbols used via reflection (
reflect.TypeOfin Go,Class.forNamein Java) or dynamic dispatch have no static call sites visible to the LSP. -
//go:linknameand assembly. Go symbols linked via//go:linknameor referenced from assembly files will show zero LSP references. -
Library public API. Exported symbols called from external packages not present in the workspace will show zero references even if consumers exist.
-
Declaration excluded from count. The definition site is not counted (
include_declaration: false). A count of 0 means no callers found, not that the symbol never appears in the source tree. -
Always review before deleting. Zero LSP references is a signal to investigate, not a guarantee the symbol is unused.
Step 4 — Next steps
After generating the report:
-
For each zero-reference symbol (confirmed by grep): Run
lsp-impacton the symbol to confirm. Iflsp-impactalso finds zero references, it is safe to consider for removal. Still check the Caveats section above. -
For symbols with only test-file references: Mark as "test-only" in the report. These may be candidates for removal if the tests themselves are redundant, but should not be deleted without reviewing whether the tests serve a documentation or contract purpose.
-
For symbols with 1–2 references in production code: These are likely active but lightly used. Do not remove without checking whether they are part of a committed public API.
Step 5 — Optional cleanup with safe_delete_symbol
After reviewing the dead code report and confirming candidates with the user,
you may offer to remove confirmed zero-reference symbols using safe_delete_symbol:
mcp__lsp__safe_delete_symbol({
"file_path": "/abs/path/to/file.go",
"symbol_path": "DeadFunction"
})
This tool performs its own reference check before deleting. If any references exist (even ones missed in the initial scan), the deletion is refused.
Requirements before using this step:
- The user has explicitly confirmed they want the symbol removed.
- The symbol was classified as a confirmed dead candidate (zero LSP + zero grep references).
- You have reviewed the Caveats section above and communicated relevant risks.
Do NOT auto-delete symbols without user confirmation. Present the dead code
report first, let the user select which symbols to remove, then execute
safe_delete_symbol for each approved removal.
Dépôt GitHub
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