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lsp-inspect

blackwell-systems
Mis à jour 5 days ago
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Testsaitesting

À propos

lsp-inspect effectue des audits complets de qualité de code en utilisant l'analyse LSP pour détecter des problèmes tels que le code mort, les bogues de concurrence et les échecs silencieux dans plus de 25 langages. Il propose des analyses par lots, des comparaisons basées sur les différences, et fournit des rapports classés par gravité avec des suggestions de correction. Utilisez cette compétence pour des revues de code automatisées approfondies et pour maintenir la qualité sur des projets entiers ou des modifications spécifiques.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add blackwell-systems/agent-lsp -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/blackwell-systems/agent-lsp
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/blackwell-systems/agent-lsp.git ~/.claude/skills/lsp-inspect

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Requires the agent-lsp MCP server.

lsp-inspect

Full code quality audit for a file, package, or directory. Combines LSP batch analysis (blast_radius) with targeted per-symbol checks and LLM-driven heuristic analysis. Produces a severity-tiered findings report with confidence tiers and fix suggestions.

When to Use

  • Auditing a package before a release or major refactor
  • Finding dead code, untested exports, and error handling gaps in unfamiliar code
  • Reviewing code quality of an external codebase for contribution opportunities
  • Pre-merge quality gate on a set of changed files
  • Batch inspection of an entire directory with ranked output
  • Comparing branch changes against main to find newly introduced issues

Input

/lsp-inspect <target> [--checks <type1>,<type2>] [--json] [--top N] [--diff]

Target can be:

  • A file path: /lsp-inspect src/handlers/auth.go
  • A directory/package: /lsp-inspect internal/runnables/
  • Multiple targets: /lsp-inspect pkg/a.go pkg/b.go

Directory detection: When target is a directory, walk all .go, .ts, .py files in it recursively. Produce a ranked report: "Top N findings sorted by severity then blast radius."

Flags:

  • --checks <type1>,<type2>: only run listed check types (default: all applicable)
  • --json: emit structured JSON instead of markdown
  • --top N: Maximum findings to report (default 20). Only applies to directory/batch mode.
  • --diff: Only inspect files changed vs main branch. Filter findings to lines within the diff ranges. Output header: "New issues introduced by this branch."

Check Taxonomy

CheckWhat it findsLSP strategy
dead_symbolExported symbol with zero referencesTier 1A: blast_radius batch; Tier 1B: find_references per-symbol
test_coverageExported symbol with no test callersTier 1A: blast_radius test_callers field
silent_failureError/exception suppressed without re-raise or loggingRead code, identify bare except:, empty if err != nil {}, swallowed returns
error_wrappingError returned/raised without contextRead code, identify return err without fmt.Errorf wrapping or raise without from
coverage_gapUnhandled input, error path, or code branchRead code, identify switch/match without default, unchecked type assertions
doc_driftDocstring/comment that doesn't match the actual signatureCompare inspect_symbol hover text against source
panic_not_recoveredUnhandled crash in a goroutine or async contextRead code, identify go func() without recover, unguarded .unwrap()
context_propagationFunction receives context but creates a fresh root for calleesRead code, identify context.Background() in functions with ctx parameter
unrecovered_concurrent_entryConcurrent entry point without recoveryRead code, identify goroutines/threads/tasks without try-catch or recover
unchecked_shared_stateType assertion or cast on concurrent data structure without safety checkRead code, identify bare .(*Type) on sync.Map, unchecked casts on ConcurrentHashMap
channel_never_closedChannel or queue created but never closed in the same packageRead code + grep, find creation sites without matching close/shutdown
shared_field_without_syncField accessed from concurrent contexts without synchronizationblast_radius (sync_guarded) + find_callers (cross_concurrent)

Execution

Step 0: Initialize and verify workspace

mcp__lsp__start_lsp(root_dir="<repo_root>")

Open one file per package being audited:

mcp__lsp__open_document(file_path="<target_file>", language_id="<lang>")

Warm-up check (mandatory): Pick one symbol you know is actively used. Call find_references on it. If it returns [], wait 3-5 seconds and retry. Do not proceed until a known-active symbol returns >= 1 reference.

Step 0.5: Diff mode file selection

When --diff is set:

  1. Run git diff --name-only main to get changed files
  2. Run git diff main to get line-level change ranges
  3. Use only changed files as inspection targets
  4. After Step 3, filter findings: keep only those whose File:Line falls within a changed line range from the diff
  5. Prepend output with: '## New issues introduced by this branch'

Step 1: Batch analysis (Tier 1A)

Call blast_radius once per file in the target:

mcp__lsp__blast_radius(changed_files=["/abs/path/file.go"], include_transitive=false)

This returns all exported symbols with:

  • non_test_callers: count of production code references
  • test_callers: count of test file references

Classify immediately:

  • non_test_callers == 0 AND test_callers == 0 -> dead symbol candidate (confidence: verified)
  • non_test_callers == 0 AND test_callers > 0 -> test-only (may be dead, confidence: suspected)
  • non_test_callers > 0 AND test_callers == 0 -> untested export (confidence: verified)

If blast_radius fails or is unavailable, fall back to Tier 1B (find_references per-symbol) for dead_symbol checks.

Step 2: Heuristic checks (LLM-driven)

Read the source code of each file (use offset/limit for files over 500 lines). Apply the following checks by reading and reasoning about the code:

silent_failure: Look for:

  • Go: if err != nil { return } (no error returned), bare _ = fn()
  • Python: bare except: or except Exception: pass
  • TypeScript: empty .catch(() => {}), try {} catch(e) {}
  • Rust: .unwrap_or_default() on fallible ops that should propagate

error_wrapping: Look for:

  • Go: return err without fmt.Errorf("context: %w", err)
  • Python: raise ValueError(str(e)) without from e
  • TypeScript: throw e without wrapping in a contextual error

coverage_gap: Look for:

  • Switch/match without exhaustive cases or default branch
  • Unchecked type assertions (v := x.(Type) vs v, ok := x.(Type))
  • Missing nil/null checks before dereference after fallible calls

doc_drift: For exported functions, compare:

  • Parameter names in docstring vs actual signature
  • Return type described in doc vs actual return
  • Use inspect_symbol hover text to cross-reference

panic_not_recovered: Look for:

  • Go: go func() { ... }() without defer recover()
  • Rust: .unwrap() or .expect() in non-test, non-main code
  • Python: bare thread creation without exception handling

context_propagation: Look for:

  • Functions that accept ctx context.Context but call context.Background() or context.TODO() internally

unrecovered_concurrent_entry: Detect concurrent entry points without recovery. Language-specific patterns (check by language family):

  • Go: go func() { ... }() where the function body has no defer func() { if r := recover() pattern. Weight: library transport code (error severity), application code with middleware protection (info).
  • Java/Kotlin/Scala: new Thread(...) or ExecutorService.submit(...) without try-catch wrapping the Runnable body, and no UncaughtExceptionHandler set on the thread.
  • C#: Task.Run(...) or new Thread(...) without try-catch in the delegate body.
  • C/C++: pthread_create or std::thread without exception handling in the thread function.
  • Rust: std::thread::spawn without catch_unwind in the closure. Also flag .unwrap() inside spawned threads (panics kill only that thread but lose the error).
  • Swift: DispatchQueue.async or Task { } without do-catch.
  • Python: threading.Thread(target=...) without try-except in the target function. asyncio.create_task() without error handling on the awaited result.
  • TypeScript/JavaScript: new Worker() without onerror or error event handler. Promise constructor without .catch() on the chain.
  • Zig: try std.Thread.spawn without error handling on the spawned function.
  • Elixir/Erlang/Gleam: Skip (actor model with supervisors; unrecovered processes are by design).
  • Lua/Bash/SQL: Skip (no concurrency primitives).

unchecked_shared_state: Detect unsafe type operations on concurrent data structures:

  • Go: sync.Map .Load(), .LoadOrStore(), or .LoadAndDelete() followed by a bare type assertion actual.(*Type) without the , ok pattern. The safe pattern is v, ok := actual.(*Type).
  • Java: ConcurrentHashMap.get() with unchecked cast and no instanceof guard.
  • C#: ConcurrentDictionary value retrieval with unchecked cast.
  • Other languages: skip (dynamic typing or type system prevents this class of bug).

channel_never_closed: Detect channels or queues that are created but never closed:

  • Go: make(chan T) or make(chan T, N) where close(channelName) does not appear in the same package. May indicate goroutine leaks (receivers block on range forever).
  • Python: queue.Queue() creation without a sentinel value pattern (queue.put(None) + if item is None: break).
  • Rust: mpsc::channel() where the sender is never dropped or explicitly closed.
  • TypeScript: new MessageChannel() or new BroadcastChannel() without .close().
  • Java: BlockingQueue creation without a poison pill or shutdown pattern.
  • Other languages: skip if no channel/queue primitives.

shared_field_without_sync: Detect struct/class fields accessed from multiple concurrent contexts without synchronization. This check composes two tools:

  1. Call blast_radius on the target file. For each symbol where sync_guarded: false (or absent), the symbol's type lacks sync primitives.
  2. For each such symbol, call find_callers with cross_concurrent: true. If concurrent_callers is non-empty, the symbol is called from a concurrent context (goroutine, thread, async task) without synchronization.
  3. Flag any symbol where: (a) it modifies state (writes to fields, not a pure read-only function), AND (b) it has concurrent callers, AND (c) its parent type is not sync-guarded.

Language-agnostic: blast_radius provides sync_guarded, find_callers provides concurrent_callers. The check logic is identical regardless of whether the concurrent boundary is a goroutine, thread, or async task.

Severity:

  • error: field written from 2+ concurrent contexts with no sync (data race)
  • warning: field written from 1 concurrent context (potential race under load)
  • info: field read-only from concurrent contexts (likely safe, but flag for review)

Step 3: Cross-check and classify

For each finding, assign:

Severity (calibrated by blast radius):

  • error: Will cause runtime failure, data loss, or resource leak, OR any finding where non_test_callers >= 10 (high blast radius amplifies severity)
  • warning: May cause confusion, maintenance burden, or subtle bugs, OR findings where non_test_callers is 3-9
  • info: Style issue or improvement opportunity, OR non_test_callers <= 2

Use the non_test_callers count from Step 1's blast_radius result as a severity multiplier. A silent failure in a function with 50 callers is error-severity; the same pattern with 2 callers is info.

Cross-file impact scoring: For every finding, look up the symbol's non_test_callers count from Step 1's blast_radius result. Use this as a severity multiplier: if non_test_callers >= 10, escalate severity by one tier (info->warning, warning->error). Document the caller count in the finding.

Confidence tiers:

  • verified: LSP-confirmed (Tier 1A/1B) or unambiguous code pattern (act immediately)
  • suspected: Heuristic match with possible false positive (pattern match, investigate first)
  • advisory: Grep-based or uncertain pattern match (style, optional)

Step 4: Output

Produce the findings report:

## Inspection Report: <target>

**Files analyzed:** N
**Checks applied:** [list]
**Findings:** E errors, W warnings, I info

### Errors

| # | Check | File:Line | Finding | Confidence | Fix |
|---|-------|-----------|---------|------------|-----|
| 1 | dead_symbol | pkg/foo.go:42 | `UnusedHelper` has 0 references (0 callers) | verified (LSP) | Remove lines 42-55 (function `UnusedHelper`) |

### Warnings

| # | Check | File:Line | Finding | Confidence | Fix |
|---|-------|-----------|---------|------------|-----|
| 1 | error_wrapping | pkg/bar.go:88 | `return err` without context wrapping (5 callers) | verified | Change `return err` to `return fmt.Errorf("funcName: %w", err)` |
| 2 | test_coverage | pkg/foo.go:15 | `ProcessInput` has 0 test callers (8 callers) | verified (LSP) | Add test for `ProcessInput` in foo_test.go |

### Info

| # | Check | File:Line | Finding | Confidence | Fix |
|---|-------|-----------|---------|------------|-----|
| 1 | doc_drift | pkg/foo.go:20 | Docstring mentions `timeout` param, signature has `deadline` (1 caller) | suspected | Update docstring parameter name from timeout to deadline |

Fix suggestions per check type:

  • dead_symbol: "Remove lines N-M (function FuncName)"
  • error_wrapping: "Change return err to return fmt.Errorf(\"funcName: %w\", err)"
  • silent_failure: "Add return fmt.Errorf(...) after the if block"
  • test_coverage: "Add test for FuncName in file_test.go"
  • coverage_gap: "Add default case to switch statement at line N"
  • doc_drift: "Update docstring parameter name from X to Y"
  • panic_not_recovered: "Add defer func() { if r := recover()... }() at goroutine start"
  • context_propagation: "Replace context.Background() with ctx parameter"

When --json is passed, emit structured JSON with the same fields.

Step 4.5: Batch ranking

When multiple files are analyzed, sort all findings by: (1) severity tier (error > warning > info), (2) blast radius (non_test_callers descending), (3) file path alphabetically. Emit only the top N findings (default 20, controlled by --top flag). Append a summary line: 'Showing N of M total findings.'

Step 5: Persist results

After producing the findings report, write a JSON file to .agent-lsp/last-inspection.json in the workspace root. The JSON schema:

{
  "target": "<original target path>",
  "timestamp": "<ISO 8601>",
  "files_analyzed": N,
  "findings": [
    {
      "severity": "error|warning|info",
      "confidence": "verified|suspected|advisory",
      "check": "<check_type>",
      "file": "<path>",
      "line": N,
      "finding": "<description>",
      "fix": "<exact fix text>",
      "blast_radius": N
    }
  ],
  "summary": {"errors": N, "warnings": N, "info": N}
}

This file is served by the inspect://last MCP resource for programmatic access.

Caveats

  1. Re-exports: Symbols in __init__.py (Python), index.ts (TypeScript), or public API surface files may appear dead locally but are consumed externally. Check __all__, barrel exports, and package-level re-exports before classifying.

  2. Registration patterns: Symbols passed as values to framework registrars (HTTP handlers, plugin hooks) show zero LSP references. Grep wiring files before confirming dead.

  3. Library public API: If the target is a library consumed by external repos, zero internal references doesn't mean dead. Use --consumer-repos or note as "library export, verify externally."

  4. Heuristic checks are advisory. Silent failure and error wrapping checks depend on LLM reasoning about intent. False positives are expected; always review before acting on findings.

  5. Large files: For files over 500 lines, read targeted sections (use offset/limit). Do not read entire large files into context.

Dépôt GitHub

blackwell-systems/agent-lsp
Chemin: skills/lsp-inspect
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agentskillsai-agentsai-toolingclaudeclaude-codecode-intelligence

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