internal: add json `tracing` Layer for profiling startup
On `buck2/integrations/rust-project`, this results in the following being printed:
```json
{"name":"discover_command","elapsed_ms":18703}
{"name":"parallel_prime_caches","elapsed_ms":0}
{"name":"vfs_load","elapsed_ms":5895}
{"name":"vfs_load","elapsed_ms":547}
{"name":"parallel_prime_caches","elapsed_ms":23}
{"name":"parallel_prime_caches","elapsed_ms":84}
{"name":"parallel_prime_caches","elapsed_ms":5819}
```
remove blank issue template
r? `@Noratrieb`
So there are currently two blank issue templates. One called "Blank Issue" and one called "Blank issue". Wildly different, of course. It seems that one is auto generated by GitHub, while the other one has an explicit template for it. This removes the explicit one so there's only one "Blank [iI]ssue" in the list. Unfortunately, the only way to test if it works is merging this and finding out, but it seems obvious that it would work.
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f802ca88-a80f-48e8-9aff-4008ec030dfa)
add caching to most type folders, rm region uniquification
Fixes the new minimization of the hang in nalgebra and nalgebra itself :3
this is a bit iffy, especially the cache in `TypeRelating`. I believe all the caches are correct, but it definitely adds some non-local complexity in places. The first commit removes region uniquification, reintroducing the ICE from https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/27. This does not affect coherence and I would like to fix this by introducing OR-region constraints
r? `@compiler-errors`
When providing a custom rustfmt command, join it with the project
root instead of the workspace root. This fixes rust-analyzer
getting the wrong invocation path in projects containing subprojects.
This makes the behaviour consistent with how a custom path provided
in rust-analyzer.procMacro.server behaves already.
Resolves issue #18222
Add `[Option<T>; N]::transpose`
This PR as a new unstable libs API, `[Option<T>; N]::transpose`, which permits going from `[Option<T>; N]` to `Option<[T; N]>`.
This new API doesn't have an ACP as it was directly asked by T-libs-api in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97601#issuecomment-2372109119:
> [..] but it'd be trivial to provide a helper method `.transpose()` that turns array-of-Option into Option-of-array (**and we think that method should exist**; it already does for array-of-MaybeUninit).
r? libs
Add `field@` and `variant@` doc-link disambiguators
I'm not sure if this is big enough to need an fcp or not, but this is something I found missing when trying to refer to a field in macro-generated docs, not knowing if a method might be defined as well. Obviously, there are definitely other uses.
In the case where it's not disambiguated, methods (and I suppose other associated items in the value namespace) still take priority, which `@jyn514` said was an oversight but I think is probably the desired behavior 99% of the time anyway - shadowing a field with an accessor method is a very common pattern. If fields and methods with the same name started conflicting, it would be a breaking change. Though, to quote them:
> jyn: maybe you can break this only if both [the method and the field] are public
> jyn: rustc has some future-incompat warning level
> jyn: that gets through -A warnings and --cap-lints from cargo
That'd be out of scope of this PR, though.
Fixes#80283
internal: remove `Default` from OpQueue
`@Wilfred` and I were talking about `OpQueue` and we identified one symptom of its (relative) weirdness is that `last_op_result` returns a `T::default()`; not `Option<&T>`, which means it's not possible to distinguish between "the `OpQueue` hasn't run yet" and "the OpQueue ran, but didn't produce a result". This branch fixes that.
fix: Fix resolution of label inside macro
When working on Something Else (TM) (I left a hint in the commits :P), I noticed to my surprise that labels inside macros are not resolved. This led to a discovery of *two* unrelated bugs, which are hereby fixed in two commits.
This fixes a bug where labels inside macros were not resolved, but more importantly this prepares us to a future where we have hygiene, and textual equivalence isn't enough to resolve identifiers.
internal: Send less data during `textDocument/completion` if possible
Similar to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/15522, stops sending extra data during `textDocument/completion` if that data was set in the client completions resolve capabilities, and sends those only during `completionItem/resolve` requests.
Currently, rust-analyzer sends back all fields (including potentially huge docs) for every completion item which might get large.
Same as the other one, this PR aims to keep the changes minimal and does not remove extra computations for such fields — instead, it just filters them out before sending to the client.
The PR omits primitive, boolean and integer, types such as `deprecated`, `preselect`, `insertTextFormat`, `insertTextMode`, etc. AND `additionalTextEdits` — this one looks very dangerous to compute for each completion item (as the spec says we ought to if there's no corresponding resolve capabilities provided) due to the diff computations and the fact that this code had been in the resolution for some time.
It would be good to resolve this lazily too, please let me know if it's ok to do.
When tested with Zed which only defines `documentation` and `additionalTextEdits` in its client completion resolve capabilities, rust-analyzer starts to send almost 3 times less characters:
Request:
```json
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":104,"method":"textDocument/completion","params":{"textDocument":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/ide/src/inlay_hints.rs"},"position":{"line":90,"character":14},"context":{"triggerKind":1}}}
```
<img width="1338" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/104f19b5-7095-4fc1-b008-5d829623b2e2">
Before: 381944 characters
[before.json](https://github.com/user-attachments/files/17092385/before.json)
After: 140503 characters
[after.json](https://github.com/user-attachments/files/17092386/after.json)
After Zed's [patch](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/18212) to enable all resolving possible: 84452 characters
[after-after.json](https://github.com/user-attachments/files/17092755/after-after.json)
fix: Ambiguity with CamelCase diagnostic messages, align with rustc warnings
Fixed diagnostic messages so they say UpperCamelCase rather than CamelCase, as it is ambiguous.
Usually I'd call it PascalCase, but in the code base it is called UpperCamelCase so I left it with that naming choice.
`rustc` says `upper camel case` also when the case is wrong
```
warning: trait `testThing` should have an upper camel case name
--> src/main.rs:5:7
|
5 | trait testThing {
| ^^^^^^^^^ help: convert the identifier to upper camel case: `TestThing`
|
= note: `#[warn(non_camel_case_types)]` on by default
```
This is in line with the UPPER_SNAKE_CASE diagnostic messages.
546339a7be/crates/hir-ty/src/diagnostics/decl_check.rs (L60)546339a7be/crates/ide-diagnostics/src/handlers/incorrect_case.rs (L535)
This will mean users opting to not activate `cfg(test)` will lose IDE experience on them, which is quite unfortunate, but this is unavoidable if we want to avoid false positives on e.g. diagnostics. The real fix is to provide IDE experience even for cfg'ed out code, but this is out of scope for this PR.
Rename object_safety
First PR here (yay!), so I read some of the getting started docs. There are a couple references to `handlers.rs`, which as far as I can tell has been refactored into `handlers/*.rs`. I made some tweaks to that in one commit. There is one fixme about a function called `to_lsp_runnable`, which I can't find anywhere at all. I can update that if I get some more info there.
Otherwise I changed references to object safety, is object safe, etc., trying to match case/style as I went. There was one case I found where there's a trait from somewhere else called `is_object_safe`, which I found defined in my cargo registry. I didn't touch that for now, just marked it with a fixme
Update `catch_unwind` doc comments for `c_unwind`
Updates `catch_unwind` doc comments to indicate that catching a foreign exception _will no longer_ be UB. Instead, there are two possible behaviors, though it is not specified which one an implementation will choose.
Nominated for t-lang to confirm that they are okay with making such a promise based on t-opsem FCP, or whether they would like to be included in the FCP.
Related: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74990, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115285, https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1226
Improve autovectorization of to_lowercase / to_uppercase functions
Refactor the code in the `convert_while_ascii` helper function to make it more suitable for auto-vectorization and also process the full ascii prefix of the string. The generic case conversion logic will only be invoked starting from the first non-ascii character.
The runtime on a microbenchmark with a small ascii-only input decreases from ~55ns to ~18ns per iteration. The new implementation also reduces the amount of unsafe code and encapsulates all unsafe inside the helper function.
Fixes#123712
Include buildfiles in VFS
We subscribe to `textDocument/didSave` for `filesToWatch`, but the VFS doesn't contain those files. Before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/18105, this would bring down the server. Now, it's only a benign error logged:
```
ERROR notification handler failed handler=textDocument/didSave error=file not found: /foo/bar/TARGETS
```
It's benign, because we will also receive a `workspace/didChangeWatchedFiles` for the file which will invalidate and load it.
Explicitly include the buildfiles in the VFS to prevent the handler from erroring.
Building before a debugging session was restarted
# Background
Resolves#17901. It adds support for rebuilding after debugging a test was restarted. This means the test doesn't have to be aborted and manually re-ran again.
# How this is tested
First, all the Visual Studio Code extensions are loaded into an Extension Host window. Then, a sample test like below was ran and restarted to see if it was correctly rebuild.
```rust
#[test]
fn test_x() {
assert_eq!("1.1.1", "1.1.0");
}
```
internal: Add `SyntaxFactory` to ease generating nodes with syntax mappings
Part of [#15710](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15710)
Instead of requiring passing a `&mut SyntaxEditor` to every make constructor to generate mappings, we instead wrap that logic in `SyntaxFactory`, and afterwards add all the mappings to the `SyntaxEditor`.
Includes an example of using `SyntaxEditor` & `SyntaxFactory` in the `extract_variable` assist.
minor: Stricter requirements for package wide flycheck
Require the existence of a target and `check_workspace` to be false to restart package-wide flycheck. Fixes#18194 , #18104
fix: Don't report a startup error when a discover command is configured
Previously, r-a would show an error if both fetch_workspaces_queue and discover_workspace_queue were empty. We're in this state at startup, so users would see an error if they'd configured
discover_workspace_config.
Instead, allow the fetch_workspaces_queue to have zero items if discover_workspace_config is set.
Whilst we're here, prefer "failed to fetch" over "failed to discover", so the error message better reflects what this function is doing.
Previously, r-a would show an error if both fetch_workspaces_queue and
discover_workspace_queue were empty. We're in this state at startup,
so users would see an error if they'd configured
discover_workspace_config.
Instead, allow the fetch_workspaces_queue to have zero items if
discover_workspace_config is set.
Whilst we're here, prefer "failed to fetch" over "failed to discover",
so the error message better reflects what this function is doing.