Configuration

Clangd has a bunch of command-line options that can change its behaviour in certain situations. This page aims to define those configuration knobs.

Those command line arguments needs to be specified in an editor-specific way. You can find some editor specific instructions in here.

–query-driver

Clangd makes use of clang behind the scenes, so it might fail to detect your standard library or built-in headers if your project is making use of a custom toolchain. That is quite common in hardware-related projects, especially for the ones making use of gcc (e.g. ARM’s arm-none-eabi-gcc).

You can specify your driver as a list of globs or full paths, then clangd will execute drivers and fetch necessary include paths to compile your code.

For example if you have your compilers at:
  • /path/to/my-custom/toolchain1/arm-none-eabi-gcc,
  • /path/to/my-custom/toolchain2/arm-none-eabi-g++,
  • /path/to/my-custom2/toolchain/arm-none-eabi-g++,

you can provide clangd with –query-driver=/path/to/my-custom/**/arm-none-eabi* to enable execution of any binary that has a name starting with arm-none-eabi and under /path/to/my-custom/. This won’t allow execution of the last compiler.

Full list of flags

You can find out about the rest of the flags using clangd –help.