Optimize `array::IntoIter`
`.into_iter()` on arrays was slower than it needed to be (especially compared to slice iterator) since it uses `Range<usize>`, which needs to handle degenerate ranges like `10..4`.
This PR adds an internal `IndexRange` type that's like `Range<usize>` but with a safety invariant that means it doesn't need to worry about those cases -- it only handles `start <= end` -- and thus can give LLVM more information to optimize better.
I added one simple demonstration of the improvement as a codegen test.
(`vec::IntoIter` uses pointers instead of indexes, so doesn't have this problem, but that only works because its elements are boxed. `array::IntoIter` can't use pointers because that would keep it from being movable.)
std: use `sync::RwLock` for internal statics
Since `sync::RwLock` is now `const`-constructible, it can be used for internal statics, removing the need for `sys_common::StaticRwLock`. This adds some extra allocations on platforms which need to box their locks (currently SGX and some UNIX), but these will become unnecessary with the lock improvements tracked in #93740.
Improve error for when query is unsupported by crate
This is an improvement to the error message mentioned on #101666. It seems like a good idea to also add [this link to the rustc-dev-guide](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/query.html), if explaining the query system in detail is a concern here, but I'm unsure if there is any restrictions on adding links to error messages.
Distribute json doc
# Overview
We add a new component, `rust-json-docs`, to distribute the JSON version of rustdoc's output for public compiler crates (i.e. `std`, `alloc`, `proc_macro`, `core` and `test`).
As discussed in #101383, we do not bundle this up as part of the existing `rust-docs` component since `rustdoc`'s JSON format is still unstable.
# Open questions / Doubts
I tried my best, but I never touched this codebase and I couldn't find much documentation on how `dist` works - I pattern-matched existing code, which might have led to some non-sensical choices in the eyes of people more familiar with the codebase. In particular, I am not sure if my choice of adding a new config flag is appropriate or if the decision to build/not build the JSON docs is more appropriately gated by one of the existing flags.
Any suggestion is more than welcome.
Closes#101383
Add a new configuration settings to set env vars when running cargo, rustc, etc. commands: cargo.extraEnv and checkOnSave.extraEnv
It can be extremely useful to be able to set environment variables when rust-analyzer is running various cargo or rustc commands (such as `cargo check`, `cargo --print cfg` or `cargo metadata`): users may want to set custom `RUSTFLAGS`, change `PATH` to use a custom toolchain or set a different `CARGO_HOME`.
There is the existing `server.extraEnv` setting that allows env vars to be set when the rust-analyzer server is launched, but using this as the recommended mechanism to also configure cargo/rust has some drawbacks:
- It convolutes configuring the rust-analyzer server with configuring cargo/rustc (one may want to change the `PATH` for cargo/rustc without affecting the rust-analyzer server).
- The name `server.extraEnv` doesn't indicate that cargo/rustc will be affected but renaming it to `cargo.extraEnv` doesn't indicate that the rust-analyzer server would be affected.
- To make the setting useful, it needs to be dynamically reloaded without requiring that the entire extension is reloaded. It might be possible to do this, but it would require the client communicating to the server what the overwritten env vars were at first launch, which isn't easy to do.
This change adds two new configuration settings: `cargo.extraEnv` and `checkOnSave.extraEnv` that can be used to change the environment for the rust-analyzer server after launch (thus affecting any process that rust-analyzer invokes) and the `cargo check` command respectively. `cargo.extraEnv` supports dynamic changes by keeping track of the pre-change values of environment variables, thus it can undo changes made previously before applying the new configuration (and then requesting a workspace reload).
Fix add reference action on macros.
Before we were using the range of the corresponding expression node in the macro expanded file, which is obviously incorrect as we are setting the text in the original source.
For some reason, the test I added is failing and I haven't found a way to fix it. Does anyone know why `check_fix` wouldn't work with macros? Getting this error:
```text
thread 'handlers::type_mismatch::tests::test_add_reference_to_macro_call' panicked at 'no diagnostics', crates/ide-diagnostics/src/handlers/type_mismatch.rs:317:9
```
closes#13219
Use memmem when searching for usages in ide-db
We already have this dependency, so there is no reason not to use it as it is generally faster than std in our use case.
Further simplify the macros generated by `rustc_queries`
This doesn't actually move anything outside the macros, but it makes them simpler to read.
- Add a new `rustc_query_names` macro. This allows a much simpler syntax for the matchers in the macros passed to it as a callback.
- Convert `define_dep_nodes` and `alloc_once` to use `rustc_query_names`. This is possible because they only use the names
(despite the quite complicated matchers in `define_dep_nodes`, none of the other arguments are used).
- Get rid of `rustc_dep_node_append`.
r? `@cjgillot`
Refactor macro-by-example code
I had a look at the MBE code because of #7857. I found some easy readability wins, that might also _marginally_ improve perf.
Initial implementation of dyn*
This PR adds extremely basic and incomplete support for [dyn*](https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps//blog/2022/03/29/dyn-can-we-make-dyn-sized/). The goal is to get something in tree behind a flag to make collaboration easier, and also to make sure the implementation so far is not unreasonable. This PR does quite a few things:
* Introduce `dyn_star` feature flag
* Adds parsing for `dyn* Trait` types
* Defines `dyn* Trait` as a sized type
* Adds support for explicit casts, like `42usize as dyn* Debug`
* Including const evaluation of such casts
* Adds codegen for drop glue so things are cleaned up properly when a `dyn* Trait` object goes out of scope
* Adds codegen for method calls, at least for methods that take `&self`
Quite a bit is still missing, but this gives us a starting point. Note that this is never intended to become stable surface syntax for Rust, but rather `dyn*` is planned to be used as an implementation detail for async functions in dyn traits.
Joint work with `@nikomatsakis` and `@compiler-errors.`
r? `@bjorn3`
Simplify caching and storage for queries
I highly recommend reviewing commit-by-commit; each individual commit is quite small but it can be hard to see looking at the overall diff that the behavior is the same. Each commit depends on the previous.
r? `@cjgillot`
Update cargo
10 commits in 646e9a0b9ea8354cc409d05f10e8dc752c5de78e..082503982ea0fb7a8fd72210427d43a2e2128a63 2022-09-02 14:29:28 +0000 to 2022-09-13 17:49:38 +0000
- Take priority into account within the pending queue (rust-lang/cargo#11032)
- fix(add): Clarify which version the features are added for (rust-lang/cargo#11075)
- doc: clarify config-relative paths for `--config <path>` (rust-lang/cargo#11079)
- Do not add home bin path to PATH if it's already there (rust-lang/cargo#11023)
- Don't use `for` loop on an `Option` (rust-lang/cargo#11081)
- Remove dead code (rust-lang/cargo#11080)
- Change progress indicator for sparse registries (rust-lang/cargo#11068)
- chore(ci): Ensure intradoc links are valid (rust-lang/cargo#11055)
- Cache index files based on contents hash (rust-lang/cargo#11044)
- fix: specifies the max length for crate name (rust-lang/cargo#11051)
Rustdoc-Json: Don't loose subitems of foreign traits.
Previously, we'd clone the index, and extend it with foreign traits. But when doing this, traits would render their subitems without them going into the index being used in the output leading to dangling ID's.
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
Allow configuration of annotation location.
I've added the ability to configure where lens annotations render relevant to the item they describe. Previously, these would render directly above the line the item is declared on. Now, there is the ability to render these annotations above the entire item (including doc comments, and attributes).
The names of the config options are up for debate, I did what seemed best to me but if anyone has better ideas let me know.
This is my first contribution so if I've missed anything please let me know.
Here's a preview of what the new option looks like:
<img width="577" alt="Screen Shot 2022-09-11 at 10 39 51 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/33100798/189570298-b4fcbf9c-ee49-4b79-aae6-1037ae4f26af.png">
closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/13218
fixup: remove unnecessary `Option`
Fixup for #13223, two things:
- `normalize_projection_query()` (and consequently `HirDatabase::normalize_projection()`) never returns `None` (well, it used to when I first wrote it...), so just return `Ty` instead of `Option<Ty>`
- When chalk cannot normalize projection uniquely, `normalize_trait_assoc_type()` used to return `None` before #13223, but not anymore because of the first point. I restored the behavior so its callers work as before.
Restructure `find_path` into a separate functions for modules and non-module items
Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/13212
Also renames `prefer_core` imports config to `prefer_no_std` and changes the behavior of no_std path searching by preferring `core` paths `over` alloc
This PR turned into a slight rewrite, so it unfortunately does a few more things that I initially planned to (including a bug fix for enum variant paths)