Expand lint tables && make clippy happy š
This PR expands the lint tables on `./Cargo.toml` and thereby makes `cargo clippy` exit successfully! šFixes#15918
## How?
In the beginning there are some warnings for rustc.
Next, and most importantly, there is the clippy lint table. There are a few sections in there.
First there are the lint groups.
Second there are all lints which are permanently allowed with the reasoning why they are allowed.
Third there is a huge list of temporarily allowed lints. They should be removed in the mid-term, but incur a substantial amount of work, therefore they are allowed for now and can be worked on bit by bit.
Fourth there are all lints which should warn.
Additionally there are a few allow statements in the code for lints which should be permanently allowed in this specific place, but not in the whole code base.
## Follow up work
- [ ] Run clippy in CI
- [ ] Remove tidy test (at least `@Veykril` wrote this in #15017)
- [ ] Work on temporarily allowed lints
`cargo clippy --fix`
This PR is the result of running `cargo clippy --fix && cargo fmt` in the root of the repository. I did not manually review all the changes, but just skimmed through a few of them. The tests still pass, so it seems fine.
Add a new config to allow renaming of non-local defs
With #15656 we started disallowing renaming of non-local items. Although this makes sense there are some false positives that impacted users' workflows. So this config aims to mitigate this by giving users the liberty to disable this feature.
The reason why this is a draft is that I saw one of the tests fail and I am not sure if the "got" result even syntactically makes sense
Test case is :
```rust
check(
"Baz",
r#"
//- /lib.rs crate:lib new_source_root:library
pub struct S;
//- /main.rs crate:main deps:lib new_source_root:local
use lib::S$0;
"#,
"use lib::Baz;"
);
```
```
Left:
use lib::Baz;
Right:
use lib::Baz;Baz
Diff:
use lib::Baz;Baz
```
The first one succeeds because the functionality is already implemented.
The second one fails and represents the functionality to be implemented
in this PR.
With #15656 we started disallowing renaming of non-local items.
Although this makes sense there are some false positives that
impacted users' workflows. So this config aims to mitigate this
by giving users the liberty to disable this feature.
internal: Only compare relevant parts in `ide::{runnables,inlay_hints}` tests
This PR limits the data being compared. Therefore the tests should be more readable, as well as being more robust to changes to the data structure.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/14268.
internal: Move query limits to the caller
Prior we calculated up to `limit` entries from a query, then filtered from that leaving us with less entries than the limit in some cases (which might give odd completion behavior due to items disappearing). This changes it so we filter before checking the limit.
feat: resolve inherent and implemented associated items in docs
This partially fixes#9694.
Supported:
- Trait methods and constants.
* Due to resolution differences pointed out during the review of the PR, trait associated types are _not_ supported.
- Inherent methods, constants and associated types.
* Inherent associated types are a [nightly feature](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/8995), and are supported with no additional work in this PR.
Screenshot of VS Code running with the change:
<img width="513" alt="image" src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/7189784/c37ed8b7-b572-4684-8e81-2a817b0027c4">
You can see that the items are resolved (excl. trait associated types) since they are semantically highlighted in the doc comment.
SymbolInformation::kind is finer-grained than the SCIP symbol suffix.
This also fixes a bug where all type aliases where treated like type
parameters.
```
trait SomeTrait {
type AssociatedType; // ā this is SomeTrait#[AssociatedType]
}
type MyTypeAlias = u8; // ā this used to be [MyTypeAlias]
// and now is MyTypeAlias#
```
To build the SymbolInformation::signature_documentation we need access
to the ālabelā when building the TokenStaticData, preferably without
any markdown markup.
Therefore this refactors ide::hover::render::definition and its helper
functions to give easier access to the label alone.
For local variables, this gets the moniker from the enclosing
definition and stores it into the TokenStaticData.
Then it builds the scip symbol for that moniker when building the
SymbolInformation.
Complete exported macros in `#[macro_use($0)]`
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15657.
Originally added a test case for incomplete input:
```rust
#[test]
fn completes_incomplete_syntax() {
check(
r#"
//- /dep.rs crate:dep
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! foo {
() => {};
}
//- /main.rs crate:main deps:dep
#[macro_use($0
extern crate dep;
"#,
expect![[r#"
ma foo
"#]],
)
}
```
but couldn't make it pass and removed it š Our current recovering logic doesn't work for token trees and for this code:
```rust
#[macro_use(
extern crate lazy_static;
fn main() {}
```
we ended up with this syntax tree:
```
SOURCE_FILE@0..53
ATTR@0..52
POUND@0..1 "#"
L_BRACK@1..2 "["
META@2..52
PATH@2..11
PATH_SEGMENT@2..11
NAME_REF@2..11
IDENT@2..11 "macro_use"
TOKEN_TREE@11..52
L_PAREN@11..12 "("
WHITESPACE@12..13 "\n"
EXTERN_KW@13..19 "extern"
WHITESPACE@19..20 " "
CRATE_KW@20..25 "crate"
WHITESPACE@25..26 " "
IDENT@26..37 "lazy_static"
SEMICOLON@37..38 ";"
WHITESPACE@38..40 "\n\n"
FN_KW@40..42 "fn"
WHITESPACE@42..43 " "
IDENT@43..47 "main"
TOKEN_TREE@47..49
L_PAREN@47..48 "("
R_PAREN@48..49 ")"
WHITESPACE@49..50 " "
TOKEN_TREE@50..52
L_CURLY@50..51 "{"
R_CURLY@51..52 "}"
WHITESPACE@52..53 "\n"
```
Maybe we can try to parse the token tree in `crates/ide-completion/src/context/analysis.rs` but I'm not sure what's the best way forward.
fix: Update metavariable expression implementation
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/16154
This duplicates behavior of that before and after PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117050 based on the toolchain version. There are some 1.76 nightlies that are still broken (any before that PR basically) but fetching and storing the commit makes little sense to me (opposed to the toolchain version).
minor: Use reserve when removing markdown from text
After markdown syntax removal the length of the text is roughly the same so we can reserve memory beforehand
TokenMap -> SpanMap rewrite
Opening early so I can have an overview over the full diff more easily, still very unfinished and lots of work to be done.
The gist of what this PR does is move away from assigning IDs to tokens in arguments and expansions and instead gives the subtrees the text ranges they are sourced from (made relative to some item for incrementality). This means we now only have a single map per expension, opposed to map for expansion and arguments.
A few of the things that are not done yet (in arbitrary order):
- [x] generally clean up the current mess
- [x] proc-macros, have been completely ignored so far
- [x] syntax fixups, has been commented out for the time being needs to be rewritten on top of some marker SyntaxContextId
- [x] macro invocation syntax contexts are not properly passed around yet, so $crate hygiene does not work in all cases (but most)
- [x] builtin macros do not set spans properly, $crate basically does not work with them rn (which we use)
~~- [ ] remove all uses of dummy spans (or if that does not work, change the dummy entries for dummy spans so that tests will not silently pass due to havin a file id for the dummy file)~~
- [x] de-queryfy `macro_expand`, the sole caller of it is `parse_macro_expansion`, and both of these are lru-cached with the same limit so having it be a query is pointless
- [x] docs and more docs
- [x] fix eager macro spans and other stuff
- [x] simplify include! handling
- [x] Figure out how to undo the sudden `()` expression wrapping in expansions / alternatively prioritize getting invisible delimiters working again
- [x] Simplify InFile stuff and HirFIleId extensions
~~- [ ] span crate containing all the file ids, span stuff, ast ids. Then remove the dependency injection generics from tt and mbe~~
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/10300
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15685
Resolve inlay hint data
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/13962
Support https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#inlayHint_resolve better, by omitting all inlay hint fields specified in the client hint resolve capabilities.
Current list of all capabilities possible to resolve later:
```
"textEdits"
"tooltip"
"label.tooltip"
"label.location"
"label.command"
```
and every one specified in the client capabilities is now resolved by r-a, being omitted in the initial response.
--------------
When editing `inlay_hints.rs` file around line `457` with no resolve capabilities, I get
<details>
<summary>resolved json, 10803 characters</summary>
```json
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":55,"result":[{"position":{"line":477,"character":1},"label":[{"value":"fn inlay_hints","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/ide/src/inlay_hints.rs","range":{"start":{"line":445,"character":14},"end":{"line":445,"character":25}}}}],"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":451,"character":10},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"ProfileSpan","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/profile/src/hprof.rs","range":{"start":{"line":85,"character":11},"end":{"line":85,"character":22}}}},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":451,"character":27},"label":[{"value":"label:","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/profile/src/hprof.rs","range":{"start":{"line":60,"character":12},"end":{"line":60,"character":17}}}}],"kind":2,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":true,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":452,"character":12},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"Semantics","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/hir/src/semantics.rs","range":{"start":{"line":108,"character":11},"end":{"line":108,"character":20}}}},{"value":"<'_, "},{"value":"RootDatabase","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/ide-db/src/lib.rs","range":{"start":{"line":75,"character":11},"end":{"line":75,"character":23}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":453,"character":12},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SourceFile","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/ast/generated/nodes.rs","range":{"start":{"line":223,"character":11},"end":{"line":223,"character":21}}}},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":454,"character":12},"label":[{"value":": &"},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":456,"character":12},"label":": i32","kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":458,"character":15},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"Vec","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.rustup/toolchains/stable-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/alloc/src/vec/mod.rs","range":{"start":{"line":395,"character":11},"end":{"line":395,"character":14}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"InlayHint","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/ide/src/inlay_hints.rs","range":{"start":{"line":149,"character":11},"end":{"line":149,"character":20}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":460,"character":21},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SemanticsScope","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/hir/src/semantics.rs","range":{"start":{"line":1651,"character":11},"end":{"line":1651,"character":25}}}},{"value":"<'_>"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":460,"character":36},"label":[{"value":"node:","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/hir/src/semantics.rs","range":{"start":{"line":482,"character":24},"end":{"line":482,"character":28}}}}],"kind":2,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":true,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":461,"character":23},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"FamousDefs","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/ide-db/src/famous_defs.rs","range":{"start":{"line":20,"character":11},"end":{"line":20,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<'_, '_>"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":463,"character":17},"label":[{"value":": impl FnMut("},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">)"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":463,"character":25},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":463,"character":33},"label":[{"value":"hints:","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/ide/src/inlay_hints.rs","range":{"start":{"line":480,"character":4},"end":{"line":480,"character":9}}}}],"kind":2,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":true,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":465,"character":22},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"TextRange","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/text-size-1.1.0/src/range.rs","range":{"start":{"line":14,"character":11},"end":{"line":14,"character":20}}}},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":467,"character":35},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":469,"character":92},"label":[{"value":"impl "},{"value":"Iterator","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.rustup/toolchains/stable-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/iter/traits/iterator.rs","range":{"start":{"line":72,"character":10},"end":{"line":72,"character":18}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"Item","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.rustup/toolchains/stable-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/iter/traits/iterator.rs","range":{"start":{"line":76,"character":9},"end":{"line":76,"character":13}}}},{"value":" = "},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">>"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":468,"character":34},"label":[{"value":"impl "},{"value":"Iterator","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.rustup/toolchains/stable-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/iter/traits/iterator.rs","range":{"start":{"line":72,"character":10},"end":{"line":72,"character":18}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"Item","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.rustup/toolchains/stable-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/core/src/iter/traits/iterator.rs","range":{"start":{"line":76,"character":9},"end":{"line":76,"character":13}}}},{"value":" = "},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">>"},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":467,"character":41},"label":[{"value":""},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":469,"character":40},"label":" -> bool","kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":469,"character":39},"label":[{"value":": &"},{"value":"SyntaxNode","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/rowan-0.15.11/src/api.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":11},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage","location":{"uri":"file:///Users/someonetoignore/work/rust-analyzer/crates/syntax/src/syntax_node.rs","range":{"start":{"line":15,"character":9},"end":{"line":15,"character":21}}}},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}}]}
```
</details>
for the visible editor range alone, pretty much repeated on every consequent edit.
With this patch and all inlay hint resolve capabilities enabled, for the same example I observe quite a footprint reduction:
<details>
<summary>unresolved json, 4142 characters</summary>
```json
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":49,"result":[{"position":{"line":477,"character":1},"label":[{"value":"fn inlay_hints"}],"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":451,"character":10},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"ProfileSpan"},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":451,"character":27},"label":[{"value":"label:"}],"kind":2,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":true,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":452,"character":12},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"Semantics"},{"value":"<'_, "},{"value":"RootDatabase"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":453,"character":12},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SourceFile"},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":454,"character":12},"label":[{"value":": &"},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":456,"character":12},"label":": i32","kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":458,"character":15},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"Vec"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"InlayHint"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":460,"character":21},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SemanticsScope"},{"value":"<'_>"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":460,"character":36},"label":[{"value":"node:"}],"kind":2,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":true,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":461,"character":23},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"FamousDefs"},{"value":"<'_, '_>"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":463,"character":17},"label":[{"value":": impl FnMut("},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">)"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":463,"character":25},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":463,"character":33},"label":[{"value":"hints:"}],"kind":2,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":true,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":465,"character":22},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"TextRange"},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":467,"character":35},"label":[{"value":": "},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":469,"character":92},"label":[{"value":"impl "},{"value":"Iterator"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"Item"},{"value":" = "},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">>"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":468,"character":34},"label":[{"value":"impl "},{"value":"Iterator"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"Item"},{"value":" = "},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">>"},{"value":""}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":467,"character":41},"label":[{"value":""},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":true,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":469,"character":40},"label":" -> bool","kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}},{"position":{"line":469,"character":39},"label":[{"value":": &"},{"value":"SyntaxNode"},{"value":"<"},{"value":"RustLanguage"},{"value":">"}],"kind":1,"paddingLeft":false,"paddingRight":false,"data":{"file_id":0}}]}
```
</details>
with all unresolved parts needing only for navigation, hover or applying the hint edit ā dynamic parts that are made after mouse hover or similar events, that resolve the hint data.
On type format '(', by adding closing ')' automatically
If I understand right, `()` can surround pretty much the same `{}` can, so add another on type formatting pair for convenience: sometimes it's not that pleasant to write parenthesis in `Some(2).map(|i| (i, i+1))` cases and I would prefer r-a to do that for me.
One note: currently, b06503b6ec/crates/rust-analyzer/src/handlers/request.rs (L357) fires always.
Should we remove the assertion entirely now, since apparently things work in release despite that check?
Fix signature help of methods from macros
Currently the receiver type is copied from AST instead re-formatting through `HirDisplay`. Macro generated functions seem to have no spaces and their signature help are rendered like `fn foo(&'amutself)` instead of `fn foo(&'a mut self)`.
Support doc links that resolve to fields
Fixes#15331
Also removes `Resolver::resolve_module_path_in_trait_assoc_items()` and reimplements it in hir with other `Resolver` methods to decouple things a bit.
Handle `#[cfg]`s on generic parameters
Records attributes on generic parameters in the item tree and filters out generic parameters disabled by `#[cfg]`s in `generic_params_query`.
Closes#11756
SCIP requires symbols to be unique, but multiple functions may have a
parameter with the same name. Qualify parameters according to the
containing function.
Added remove unused imports assist
This resolves the most important part of #5131. I needed to make a couple of cosmetic changes to the search infrastructure to do this.
A few open questions:
* Should imports that don't resolve to anything be considered unused? I figured probably not, but it would be a trivial change to make if we want it.
* Is there a cleaner way to make the edits to the use list?
* Is there a cleaner way to get the list of uses that intersect the current selection?
* Is the performance acceptable? When testing this on itself, it takes a good couple seconds to perform the assist.
* Is there a way to hide the rustc diagnostics that overlap with this functionality?
internal: Defer structured snippet rendering to allow escaping snippet bits
Since we know exactly where snippets are, we can transparently escape snippet bits to the exact text edits that need it, and not have to do it for anything other text edits.
Also will eventually fix#11006 once all assists are migrated. This comes as a side-effect of text edits that don't have snippets get marked as having no insert formatting at all.
internal: Format let-else
As nightly finally got support for it I went ahead and formatted r-a with the latest nightly, then with the latest stable (in case other stuff changed)
Fix runnable detection for `#[tokio::test]`
fix#15141
It is hacky, and it wouldn't work for e.g. this case:
```Rust
use ::core::prelude;
#[prelude::v1::test]
fn foo() {
}
```
But it works for the tokio case. We should use the name resolution here somehow, and after that we should probably also get rid of the ast based `test_related_attribute` function.
internal: add `library` fixture meta
Currently, there is no way to specify `CrateOrigin` of a file fixture ([this] might be a bug?). This PR adds `library` meta to explicitly specify the fixture to be `CrateOrigin::Library` and also makes sure crates that belong to a library source root are set `CrateOrigin::Library`.
(`library` isn't really the best name. It essentially means that the crate is outside workspace but `non_workspace_member` feels a bit too long. Suggestions for the better name would be appreciated)
Additionally:
- documents the fixture meta syntax as thoroughly as possible
- refactors relevant code
[this]: 4b06d3c595/crates/base-db/src/fixture.rs (L450)
internal: Add run-tests command
This command is similar to `cargo test` except that it uses r-a to run tests instead of compiling and running them with rustc. This is slower than `cargo test` and it is only useful for me to see a bird view of what needs to be fixed. The current output is:
```
48 passed, 5028 failed, 2 ignored
All tests 174.74s, 648ginstr
```
48 is very low, but higher than what I originally thought.
Now that there is some passing tests, I can show the plan:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/45197576/76d7d777-1843-4ca4-b7fe-e463bdade6cb
That is, at the end, I want to be able to immediately re run every test after every change. (0.5s is not really immediate, but it's not finished yet, and it is way better than 8s that running a typical test in r-a will take on my system)
Added a test near positive extermes and two test near negative
extermes as well one for 0.
Added a test using the `as` cast and one with comparison with 0.
fix: Fix nav target calculation discarding file ids from differing macro upmapping
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/14792
Turns out there was the assumption that upmapping from a macro will always end in the same root file, which is no longer the case thanks to `include!`
Add signature help for tuple patterns and expressions
~~These are somewhat wonky since their signature changes as you type depending on context but they help out nevertheless.~~ should be less wonky now with added parser and lowering recoveries
fix: Don't duplicate sysroot crates in rustc workspace
Since we handle `library` as the sysroot source directly in the rustc workspace, we now duplicate the crates there, once as sysroot and once as just plain workspace crate. This causes a variety of issues for `vec!` macros and similar that emit `$crate` tokens across crates.
Prioritize threads affected by user typing
To this end Iāve introduced a new custom thread pool type which can spawn threads using each QoS class. This way we can run latency-sensitive requests under one QoS class and everything else under another QoS class. The implementation is very similar to that of the `threadpool` crate (which is currently used by rust-analyzer) but with unused functionality stripped out.
Iāll have to rebase on master once #14859 is merged but I think everything else is alright :D
This code replaces the thread pool implementation we were using
previously (from the `threadpool` crate). By making the thread pool
aware of QoS, each job spawned on the thread pool can have a different
QoS class.
This commit also replaces every QoS class used previously with Default
as a temporary measure so that each usage can be chosen deliberately.
Specify thread types using Quality of Service API
<details>
<summary>Some background (in case you havenāt heard of QoS before)</summary>
Heterogenous multi-core CPUs are increasingly found in laptops and desktops (e.g. Alder Lake, Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3, M1). To maximize efficiency on this kind of hardware, it is important to provide the operating system with more information so threads can be scheduled on different core types appropriately.
The approach that XNU (the kernel of macOS, iOS, etc) and Windows have taken is to provide a high-level semantic API ā quality of service, or QoS ā which informs the OS of the programās intent. For instance, you might specify that a thread is running a render loop for a game. This makes the OS provide this thread with as large a share of the systemās resources as possible. Specifying a thread is running an unimportant background task, on the other hand, is cause for it to be scheduled exclusively on high-efficiency cores instead of high-performance cores.
QoS APIs allows for easy configuration of many different parameters at once; for instance, setting QoS on XNU affects scheduling, timer latency, I/O priorities, and of course what core type the thread in question should run on. I donāt know any details on how QoS works on Windows, but I would guess itās similar.
Hypothetically, taking advantage of these APIs would improve power consumption, thermals, battery life if applicable, etc.
</details>
# Relevance to rust-analyzer
From what I can tell the philosophy behind both the XNU and Windows QoS APIs is that _user interfaces should never stutter under any circumstances._ You can see this in the array of QoS classes which are available: the highest QoS class in both APIs is one intended explicitly for UI render loops.
Imagine rust-analyzer is performing CPU-intensive background work ā maybe you just invoked Find Usages on `usize` or opened a large project ā in this scenario the editorās render loop should absolutely get higher priority than rust-analyzer, no matter what. You could view it in terms of ārealtime-nessā: flight control software is hard realtime, audio software is soft realtime, GUIs are softer realtime, and rust-analyzer is not realtime at all. Of course, maximizing responsiveness is important, but respecting the rest of the system is more important.
# Implementation
Iāve tried my best to unify thread creation in `stdx`, where the new API Iāve introduced _requires_ specifying a QoS class. Different points along the performance/efficiency curve can make a great difference; the M1ās e-cores use around three times less power than the p-cores, so putting in this effort is worthwhile IMO.
Itās worth mentioning that Linux does not [yet](https://youtu.be/RfgPWpTwTQo) have a QoS API. Maybe translating QoS into regular thread priorities would be acceptable? From what I can tell the only scheduling-related code in rust-analyzer is Windows-specific, so ignoring QoS entirely on Linux shouldnāt cause any new issues. Also, I havenāt implemented support for the Windows QoS APIs because I donāt have a Windows machine to test on, and because Iām completely unfamiliar with Windows APIs :)
I noticed that rust-analyzer handles some requests on the main thread (using `.on_sync()`) and others on a threadpool (using `.on()`). I think it would make sense to run the main thread at the User Initiated QoS and the threadpool at Utility, but only if all requests that are caused by typing use `.on_sync()` and all that donāt use `.on()`. I donāt understand how the `.on_sync()`/`.on()` split thatās currently present was chosen, so Iāve let this code be for the moment. Let me know if changing this to what I proposed makes any sense.
To avoid having to change everything back in case Iāve misunderstood something, Iāve left all threads at the Utility QoS for now. Of course, this isnāt what I hope the code will look like in the end, but I figured I have to start somewhere :P
# References
<ul>
<li><a href="https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/Performance/Conceptual/power_efficiency_guidelines_osx/PrioritizeWorkAtTheTaskLevel.html">Apple documentation related to QoS</a></li>
<li><a href="67e155c940/include/pthread/qos.h">pthread API for setting QoS on XNU</a></li>
<li><a href="https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/procthread/quality-of-service">Windowsās QoS classes</a></li>
<li>
<details>
<summary>Full documentation of XNU QoS classes. This documentation is only available as a huge not-very-readable comment in a header file, so Iāve reformatted it and put it here for reference.</summary>
<ul>
<li><p><strong><code>QOS_CLASS_USER_INTERACTIVE</code>: A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread is interactive with the user.</strong></p><p>Such work is requested to run at high priority relative to other work on the system. Specifying this QOS class is a request to run with nearly all available system CPU and I/O bandwidth even under contention. This is not an energy-efficient QOS class to use for large tasks. The use of this QOS class should be limited to critical interaction with the user such as handling events on the main event loop, view drawing, animation, etc.</p></li>
<li><p><strong><code>QOS_CLASS_USER_INITIATED</code>: A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread was initiated by the user and that the user is likely waiting for the results.</strong></p><p>Such work is requested to run at a priority below critical user-interactive work, but relatively higher than other work on the system. This is not an energy-efficient QOS class to use for large tasks. Its use should be limited to operations of short enough duration that the user is unlikely to switch tasks while waiting for the results. Typical user-initiated work will have progress indicated by the display of placeholder content or modal user interface.</p></li>
<li><p><strong><code>QOS_CLASS_DEFAULT</code>: A default QOS class used by the system in cases where more specific QOS class information is not available.</strong></p><p>Such work is requested to run at a priority below critical user-interactive and user-initiated work, but relatively higher than utility and background tasks. Threads created by <code>pthread_create()</code> without an attribute specifying a QOS class will default to <code>QOS_CLASS_DEFAULT</code>. This QOS class value is not intended to be used as a work classification, it should only be set when propagating or restoring QOS class values provided by the system.</p></li>
<li><p><strong><code>QOS_CLASS_UTILITY</code>: A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread may or may not be initiated by the user and that the user is unlikely to be immediately waiting for the results.</strong></p><p>Such work is requested to run at a priority below critical user-interactive and user-initiated work, but relatively higher than low-level system maintenance tasks. The use of this QOS class indicates the work should be run in an energy and thermally-efficient manner. The progress of utility work may or may not be indicated to the user, but the effect of such work is user-visible.</p></li>
<li><p><strong><code>QOS_CLASS_BACKGROUND</code>: A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread was not initiated by the user and that the user may be unaware of the results.</strong></p><p>Such work is requested to run at a priority below other work. The use of this QOS class indicates the work should be run in the most energy and thermally-efficient manner.</p></li>
<li><p><strong><code>QOS_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED</code>: A QOS class value which indicates the absence or removal of QOS class information.</strong></p><p>As an API return value, may indicate that threads or pthread attributes were configured with legacy API incompatible or in conflict with the QOS class system.</p></li>
</ul>
</details>
</li>
</ul>