8796: internal: rewrite `#[derive]` removal to be based on AST (take 2) r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Second attempt of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/8443, this uses syntactical attribute offsets in `hir_expand`, and changes `attr.rs` to make those easy to derive.
This will make it easy to add similar attribute removal for attribute macros, unblocking them.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8800: feat: Make "pull assignments up" assist work in more cases r=Jesse-Bakker a=Jesse-Bakker
Fixes#8771
Co-authored-by: Jesse Bakker <github@jessebakker.com>
This recognizes `let a = [1u8, 2, 3]` as having type `[u8; 3]` instead
of the previous `[u8; _]`. Byte strings and `[0u8; 2]` kinds of range
array declarations are unsupported as before.
I don't know why a bunch of our rustc tests had single quotes inside
strings un-escaped by `UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo t`, but I don't think it's
bad? Maybe something in a nightly?
8794: Give MergeBehaviour variants better names r=Veykril a=Veykril
I never really liked the variant names I gave this enum from the beginning and then I found out about rustfmt's `imports_granularity` config:
> imports_granularity
>
> How imports should be grouped into use statements. Imports will be merged or split to the configured level of granularity.
>
> Default value: Preserve
> Possible values: Preserve, Crate, Module, Item
> Stable: No
I personally prefer using `crate` over `full` and `module` over last, they seem more descriptive. Keeping these similar between tooling also seems like a good plus point to me.
We might even wanna take over the entire enum at some point if we have a `format/cleanup imports` assists in the future which would probably want to also have the `preserve` and `item` options.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
There's a tension between keeping a well-architectured minimal
orthogonal set of constructs, and providing convenience functions.
Relieve this pressure by introducing an dedicated module for
non-orthogonal shortcuts.
This is inspired by the django.shortcuts module which serves a similar
purpose architecturally.
8776: fix: fix unnecessary recomputations due to macros r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This computes a macro's fragment kind eagerly (when the calling file is still available in parsed form) and stores it in the `MacroCallLoc`. This means that during expansion we no longer have to reparse the file containing the macro call, avoiding the unnecessary salsa dependencies (https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/8746#issuecomment-834776349).
Marking as draft until I manage to find a test for this problem, since for some reason `typing_inside_a_function_should_not_invalidate_expansions` does not catch this (which might indicate that I misunderstand the problem).
I've manually confirmed that this fixes the issue described in https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/8746#issuecomment-834776349:
```
7ms - parse_query @ FileId(179)
12ms - SourceBinder::to_module_def
12ms - crate_def_map:wait
5ms - item_tree_query (1 calls)
7ms - ???
```
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8777: Escape characters in builtin macros correctly r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
Fixes#8749
It is the same bug in #8560 but in our `quote!` macro.
Because the "\" are adding exponentially in #8749 case, so the text is eat up all the memory.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
8774: feat: Honor `.cargo/config.toml` r=matklad a=Veykril
![f1Gup1aiAn](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/117545448-1dcaae00-b026-11eb-977a-0f35a5e3f2e0.gif)
Implements `cargo/.config` build target and cfg access by using unstable cargo options:
- `cargo config get` to read the target triple out of the config to pass to `cargo metadata` --filter-platform
- `cargo rustc --print` to read out the `rustc_cfgs`, this causes us to honor `rustflags` and the like.
If those commands fail, due to not having a nightly toolchain present for example, they will fall back to invoking rustc directly as we currently do.
I personally think it should be fine to use these unstable options as they are unlikely to change(even if they did it shouldn't be a problem due to the fallback) and don't burden the user if they do not have a nightly toolchain at hand since we fall back to the previous behaviour.
cc #8741Closes#6604, Closes#5904, Closes#8430, Closes#8480
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8745: Support goto_type_definition for types r=matklad a=Veykril
I'm unsure if the approach of lowering an `ast::Type` to a `hir::Type` is a good idea, it seems fine to me at least.
Fixes#2882
Co-authored-by: Lukas Tobias Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8280: Borrow text of immutable syntax node r=iDawer a=iDawer
In https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rowan/pull/101 `rowan::SyntaxNode::green` returns `Cow<'_, GreenNodeData>`. It returns borrow of green node of immutable syntax tree node.
Using this we can return borrowed text from `ast::Name::text`.
~~However now it allocates in case of mutable syntax trees.~~ (see next comment)
The idea comes from https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rowan/pull/100#issuecomment-809330325
Co-authored-by: Dawer <7803845+iDawer@users.noreply.github.com>
8674: fix for #8664: Emit folding ranges for multi-line where clauses r=matklad a=m5tfi
#8664
I added a test that assert folding multi-line where clauses while leaving single lined one. Please, let me know if the code needs further improvements.
Co-authored-by: m5tfi <72708423+m5tfi@users.noreply.github.com>
8711: Only resolve selected assist r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Part of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8700
Now resolves only the assist that was selected out of the list, while before the whole assist list was resolved despite a single popup selection.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
8693: Ensure that only one cache priming task can run at a time r=matklad a=Bobo1239
Fixes#8632.
Co-authored-by: Boris-Chengbiao Zhou <bobo1239@web.de>
8692: Fix panic caused by new Try trait definition r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
The new Try trait definition caused a query cycle for us. This adds recovery for that cycle, but also fixes the cause, which is that we went through the supertraits when resolving `<T as Trait>::Assoc`, which isn't actually necessary. I also rewrote `all_super_trait_refs` to an iterator before I realized what the actual problem was, so I kept that.
Fixes#8686.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
According to the spec we should return ServerNotInitialized if the server is waiting for an initialize request and something else comes in.
Upgrading to lsp-server 0.5.1 will do this and retry until the initialize request comes in.
Fixes#8581
At the moment,the popup is just a bazillion of Cargo's "Compiling this\nCompiling that",
which is not that useful.
--quiet still displays error, which is what we needc
Attempting to rename an element of a tuple field would previously
replace the type with the new name, which doesn't make sense; now it
fails instead.
The check is done in both `prepare_rename` and `rename` so that the case
is caught before the user is prompted for a new name. Some other
existing failure cases are also now additionally checked in
`prepare_rename`.
8591: Remove SyntaxRewriter usage in insert_use in favor of mutable syntax trees r=matklad a=Veykril
Unfortunately changing `insert_use` to not use `SyntaxRewriter` creates a lot of changes since so much relies on that. But on the other hand this should be the biggest usage of `SyntaxRewriter` I believe.
8638: Remove SyntaxRewriter::from_fn r=Veykril a=Veykril
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8620: Remove unnecessary braces for extracted block expression r=Veykril a=brandondong
This change addresses the first bullet point of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7839.
Specifically, when extracting block expressions, remove the unneeded extra braces inside the generated function.
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
8570: Flycheck tries to parse both Cargo and Rustc messages. r=rickvanprim a=rickvanprim
This change allows non-Cargo build systems to be used for Flycheck provided they call `rustc` with `--error-format=json` and emit those JSON messages to `stdout`.
Co-authored-by: James Leitch <rickvanprim@gmail.com>
reading both stdout & stderr is a common gotcha, you need to drain them
concurrently to avoid deadlocks. Not sure why I didn't do the right
thing from the start. Seems like I assumed the stderr is short? That's
not the case when cargo spams `compiling xyz` messages
8524: Fix extract function with partial block selection r=matklad a=brandondong
**Reproduction:**
```rust
fn foo() {
let n = 1;
let mut v = $0n * n;$0
v += 1;
}
```
1. Select the snippet ($0) and use the "Extract into function" assist.
2. Extracted function is incorrect and does not compile:
```rust
fn foo() {
let n = 1;
let mut v = fun_name(n);
v += 1;
}
fn fun_name(n: i32) {}
```
3. Omitting the ending semicolon from the selection fixes the extracted function:
```rust
fn fun_name(n: i32) -> i32 {
n * n
}
```
**Cause:**
- When `extraction_target` uses a block extraction (semicolon case) instead of an expression extraction (no semicolon case), the user selection is directly used as the TextRange.
- However, the existing function extraction logic for blocks requires that the TextRange spans from start to end of complete statements to work correctly.
- For example:
```rust
fn foo() {
let m = 2;
let n = 1;
let mut v = m $0* n;
let mut w = 3;$0
v += 1;
w += 1;
}
```
produces
```rust
fn foo() {
let m = 2;
let n = 1;
let mut v = m let mut w = fun_name(n);
v += 1;
w += 1;
}
fn fun_name(n: i32) -> i32 {
let mut w = 3;
w
}
```
- The user selected TextRange is directly replaced by the function call which is now in the middle of another statement. The extracted function body only contains statements that were fully covered by the TextRange and so the `* n` code is deleted. The logic for calculating variable usage and outlived variables for the function parameters and return type respectively search within the TextRange and so do not include `m` or `v`.
**Fix:**
- Only extract full statements when using block extraction. If a user selected part of a statement, extract that full statement.
8527: Switch introduce_named_lifetime assist to use mutable syntax tree r=matklad a=iDawer
This extends `GenericParamsOwnerEdit` trait with `get_or_create_generic_param_list` method
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dawer <7803845+iDawer@users.noreply.github.com>
8565: Fill match arms assist: add remaining arms for tuple of enums r=iDawer a=iDawer
Fix for #8493
However, the assist is still flaky and does not use `hir_ty::diagnostics::match_check`
Co-authored-by: Dawer <7803845+iDawer@users.noreply.github.com>
8540: Prevent being able to rename items that are not part of the workspace r=Veykril a=Veykril
This change causes renames that happen on items coming from crates outside the workspace to fail. I believe this should be the right approach, but usage of cargo's workspace might not be entirely correct for preventing these kinds of refactoring from touching things they shouldn't. I'm not entirely sure?
cc #6623, this is one of the bigger footguns when it comes to refactoring, especially in combination with import aliases people tend to rename items coming from a crates dependency which this prevents.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8467: Adds impl Deref assist r=jhgg a=jhgg
This PR adds a new `generate_deref` assist that automatically generates a deref impl for a given struct field.
Check out this gif:
![2021-04-11_00-33-33](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/5489149/114296006-b38e1000-9a5d-11eb-9112-807c01b8fd0a.gif)
--
I have a few Q's:
- [x] Should I write more tests, if so, what precisely should I test for?
- [x] I have an inline question on line 65, can someone provide guidance? :)
- [x] I can implement this for `ast::TupleField` too. But should it be a separate assist fn, or should I try and jam both into the `generate_deref`?
- [x] I want to follow this up with an assist on `impl $0Deref for T {` which would automatically generate a `DerefMut` impl that mirrors the Deref as well, however, I could probably use some pointers on how to do that, since I'll have to reach into the ast of `fn deref` to grab the field that it's referencing for the `DerefMut` impl.
Co-authored-by: jake <jh@discordapp.com>
8560: Escape characters in doc comments in macros correctly r=jonas-schievink a=ChayimFriedman2
Previously they were escaped twice, both by `.escape_default()` and the debug view of strings (`{:?}`). This leads to things like newlines or tabs in documentation comments being `\\n`, but we unescape literals only once, ending up with `\n`.
This was hard to spot because CMark unescaped them (at least for `'` and `"`), but it did not do so in code blocks.
This also was the root cause of #7781. This issue was solved by using `.escape_debug()` instead of `.escape_default()`, but the real issue remained.
We can bring the `.escape_default()` back by now, however I didn't do it because it is probably slower than `.escape_debug()` (more work to do), and also in order to change the code the least.
Example (the keyword and primitive docs are `include!()`d at https://doc.rust-lang.org/src/std/lib.rs.html#570-578, and thus originate from macro):
Before:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/24700207/115130096-40544300-9ff5-11eb-847b-969e7034e8a4.png)
After:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/24700207/115130143-9cb76280-9ff5-11eb-9281-323746089440.png)
Co-authored-by: Chayim Refael Friedman <chayimfr@gmail.com>
Previously they were escaped twice, both by `.escape_default()` and the debug view of strings (`{:?}`). This leads to things like newlines or tabs in documentation comments being `\\n`, but we unescape literals only once, ending up with `\n`.
This was hard to spot because CMark unescaped them (at least for `'` and `"`), but it did not do so in code blocks.
This also was the root cause of #7781. This issue was solved by using `.escape_debug()` instead of `.escape_default()`, but the real issue remained.
We can bring the `.escape_default()` back by now, however I didn't do it because it is probably slower than `.escape_debug()` (more work to do), and also in order to change the code the least.
8510: Move cursor position when using item movers r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This updates the cursor position when moving items around to stay in the same location within the moved node.
I changed the `moveItem` response to `SnippetTextEdit[]`, since that made more sense to me (the file was ignored by the client anyways, since the edits always apply to the current document). It also matches `onEnter`, which seems logical to me, but please let me know if this doesn't make sense.
There's still a bug in the client-side snippet code that will cause the cursor position to be slightly off when moving parameters in the same line (presumably we don't track the column correctly after deleting `$0`). Not really sure how to fix that immediately, but this PR should already be an improvement despite that bug.
8533: Fix typo in style guide r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Fixes bold text rendering
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8432: decl_check: consider outer scopes' allows r=jonas-schievink a=lf-
Fix#8417. Also makes it less noisy about no_mangle annotated stuff the
user can do nothing about.
Note: this still is broken with bitfield! macros. A repro in an ignore
test is included here. I believe this bug is elsewhere, and I don't
think I can work around it here.
I would like help filing the remaining bug, as it does actually affect
users, but I don't know how to describe the behaviour (or even if it
is unintended).
Co-authored-by: Jade <software@lfcode.ca>
8354: Distinguishing between different operators in semantic highlighting r=matklad a=chetankhilosiya
Co-authored-by: Chetan Khilosiya <chetan.khilosiya@gmail.com>
8415: Fix faulty assertion when extracting function with macro call r=matklad a=brandondong
**Reproduction:**
```rust
fn main() {
let n = 1;
let k = n * n;
dbg!(n);
}
```
1. Select the second and third lines of the main function. Use the "Extract into function" code assist.
2. Panic occurs in debug, error is logged in release: "[ERROR ide_assists::handlers::extract_function] assertion failed: matches!(path, ast :: Expr :: PathExpr(_))".
3. Function generates successfully on release where the panic was bypassed.
```rust
fn fun_name(n: i32) {
let k = n * n;
dbg!(n);
}
```
**Cause:**
- The generated function will take `n` as a parameter. The extraction logic needs to search the usages of `n` to determine whether it is used mutably or not. The helper `path_element_of_reference` is called for each usage but the second usage is a macro call and fails the `Expr::PathExpr(_)` match assertion.
- The caller of `path_element_of_reference` does implicitly assume it to be a `Expr::PathExpr(_)` in how it looks at its parent node for determining whether it is used mutably. This logic will not work for macros.
- I'm not sure if there are any other cases besides macros where it could be something other than a `Expr::PathExpr(_)`. I tried various examples and could not find any.
**Fix:**
- Update assertion to include the macro case.
- Add a FIXME to properly handle checking if a macro usage requires mutable access. For now, return false instead of running the existing logic that is tailored for `Expr::PathExpr(_)`'s.
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
Conceptually, using a *message* here is wrong, because this is a
"status", rather than "point in time" thing. But statuses are an LSP
extension, while messages are stable. As a compromise, send message only
for more critical `metadata` failures, and only once per state change.
This condition should always be true for *valid* code, but of course
there might be invalid code or things that we can't currently resolve.
Fixes#8464.
8463: Support macros in pattern position r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This was fairly easy, because patterns are limited to bodies, so almost all changes were inside body lowering.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8436: Fix extract function's mutability of variables outliving the body r=matklad a=brandondong
**Reproduction:**
```rust
fn main() {
let mut k = 1;
let mut j = 2;
j += 1;
k += j;
}
```
1. Select the first to third lines of the main function. Use the "Extract into function" code assist.
2. The output is the following which does not compile because the outlived variable `k` is declared as immutable:
```rust
fn main() {
let (k, j) = fun_name();
k += j;
}
fn fun_name() -> (i32, i32) {
let mut k = 1;
let mut j = 2;
j += 1;
(k, j)
}
```
3. We would instead expect the output to be:
```rust
fn main() {
let (mut k, j) = fun_name();
k += j;
}
```
**Fix:**
- Instead of declaring outlived variables as immutable unconditionally, check for any mutable usages outside of the extracted function.
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
8410: Use CompletionTextEdit::InsertAndReplace if supported by the client r=Veykril a=Veykril
Fixes#8404, Fixes#3130
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8443: Rewrite `#[derive]` removal code to be based on AST r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
We now remove any `#[derive]` before and including the one we want to expand, in the `macro_arg` query.
The same infra will be needed by attribute macros (except we only remove the attribute we're expanding, not any preceding ones).
Part of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8434 (doesn't implement the cfg-expansion yet, because that's more difficult)
8446: Undo path resolution hack for extern prelude r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Reverts the change made in https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7959
We don't populate the extern prelude for block DefMaps anymore,
so this is unnecessary
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8445: `hir_ty` cleanup r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
Move lots of things around within `hir_ty`. Most notably, all the Chalk-related stuff moves from within `traits/` to the top-level, since Chalk isn't purely a "traits thing" anymore.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
8406: Improve indexing of impls r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
Store impls for e.g. &Foo with the ones for Foo instead of the big "other" bucket. This can improve performance and simplifies the HIR impl search a bit.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
Store impls for e.g. &Foo with the ones for Foo instead of the big
"other" bucket. This can improve performance and simplifies the HIR impl
search a bit.
If we get lifetime variables back in autoderef, just immediately replace
them by static lifetimes for now. Method resolution doesn't really deal
correctly with new variables being introduced (this needs to be fixed
more properly).
This fixes `rust-analyzer analysis-stats --with-deps` crashing in the RA
repo.
8429: 8425: Added documentation for on enter covering //! doc comments. r=jonas-schievink a=chetankhilosiya
Also added passing test case.
Co-authored-by: Chetan Khilosiya <chetan.khilosiya@gmail.com>
Fix#8417. Also makes it less noisy about no_mangle annotated stuff the
user can do nothing about.
Note: this still is broken with bitfield! macros. A repro in an ignore
test is included here. I believe this bug is elsewhere, and I don't
think I can work around it here.
8419: Move hir_ty to Chalk IR r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
Closes#8313.
There's some further cleanups to do:
- we're still using our `TypeWalk` in lots of places (not for mutating/folding though, just for walking)
- we're still using our own canonicalization and unification and our `InferenceTable`
- ~`ToChalk` still exists and gets called, it's just the identity in most cases now (I'll probably clean those up before merging this)~
8423: Bump lsp-types and syn r=kjeremy a=kjeremy
This lsp-types now supports a default InsertTextMode for completion and a per-completion item commit_characters
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: kjeremy <kjeremy@gmail.com>
8408: Update `OUT_DIR` diagnostic to match setting r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
The setting was renamed, so the diagnostic should follow
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
I'd prefer getting rid of it, but it's used in the impl search and not
super easy to replace there (I think ideally the impl search would do
proper unification, but that's a bit more complicated).
8402: Remove Ty::substs{_mut} r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
Almost all uses actually only care about ADT substs, so it's better to be explicit. The methods were a bad abstraction anyway since they already didn't include the inner types of e.g. `TyKind::Ref` anymore.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
Almost all uses actually only care about ADT substs, so it's better to
be explicit. The methods were a bad abstraction anyway since they
already didn't include the inner types of e.g. `TyKind::Ref` anymore.
8397: Return proper error code when server is loading r=matklad a=ceronman
When requests are made to rust-analyzer and the server is still loading, a response error is returned with the code `ContentModified` and text `"Rust Analyzer is still loading..."`. This error code doesn't seem to be the more appropriate for this situation. Using `ServerNotInitialized` seems better.
As this is such a small change, I have not created an issue for it.
Co-authored-by: Manuel Ceron <manuel.ceron@jetbrains.com>
8386: Avoid O(n²) when constructing AttrSourceMap r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Brings https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8377 down to 2.52s on my machine. Not quite back to where it was before, so I'll leave that issue open for now.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8371: Don't use HirDisplayWrapper when displaying SourceCode r=matklad a=Veykril
The issue was basically that when displaying for `DisplayTarget::SourceCode` some `hir_fmt` functions would create `HirDisplayWrapper`s which would then `fmt` these triggering the Display panic since `fmt::Display` can't fail the same way as `HirDisplay`. Simple fix is to just use `hir_fmt` directly. Should probably write that down somewhere in source, looking for a good spot to put that right now.
Fixes#8077, Fixes#8370
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8375: feat: show errors from `cargo metadata` and initial `cargo check` in the status bar r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
8364: Memory usage improvements r=jonas-schievink a=alexmaco
These are mostly focused on splitting up enum variants with large size differences between variants by `Box`-ing things up.
In my testing this reduces the memory usage somewhere in the low percentages, even though the measurements are quite noisy.
Co-authored-by: Alexandru Macovei <alexnmaco@gmail.com>
Rationale: only a minority of variants used almost half the size.
By keeping large members (especially in Option) behind a box
the memory cost is only payed when the large variants are needed.
This reduces the size Vec<Expr> needs to allocate.
8355: internal: do not drop errors from cargo metadata/check r=matklad a=matklad
Work towards #3155
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
- don't shift in/out for Chalk mapping (we want to have the same
binders now)
- do shift in when creating the signature for a closure (though it
shouldn't matter much)
- do shift in when lowering a `fn()` type
- correctly deal with the implied binder in TypeWalk
8353: Replace hir_ty::Lifetime with chalk equivalent r=flodiebold a=Veykril
Our `Lifetime` isn't really used yet so this is a rather simple change
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8352: Remove dead legacy macro expansion code r=lnicola a=brandondong
I was investigating some unrelated macro issue when I noticed this dead code. This legacy macro expansion logic was changed in https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/8128.
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
8351: Use more assoc. type aliases in the chalk interner r=flodiebold a=jonas-schievink
Makes it sligthly easier to swap out these types
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8350: internal: prepare to store OpQueue results in the queue itself r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
8348: Make `Binders` more like Chalk r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
Working towards #8313.
- hide `value`
- use `VariableKinds`
- adjust `subst` to be like Chalk's `substitute`
- also clean up some other `TypeWalk` stuff to prepare for it being replaced by Chalk's `Fold`
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
8245: Properly resolve intra doc links in hover and goto_definition r=matklad a=Veykril
Unfortunately involves a bit of weird workarounds due to pulldown_cmark's incorrect lifetimes on `BrokenLinkCallback`... I should probably open an issue there asking for the fixes to be pushed to a release since they already exist in the repo for quite some time it seems.
Fixes#8258, Fixes#8238
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8326: Rewrite reorder fields assist to use mutable syntax trees r=matklad a=Veykril
This also instead uses `Either` to use the typed `RecordPat` and `RecordExpr` nodes, this unfortunately gives a bit of code duplication
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8328: Move things in hir_ty into submodules r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
- all the types that will be replaced by Chalk go to `types`
- `TypeWalk` impls go to `walk`
- also fix signature of `Substitution::interned`
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
8325: Check if bitflags deps pulls its weight r=jonas-schievink a=matklad
Bitflags is generally a good dependency -- it's lightweight, well
maintained and embraced by the ecosystem.
I wonder, however, do we really need it? Doesn't feel like it adds much
to be honest.
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
8295: Add `convert_into_to_from` assist r=Veykril a=obmarg
This adds a "Convert Into to From" assist, useful since clippy has
recently started adding lints on every `Into`.
It covers converting the signature, and converting any `self`/`Self`
references within the body.
It does assume that every instance of `Into` can be converted to a
`From`, which I _think_ is the case now. Let me know if there's
something I'm not thinking of and I can try and make it smarter.
Closes#8196
![CleanShot 2021-04-02 at 13 39 54](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/556490/113420108-9ce21c00-93c0-11eb-8c49-80b5fb189284.gif)
I'm extremely new to this codebase so please let me know if anything needs
changed.
Co-authored-by: Graeme Coupar <grambo@grambo.me.uk>
Bitflags is generally a good dependency -- it's lightweight, well
maintained and embraced by the ecosystem.
I wonder, however, do we really need it? Doesn't feel like it adds much
to be honest.
8322: Access a body's block def maps via a method r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
This adds a "Convert Into to From" assist, useful since clippy has
recently started adding lints on every `Into`.
It covers converting the signature, and converting any `self`/`Self`
references within the body to the correct types.
It does assume that every instance of `Into` can be converted to a
`From`, which I _think_ is the case now. Let me know if there's
something I'm not thinking of and I can try and make it smarter.
Only one upgradeable read lock can be handed out at the same time, and
we never acquire a non-upgradeable read lock, so this has no benefit
over just using a write lock in the first place.
8284: Reduce memory usage by using global `Arc`-based interning r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This saves around 50 mb when running `analysis-stats` on r-a itself. Not a lot, but this infra can be easily reused to intern more stuff.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
8285: Don't recheck obligations if we have learned nothing new r=matklad a=flodiebold
This is just the most trivial check: If no inference variables have been updated, and there are no new obligations, we can just skip trying to solve them again. We could be smarter about it, but this already helps quite a bit, and I don't want to touch this too much before we replace the inference table by Chalk's.
Fixes#8263 (well, improves it quite a bit).
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
8283: Resolve associated types r=flodiebold a=Veykril
Prior we were only resolving paths until the first type was found, then discarding the result if the path wasn't fully consumed. That of course causes associated types to not resolve. Fixes#5003
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
This is just the most trivial check: If no inference variables have been
updated, and there are no new obligations, we can just skip trying to
solve them again. We could be smarter about it, but this already helps
quite a bit, and I don't want to touch this too much before we replace
the inference table by Chalk's.
Fixes#8263 (well, improves it quite a bit).
8274: Adding a few more gifs and screenshots for features in manual r=Veykril a=MozarellaMan
Related #8267,#6539. Gifs are [here](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6539#issuecomment-809574840)
Finishing up the last PR, for the last two features that didn't have a visual example.
For syntax highlighting, I wasn't able to find a theme that displayed the difference between an enum and struct, but I only tried a few apart from the default so there could be one out there!
e.g., with the default light theme, `Ord` and `Ordering` in `use std::cmp::{Ord, Ordering}` had the same highlight colour. So I just went with displaying `mut` items being underlined.
Co-authored-by: Ayomide Bamidele <48062697+MozarellaMan@users.noreply.github.com>
8267: Adding gifs and screenshots for features in manual r=matklad a=MozarellaMan
For #6539
This includes most of gif or screenshot examples of most items in the "Features" header. With the exceptions of:
- **On Typing Assists** - couldn't get it to work for a demo, I'm probably missing something?
- **Structural search and replace** - looked to be already a visual example of the feature
- **Workspace symbol** - wasn't sure how best to show this, all of the examples maybe? Also wasn't sure of the best code example to show it off
- **Semantic Syntax Highlighting** - seemed obvious enough to not need a screenshot, but I could easily add this
All the gifs/pngs are hosted in this [comment](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6539#issuecomment-809574840). Please let me know if any of them aren't suitable (and why) and I'll improve it! Or if you don't like the theme/font
Co-authored-by: Ayomide Bamidele <48062697+MozarellaMan@users.noreply.github.com>
8266: Fix generic arguments being incorrectly offset in qualified trait casts r=flodiebold a=Veykril
We reverse the segments and generic args of the lowered path after building it, this wasn't accounted for when inserting the self parameter in `Type as Trait` segments.
Fixes#5886
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
We have a CLI for benchmarking, but no one actually uses it it seems.
Let's try switching to "internal" benchmarks, implemented as rust tests.
They should be easier to "script" to automate tracking of perf
regressions.
8247: internal: ensure that runaway type-inference doesn't block the main loop r=flodiebold a=matklad
We have a bug where type-checking `per_query_memory_usage` takes a
couple of seconds. It also reveals another bug: our type inference is
not cancellable.
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
We have a bug where type-checking `per_query_memory_usage` takes a
couple of seconds. It also reveals another bug: our type inference is
not cancellable.
8221: Prefer adding `mod` declaration to lib.rs over file.rs in UnlinkedFile fix r=Veykril a=Veykril
When there is a `lib.rs` and `main.rs` in one crate, one usually wants the `lib.rs` file to declare the modules.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8201: Fix recursive macro statements expansion r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
This PR attempts to properly handle macro statement expansion by implementing the following:
1. Merge macro expanded statements to parent scope statements.
2. Add a new hir `Expr::MacroStmts` for handle tail expression infer.
PS : The scope of macro expanded statements are so strange that it took more time than I thought to understand and implement it :(
Fixes #8171
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7907: Autoderef with visibility r=cynecx a=cynecx
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7841.
I am not sure about the general approach here. Right now this simply tries to check whether the autoderef candidate is reachable from the current module. ~~However this doesn't exactly work with traits (see the `tests::macros::infer_derive_clone_in_core` test, which fails right now).~~ see comment below
Refs:
- `rustc_typeck` checking fields: 66ec64ccf3/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/expr.rs (L1610)
r? @flodiebold
Co-authored-by: cynecx <me@cynecx.net>
8190: Fix chalk_ir assertion r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
Fixes#8150.
I implemented a validator that catches this in the tests, but it'd need to get merged in Chalk first.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
8183: Fix missing command error with macros r=Veykril a=brandondong
**Reproduction:**
1. Define a struct through a macro (can be via `macro_rules`, proc macro, or `include!()`).
2. !!MISSING: command!! annotation appears. Clicking on it results in an error message. No matter where the macro is called/defined, the annotation is always at the start of the file.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13722457/112268785-bce14500-8c34-11eb-9a23-bafd63ffd6ef.png)
**Cause:**
- For struct `A`, a `HasImpls` annotation is added just like for struct `B`. Unlike `B`, the file id for `A` is not the file we are adding annotations to but a macro file.
- The resolving step of the code lens does not succeed.
**Fix:**
- Check that the files match before computing offsets and adding `HasImpls`/`HasReferences` annotations.
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
8162: Compute more mathematically well-rounded notion of transitive deps r=Veykril a=matklad
By including the crate itself, we make the resulting set closed with
respect to `transitve_reveres_dependencies` operation, as it becomes a
proper transitive closure. This just feels more proper and mathy.
And, indeed, this actually allows us to simplify call sites somewhat.
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
By including the crate itself, we make the resulting set closed with
respect to `transitve_reveres_dependencies` operation, as it becomes a
proper transitive closure. This just feels more proper and mathy.
And, indeed, this actually allows us to simplify call sites somewhat.
8142: temp disable broken ref match completions for struct fields/methods r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
This PR implements a temporary workaround for #8058 by disabling ref match completions for struct fields and methods. Disabling this doesn't break any existing functionality (that I am aware of) since these completions were broken.
I plan to keep working on a real fix for the underlying issue here, but I think a proper fix could take some time, so I'd prefer to quickly fix the bug to buy some more time to implement a better solution (which would ultimately allow re-enabling ref matches for struct fields and methods).
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
8154: rewrite merge use trees assist to use muatable syntax trees r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
8155: Fix confusion between parameters and the function r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8152
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
8136: Introduce QuantifiedWhereClause and DynTy analogous to Chalk r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
This introduces a bunch of new binders in lots of places, which we have to be careful about, but we had to add them at some point. There's a lot of skipping of the binders; once we're done with the Chalk move, we should review the remaining ones.
8146: Document patch policy r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
This in particular means storing a chalk_ir::Environment, not our
TraitEnvironment. This makes InEnvironment not usable for Type, where we
need to keep the full TraitEnvironment.
8134: Correct the paths of submodules from the include! macro r=edwin0cheng a=sticnarf
This PR should fix#7846. It mostly follows the instructions from @edwin0cheng in that issue.
Co-authored-by: Yilin Chen <sticnarf@gmail.com>
8133: Ignore type bindings in generic_predicates_for_param (fix panic on ena and crates depending on it) r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
This allows us to handle more cases without a query cycle, which includes certain cases that rustc accepted. That in turn means we avoid triggering salsa-rs/salsa#257 on valid code (it will still happen if the user writes an actual cycle).
We actually accept more definitions than rustc now; that's because rustc only ignores bindings when looking up super traits, whereas we now also ignore them when looking for predicates to disambiguate associated type shorthand. We could introduce a separate query for super traits if necessary, but for now I think this should be fine.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
8132: Add `'` to trigger_characters, allowing more direct lifetime completions r=Veykril a=Veykril
Fixes having to type a character after `'` to complete lifetimes and labels
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
This allows us to handle more cases without a query cycle, which
includes certain cases that rustc accepted. That in turn means we avoid
triggering salsa-rs/salsa#257 on valid code (it will still happen if the
user writes an actual cycle).
We actually accept more definitions than rustc now; that's because rustc
only ignores bindings when looking up super traits, whereas we now also
ignore them when looking for predicates to disambiguate associated type
shorthand. We could introduce a separate query for super traits if
necessary, but for now I think this should be fine.
8122: Make bare underscore token an Ident rather than Punct in proc-macro r=edwin0cheng a=kevinmehall
In rustc and proc-macro2, a bare `_` token is parsed for procedural macro purposes as `Ident` rather than `Punct` (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/48842). This changes rust-analyzer to match rustc's behavior and implementation by handling `_` as an Ident in token trees, but explicitly preventing `$x:ident` from matching it in MBE.
proc macro crate:
```rust
#[proc_macro]
pub fn input(input: proc_macro::TokenStream) -> proc_macro::TokenStream {
dbg!(input)
}
```
test crate:
```rust
test_proc_macro::input!(_);
```
output (rustc):
```rust
[test-proc-macro/src/lib.rs:10] input = TokenStream [
Ident {
ident: "_",
span: #0 bytes(173..174),
},
]
```
output (rust-analyzer before this change):
```rust
[test-proc-macro/src/lib.rs:10] input = TokenStream [
Punct {
ch: '_',
spacing: Joint,
span: 4294967295,
},
]
```
output (rust-analyzer after this change):
```rust
[test-proc-macro/src/lib.rs:10] input = TokenStream [
Ident {
ident: "_",
span: 4294967295,
},
]
```
Co-authored-by: Kevin Mehall <km@kevinmehall.net>
8124: Add basic lifetime completion r=Veykril a=Veykril
This adds basic lifetime completion, basic in the sense that the completions for lifetimes are only shown when the user enters `'` followed by a char. Showing them when nothing is entered is kind of a pain, as we would want them to only show up where they are useful which in turn requires a lot of tree traversal and cursor position checking to verify whether the position is valid for a lifetime. This in itself doesn't seem too bad as usually when you know you want to write a lifetime putting `'` to ask for lifetime completions seems fine.
~~I'll take a look at whether its possible to lift the restriction of having to put a char after `'`.~~ This actually already works so I guess this is the clients responsibility, in which case VSCode doesn't like it.
![TYH9gIlyVo](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/111886437-c9b02f80-89cd-11eb-9bee-340f1536b0de.gif)
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8083: Track source file IDs in source mapping of Attrs r=jonas-schievink a=Veykril
Fixes the panics/incorrect injection highlighting of outline module declarations until we figure out a nicer source mapping strategy for attributes.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8065: Better handling of block doc comments r=Veykril a=Veykril
Moves doc string processing to `Attrs::docs`, as we need the indent info from all comments before being able to know how much to strip
Closes#7774
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8063: couple clippy::complexity fixes r=matklad a=matthiaskrgr
avoid redundant `.into()` calls to convert T into identical T (`let x: String = String::from("hello").into();`)
use `if let Some(x)` instead of `.is_some()` + `.unwrap()`
don't clone Copy types
remove redundant wrapped ?s: `Some(Some(3)?)` can just be `Some(3)`
use `.map(|x| y)` instead of `and_then(|x| Some(y)` on `Option`s
Co-authored-by: Matthias Krüger <matthias.krueger@famsik.de>
8052: minor style fixes per feedback on #8036 r=JoshMcguigan a=JoshMcguigan
cc @matklad - this PR addresses your comments in #8036.
changelog fixup #8036
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
7900: show function params in completion detail r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
This resolves#7842 by updating the detail for function completions from `-> T` to `fn(T, U) -> V`. I added an expicit unit test for this, `ide_completion::render::fn_detail_includes_args_and_return_type`, which passes.
Lots of other unit tests fail (~60 of them) due to this change, although I believe the failures are purely cosmetic (they were testing the exact format of this output). I'm happy to go update those tests, but before I do that I'd like to make sure this is in fact the format we want for the detail?
edit - I realized `UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo test` automatically updates `expect!` tests. Big 👍 to whoever worked on that! So I'll go ahead and update all these tests soon. But I still would like to confirm `fn(T, U) -> V` is the desired content in the `detail` field.
8000: Use hir formatter for hover text r=matklad a=oxalica
Fix#2765 , (should) fix#4665
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: oxalica <oxalicc@pm.me>
8036: completions: provide relevance bonus for enum types, and suggest ref matches for fn and enum r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
This PR makes several improvements to completions and completion sorting:
1. Provide exact match type relevance score bonus for enum variants
2. Suggest `&Foo` (ref_match) for enums if that is an exact type match
3. Suggest `&foo()` (ref_match) if `foo` returns a type which would be an exact match either with the reference or due to a `Deref` impl
### Before
![pre-ref-relevance-centralized](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22216761/111189377-3f05a580-8573-11eb-89be-58a45cb7f829.png)
### After
![post-ref-relevance-centralized](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22216761/111189395-45941d00-8573-11eb-871b-09186b35cbb9.png)
### Caveats
I think generic types will require some kind of fancier logic when testing for `exact_type_match`, so for now `Option`/`Result`/etc unfortunately still don't have great completions.
### Implementation
I implemented this in a way that I think makes it most likely for each completion type to be handled consistently. Just replace `CompletionItem::new` with `CompletionItem::new_with_type_info` and `exact_type_match`/`exact_name_match`/`ref_match` are all handled for you, in a way which is sure to be consistent across completion types.
This approach does introduce some coupling/plumbing that didn't exist before. Notice for example `set_is_local` on the builder, because `set_relevance` was removed from the builder to enforce that the relevance was built "properly" with `CompletionItem::new_with_type_info`. But I think there are benefits to this approach, like `CompletionRelevance` should probably consider deprecation status, and we already tell the builder about that, so in the (likely near term) future we can just pass that information along to `CompletionRelevance` when the user calls `set_deprecated` rather than the user having to manually set it in two places. This basically just hides `CompletionRelevance` from the individual completions, so they only worry about the `CompletionItem` interface. At the moment this seems like a cleaner approach to me, but I'm open to feedback here.
edit - I've reimplemented this in a simpler way, per feedback below.
8046: Prefer match to if let else r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
7970: Fix incorrect diagnostics for failing built in macros r=jonas-schievink a=brandondong
**Reproduction:**
1. Use a built in macro in such a way that rust-analyzer fails to expand it. For example:
**lib.rs**
```
include!("<valid file but without a .rs extension so it is not indexed by rust-analyzer>");
```
2. rust-analyzer highlights the macro call and says the macro itself cannot be resolved even though include! is in the standard library (unresolved-macro-call diagnostic).
3. No macro-error diagnostic is raised.
**Root cause for incorrect unresolved-macro-call diagnostic:**
1. collector:collect_macro_call is able to resolve include! in legacy scope but the expansion fails. Therefore, it's pushed into unexpanded_macros to be retried with module scope.
2. include! fails at the resolution step in collector:resolve_macros now that it's using module scope. Therefore, it's retained in unexpanded_macros.
3. Finally, collector:finish tries resolving the remaining unexpanded macros but only with module scope. include! again fails at the resolution step so a diagnostic is created.
**Root cause for missing macro-error diagnostic:**
1. In collector:resolve_macros, directive.legacy is None since eager expansion failed in collector:collect_macro_call. The macro_call_as_call_id fails to resolve since we're retrying in module scope. Therefore, collect_macro_expansion is not called for the macro and no macro-error diagnostic is generated.
**Fix:**
- In collector:collect_macro_call, do not add failing built-in macros to the unexpanded_macros list and immediately raise the macro-error diagnostic. This is in contrast to lazy macros which are resolved in collector::resolve_macros and later expanded in collect_macro_expansion where a macro-error diagnostic may be raised.
Co-authored-by: Brandon <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: brandondong <brandondong604@hotmail.com>
8037: Assist is empty 7709 r=Veykril a=chetankhilosiya
Updated the implementation to get the function from implementation
Co-authored-by: Chetan Khilosiya <chetan.khilosiya@gmail.com>
8020: Power up goto_implementation r=matklad a=Veykril
by allowing it to be invoked on references of names, now showing all (trait)
implementations of the given type in all crates instead of just the defining
crate as well as including support for builtin types
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/111144403-52bb0700-8587-11eb-9205-7a2a5b8b75a3.png)
Example screenshot of `impl`s of Box in `log`, `alloc`, `std` and the current crate. Before you had to invoke it on the definition where it would only show the `impls` in `alloc`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
8027: Completion context remove exact match method in favor of fields r=JoshMcguigan a=JoshMcguigan
This is a minor cleanup PR following #8008. It removes the `expected_name_and_type` method on completion context in favor of using the fields.
I thought this method was used in more places, or else it may have just made sense to make this change directly in #8008🤷
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
8008: Completion context expected type r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
Currently there are two ways completions use to determine the expected type. There is the `expected_type` field on the `CompletionContext`, as well as the `expected_name_and_type` method on the `RenderContext`. These two things returned slightly different results, and their results were only valid if you had pre-checked some (undocumented) invariants. A simple combination of the two approaches doesn't work because they are both too willing to go far up the syntax tree to find something that fits what they are looking for.
This PR makes the following changes:
1. Updates the algorithm that sets `expected_type` on `CompletionContext`
2. Adds `expected_name` field to `CompletionContext`
3. Re-writes the `expected_name_and_type` method to simply return the underlying fields from `CompletionContext` (I'd like to save actually removing this method for a follow up PR just to keep the scope of the changes down)
4. Adds unit tests for the `expected_type`/`expected_name` fields
All the existing unit tests still pass (unmodified), but this new algorithm certainly has some gaps (although I believe all the `FIXME` introduced in this PR are also flaws in the current code). I wanted to stop here and get some feedback though - is this approach fundamentally sound?
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
8018: Make Ty wrap TyKind in an Arc r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
... to further move towards Chalk.
This is a bit of a slowdown (218ginstr vs 213ginstr for inference on RA), even though it allows us to unwrap the Substs in `TyKind::Ref` etc..
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
What happens here is that we lower `: ` to a missing expression, and
then correctly record that the corresponding field expression resolves
to a specific field. Where we fail is in the mapping of syntax to this
missing expression. Doing it via `ast_field.expr()` fails, as that
expression is `None`. Instead, we go in the opposite direcition and ask
each lowered field about its source.
This works, but has wrong complexity `O(N)` and, really, the
implementation is just too complex. We need some better management of
data here.
8021: Enable searching for builtin types r=matklad a=Veykril
Not too sure how useful this is for reference search overall, but for completeness sake it should be there
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/111132711-f69db600-8579-11eb-8c90-22fd6862d11f.png)
Also enables document highlighting for them.
8022: some clippy::performance fixes r=matklad a=matthiaskrgr
use vec![] instead of Vec::new() + push()
avoid redundant clones
use chars instead of &str for single char patterns in ends_with() and starts_with()
allocate some Vecs with capacity to avoid unnecessary resizing
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matthias Krüger <matthias.krueger@famsik.de>
use vec![] instead of Vec::new() + push()
avoid redundant clones
use chars instead of &str for single char patterns in ends_with() and starts_with()
allocate some Vecs with capacity to avoid unneccessary resizing
7966: Diagnose files that aren't in the module tree r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6377
I'm not sure if this is the best way to do this. It will cause false positives for all `include!`d files (though I'm not sure how much IDE functionality we have for these).
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
... like it will be in Chalk. We still keep `interned_mut` and
`into_inner` methods that will probably not exist with Chalk.
This worsens performance slightly (5ginstr inference on RA), but doesn't
include other simplifications we can do yet.
8014: increase completion relevance for items in local scope r=matklad a=JoshMcguigan
This PR provides a small completion relevance score bonus for items in local scope. The changes here are relatively minimal, since `coc` by default pre-sorts by position in file. But as we move toward fully server side sorting #7935 I think we'll want some relevance score bump for items in local scope.
### Before
Note `let~` and `syntax` are both ahead of locals. Ultimately we may decide that `let~` is a high relevance completion given my cursor position here, but that should be done with some explicit scoring on the server side, rather than being caused by (I think) `coc` preferring shorter completions.
![pre-local-score](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22216761/111073414-c97ad600-849b-11eb-84e7-fcee130536f0.png)
### After
![post-local-score](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22216761/111073422-d0094d80-849b-11eb-92ec-7ae5ec3b190d.png)
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
8011: Add no-sysroot flag for analysis-stats r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
Add `no-sysroot` flag for `rust-analyzer analysis-stats`. It is very useful for debugging propose.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7984: Improve version display r=matklad a=lnicola
Maybe closes#7854
The version string for unreleased builds looks like this now:
```
$ rust-analyzer --version
rust-analyzer 2021-03-08-159-gc0459c535
```
Release builds should only have the tag name (`2021-03-15`).
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
7994: Speed up mbe matching in heavy recursive cases r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
In some cases (e.g. #4186), mbe matching is very slow due to a lot of copy and allocation for bindings, this PR try to solve this problem by introduce a semi "link-list" approach for bindings building.
I used this [test case](https://github.com/weiznich/minimal_example_for_rust_81262) (for `features(32-column-tables)`) to run following command to benchmark:
```
time rust-analyzer analysis-stats --load-output-dirs ./
```
Before this PR : 2 mins
After this PR: 3 seconds.
However, for 64-column-tables cases, we still need 4 mins to complete.
I will try to investigate in the following weeks.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7904: Improved completion sorting r=JoshMcguigan a=JoshMcguigan
I was working on extending #3954 to apply completion scores in more places (I'll have another PR open for that soon) when I discovered that actually completion sorting was not working for me at all in `coc.nvim`. This led me down a bit of a rabbit hole of how coc and vs code each sort completion items.
Before this PR, rust-analyzer was setting the `sortText` field on completion items to `None` if we hadn't applied any completion score for that item, or to the label of the item with a leading whitespace character if we had applied any completion score. Completion score is defined in rust-analyzer as an enum with two variants, `TypeMatch` and `TypeAndNameMatch`.
In vs code the above strategy works, because if `sortText` isn't set [they default it to the label](b4ead4ed66). However, coc [does not do this](e211e36147/src/completion/complete.ts (L245)).
I was going to file a bug report against coc, but I read the [LSP spec for the `sortText` field](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/specification-current/#textDocument_completion) and I feel like it is ambiguous and coc could claim what they do is a valid interpretation of the spec.
Further, the existing rust-analyzer behavior of prepending a leading whitespace character for completion items with any completion score does not handle sorting `TypeAndNameMatch` completions above `TypeMatch` completions. They were both being treated the same.
The first change this PR makes is to set the `sortText` field to either "1" for `TypeAndNameMatch` completions, "2" for `TypeMatch` completions, or "3" for completions which are neither of those. This change works around the potential ambiguity in the LSP spec and fixes completion sorting for users of coc. It also allows `TypeAndNameMatch` items to be sorted above just `TypeMatch` items (of course both of these will be sorted above completion items without a score).
The second change this PR makes is to use the actual completion scores for ref matches. The existing code ignored the actual score and always assumed these would be a high priority completion item.
#### Before
Here coc just sorts based on how close the items are in the file.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22216761/110249880-46063580-7f2d-11eb-9233-91a2bbd48238.png)
#### After
Here we correctly get `zzz` first, since that is both a type and name match. Then we get `ccc` which is just a type match.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22216761/110249883-4e5e7080-7f2d-11eb-9269-a3bc133fdee7.png)
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
7961: add user docs for ssr assist r=JoshMcguigan a=JoshMcguigan
@matklad
This is a small follow up on #7874, adding user docs for the SSR assist functionality. Since most other assists aren't handled this way I wasn't sure exactly how we wanted to document this, so feel free to suggest alternatives.
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
6822: Read version of rustc that compiled proc macro r=edwin0cheng a=jsomedon
Signed-off-by: Jay Somedon <jay.somedon@outlook.com>
This PR is to fix#6174.
I basically
* added two methods, `read_version` and `read_section`(used by `read_version`)
* two new crates `snap` and `object` to be used by those two methods
I just noticed that some part of code were auto-reformatted by rust-analyzer on file save. Does it matter?
Co-authored-by: Jay Somedon <jay.somedon@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7878: Remove `item_scope` field from `Body` r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7632
Instead of storing an `ItemScope` filled with inner items, we store the list of `BlockId`s for all block expressions that are part of a `Body`. Code can then query the `block_def_map` for those.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
7873: Consider unresolved qualifiers during flyimport r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7679
Takes unresolved qualifiers into account, providing better completions (or none, if the path is resolved or do not match).
Does not handle cases when both path qualifier and some trait has to be imported: there are many extra issues with those (such as overlapping imports, for instance) that will require large diffs to address.
Also does not do a fuzzy search on qualifier, that requires some adjustments in `import_map` for better queries and changes to the default replace range which also seems relatively big to include here.
![qualifier_completion](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2690773/110040808-0af8dc00-7d4c-11eb-83db-65af94e843bb.gif)
7933: Improve compilation speed r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
7898: generate_function assist: infer return type r=JoshMcguigan a=JoshMcguigan
This PR makes two changes to the generate function assist:
1. Attempt to infer an appropriate return type for the generated function
2. If a return type is inferred, and that return type is not unit, don't render the snippet
```rust
fn main() {
let x: u32 = foo$0();
// ^^^ trigger the assist to generate this function
}
// BEFORE
fn foo() ${0:-> ()} {
todo!()
}
// AFTER (only change 1)
fn foo() ${0:-> u32} {
todo!()
}
// AFTER (change 1 and 2, note the lack of snippet around the return type)
fn foo() -> u32 {
todo!()
}
```
These changes are made as two commits, in case we want to omit change 2. I personally feel like it is a nice change, but I could understand there being some opposition.
#### Pros of change 2
If we are able to infer a return type, and especially if that return type is not the unit type, the return type is almost as likely to be correct as the argument names/types. I think this becomes even more true as people learn how this feature works.
#### Cons of change 2
We could never be as confident about the return type as we are about the function argument types, so it is more likely a user will want to change that. Plus it is a confusing UX to sometimes have the cursor highlight the return type after triggering this assist and sometimes not have that happen.
#### Why omit unit type?
The assumption is that if we infer the return type as unit, it is likely just because of the current structure of the code rather than that actually being the desired return type. However, this is obviously just a heuristic and will sometimes be wrong. But being wrong here just means falling back to the exact behavior that existed before this PR.
Co-authored-by: Josh Mcguigan <joshmcg88@gmail.com>
7891: Improve handling of rustc_private r=matklad a=DJMcNab
This PR changes how `rust-analyzer` handles `rustc_private`. In particular, packages now must opt-in to using `rustc_private` in `Cargo.toml`, by adding:
```toml
[package.metadata.rust-analyzer]
rustc_private=true
```
This means that depending on crates which also use `rustc_private` will be significantly improved, since their dependencies on the `rustc_private` crates will be resolved properly.
A similar approach could be used in #6714 to allow annotating that your package uses the `test` crate, although I have not yet handled that in this PR.
Additionally, we now only index the crates which are transitive dependencies of `rustc_driver` in the `rustcSource` directory. This should not cause any change in behaviour when using `rustcSource: "discover"`, as the source used then will only be a partial clone. However, if `rustcSource` pointing at a local checkout of rustc, this should significantly improve the memory usage and lower indexing time. This is because we avoids indexing all crates in `src/tools/`, which includes `rust-analyzer` itself.
Furthermore, we also prefer named dependencies over dependencies from `rustcSource`. This ensures that feature resolution for crates which are depended on by both `rustc` and your crate uses the correct set for analysing your crate.
See also [introductory zulip stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/185405-t-compiler.2Fwg-rls-2.2E0/topic/Fixed.20crate.20graphs.20and.20optional.20builtin.20crates/near/229086673)
I have tested this in [priroda](https://github.com/oli-obk/priroda/), and it provides a significant improvement to the development experience (once I give `miri` the required data in `Cargo.toml`)
Todo:
- [ ] Documentation
This is ready to review, and I will add documentation if this would be accepted (or if I get time to do so anyway)
Co-authored-by: Daniel McNab <36049421+DJMcNab@users.noreply.github.com>
7892: Fix TokenStream::from_str for input consisting of a single group with delimiter r=edwin0cheng a=kevinmehall
TokenStream holds a `tt::Subtree` but assumes its `delimiter` is always `None`. In particular, the iterator implementation iterates over the inner `token_trees` and ignores the `delimiter`.
However, `TokenStream::from_str` violated this assumption when the input consists of a single group by producing a Subtree with an outer delimiter, which was ignored as seen by a procedural macro.
`tt::Subtree` is just `pub delimiter: Option<Delimiter>, pub token_trees: Vec<TokenTree>`, so a Subtree that is statically guaranteed not to have a delimiter is just `Vec<TokenTree>`.
Fixes#7810Fixes#7875
Co-authored-by: Kevin Mehall <km@kevinmehall.net>
7865: preserve escape sequences when replacing string with char r=Veykril a=jDomantas
Currently it replaces escape sequence with the actual value, which is very wrong for `"\n"`.
Co-authored-by: Domantas Jadenkus <djadenkus@gmail.com>
`TokenStream` assumes that its subtree's delimeter is `None`, and this
should be encoded in the type system instead of having a delimiter field
that is mostly ignored.
`tt::Subtree` is just `pub delimiter: Option<Delimiter>, pub
token_trees: Vec<TokenTree>`, so a Subtree that is statically guaranteed
not to have a delimiter is just Vec<TokenTree>.
TokenStream holds a `tt::Subtree` but assumes its `delimiter` is always
`None`. In particular, the iterator implementation iterates over the
inner `token_trees` and ignores the `delimiter`.
However, `TokenStream::from_str` violated this assumption when the input
consists of a single Group by producing a Subtree with an outer
delimiter, which was ignored as seen by a procedural macro.
In this case, wrap an extra level of Subtree around it.
Fixes#7810Fixes#7875
This is a hack to work around miri being included in
our analysis of rustc-dev
Really, we should probably use an include set of the actual root libraries
I'm not sure how those are determined however
7880: Honor snippet capability when using the extract function assist r=lnicola a=Arthamys
This fixes issue #7793
Co-authored-by: san <san@alien.parts>
7870: Use chalk_ir::AdtId r=Veykril a=Veykril
It's a bit unfortunate that we got two AdtId's now(technically 3 with the alias in the chalk module but that one won't allow pattern matching), one from hir_def and one from chalk_ir(hir_ty). But the hir_ty/chalk one doesn't leave hir so it shouldn't be that bad I suppose. Though if I see this right this will happen for almost all IDs.
I imagine most of the intermediate changes to using chalk ids will turn out not too nice until the refactor is over.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7795: Show docs on hover for keywords and primitives r=matklad a=Veykril
![lAWFadkziX](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3757771/109369534-eeb4f500-789c-11eb-8f2b-2f9c4e129de3.gif)
It's a bit annoying that this requires the `SyntaxNode` and `Semantics` to be pulled through `hover_for_definition` just so we can get the `std` crate but I couldn't think of a better way.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7335: added region folding r=matklad a=LucianoBestia
Regions of code that you'd like to be folded can be wrapped with `// #region` and `// #endregion` line comments.
This is called "Region Folding". It is originally available for many languages in VSCode. But Rust-analyzer has its own folding function and this is missing.
With this Pull Request I am suggesting a simple solution.
The regions are a special kind of comments, so I added a bit of code in the comment folding function.
The regex to match are: `^\s*//\s*#?region\b` and `^\s*//\s*#?endregion\b`.
The number of space characters is not important. There is an optional # character. The line can end with a name of the region.
Example:
```rust
// 1. some normal comment
// region: test
// 2. some normal comment
calling_function(x,y);
// endregion: test
```
I added a test for this new functionality in `folding_ranges.rs`.
Please, take a look and comment.
I found that these exact regexes are already present in the file `language-configuration.json`, but I don't find a way to read this configuration. So my regex is hardcoded in the code.
7691: Suggest name in extract variable r=matklad a=cpud36
Generate better default name in extract variable assist as was mentioned in issue #1587
# Currently supported
(in order of declining precedence)
1. Expr is argument to a function; use corresponding parameter name
2. Expr is result of a function or method call; use this function/method's name
3. Use expr type name (if possible)
4. Fallback to `var_name` otherwise
# Showcase
![generate_derive_variable_name_from_method](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/108013304-72105400-701c-11eb-9f13-eec52e74d0cc.gif)
![generate_derive_variable_name_from_param](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/108013305-72a8ea80-701c-11eb-957e-2214f7f005de.gif)
# Questions
* Should we more aggressively strip known types? E.g. we already strip `&T -> T`; should we strip `Option<T> -> T`, `Result<T, E> -> T`, and others?
* Integers and floats use `var_name` by default. Should we introduce a name, like `i`, `f` etc?
* Can we return a list and suggest a name when renaming(like IntelliJ does)?
* Should we add counters to remove duplicate variables? E.g. `type`, `type1`, type2`, etc.
Co-authored-by: Luciano Bestia <LucianoBestia@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Luciano <31509965+LucianoBestia@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Vladyslav Katasonov <cpud47@gmail.com>
7827: Fix proc macro TokenStream::from_str token ids r=vlad20012 a=vlad20012
To be honest, I don't know what it changes from a user perspective.
Internally, this fixes spans (token ids) of a `TokenStream` parsed from a string:
```rust
#[proc_macro_derive(FooDerive)]
pub fn foo_derive(item: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
"fn foo() {}".parse().unwrap()
}
```
Previously, `TokenStream` was constructed from tokens with incremental ids (that conflicted with call-site tokens). Now they are `-1`.
Co-authored-by: vlad20012 <beskvlad@gmail.com>
7829: Bump deps r=matklad a=lnicola
Unfortunately, this brings a bunch of proc macros dep because `cargo-metadata` went full-in on `derive-builder`. I'm not sure what we can do here..
7833: Use chalk_ir::Mutability r=Veykril a=Veykril
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7778: Fix lowering trailing self paths in UseTrees r=Veykril a=Veykril
Noticed that hovering over `self` in a use tree like `use foo::bar::{self}` showing documentation and such for the current module instead of `bar`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7819: Speedup heavy tests r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
7820: Update vscode README with a small features list r=matklad a=Veykril
Nothing grande but I figured this is a bit better than showing almost nothing
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7813: Inline TypeCtor into Ty r=flodiebold a=Veykril
This removes the `ApplicationTy` variant from `Ty` bringing the representation a lot closer to chalk's `TyKind`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7804: Introduce TypeCtor::Scalar r=lnicola a=Veykril
`TypeCtor::Int(..) | TypeCtor::Float(..) | TypeCtor::Char | TypeCtor::Bool` => `TypeCtor::Scalar(..)`, in this case we can actually just straight up use `chalk_ir::Scalar` already since its just a POD without any IDs or anything.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7797: Format generated lints and features manually r=matklad a=lnicola
As `quote` and `rustfmt` leave them on a single line, which makes running `grep` in the repository quite annoying.
Also removes a dead `gen_features.rs` file (`gen_lint_completions.rs` does the same thing).
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
7566: Add benchmark tests for mbe r=matklad a=edwin0cheng
This PR add more real world tests dumped from `rust-analyzer analysis-stats .` to benchmark its performance.
cc #7513
r? @matklad
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7741: Add convert_for_to_iter_for_each assist r=mattyhall a=mattyhall
Implements one direction of #7681
I wonder if this tries to guess too much at the right thing here. A common pattern is:
```rust
let col = vec![1, 2, 3];
for v in &mut col {
*v *= 2;
}
// equivalent to:
col.iter_mut().for_each(|v| *v *= 2);
```
I've tried to detect this case by checking if the expression after the `in` is a (mutable) reference and if not inserting iter()/iter_mut(). This is just a convention used in the stdlib however, so could sometimes be wrong. I'd be happy to make an improvement for this, but not sure what would be best. A few options spring to mind:
1. Only allow this for types that are known to have iter/iter_mut (ie stdlib types)
2. Try to check if iter/iter_mut exists and they return the right iterator type
3. Don't try to do this and just add `.into_iter()` to whatever is after `in`
Co-authored-by: Matt Hall <matthew@quickbeam.me.uk>
7732: Don't lower TypeBound::Lifetime as GenericPredicate::Error r=flodiebold a=Veykril
Basically we just discard the typebound for now instead when lowering to `GenericPredicate`. I think this shouldn't have any other side effects?
Fixes #7683(hopefully for real this time)
I also played around with introducing `GenericPredicate::LifetimeOutlives` and `GenericPredicate::TypeOutlives`(see b9d6904845) but that won't fix this issue(at least not for now) due to lifetime predicate mismatches when resolving methods so I figure this is a good way to fix it for now.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7699: Implement ast::AstNode for NameLike and move it to node_ext r=matklad a=Veykril
With this `search`(and 2 other modules) don't necessarily go through 3 calls of `find_node_at_offset_with_descend` to find the correct node. Also makes the code that searches for NameLikes a bit easier on the eyes imo, though that can be fixed with just a helper function as well so its not that relevant.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7705: Show hover info of the definition of ConstReference patterns instead of its type r=Veykril a=Veykril
Closes#7671
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Reading through the code for diagnostics and observing debug logs, I noticed
that diagnostics are transmitted after every change for every opened file,
even if they haven't changed (especially visible for files with no diagnostics).
This change avoids marking files as "changed" if diagnostics are the same to what
was already sent before. This will only work if diagnostics are always produced in
the same order, but from my limited testing it seems this is the case.
7703: Allow comments between newlines in chaining hints r=Veykril a=unratito
Currently, chaining hints are not generated if there are comments between newlines, which is a very common pattern:
```rust
let vec = (0..10)
// Multiply by 2
.map(|x| x * 2)
// Add 3
.map(|x| x + 3)
.collect::<Vec<i32>>();
```
Besides, it seems a bit weird that this piece of code generates a chaining hint:
```rust
let vec = (0..10)
.collect::<Vec<i32>>();
```
But this one doesn't:
```rust
let vec = (0..10)
// This is a comment
.collect::<Vec<i32>>();
```
Co-authored-by: Paco Soberón <unratito@gmail.com>
7690: Extract `fn load_workspace(…)` from `fn load_cargo(…)` r=matklad a=regexident
Unfortunately in https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7595 I forgot to `pub use` (rather than just `use`) the newly introduced `LoadCargoConfig`.
So this PR fixes this now.
It also:
- splits up `fn load_cargo` into a "workspace loading" and a "project loading" phase
- adds a `progress: &dyn Fn(String)` to allow third-parties to provide CLI progress updates, too
The motivation behind both of these is the fact that rust-analyzer currently does not support caching.
As such any third-party making use of `ra_ap_…` needs to providing a caching layer itself.
Unlike for rust-analyzer itself however a common use-pattern of third-parties is to analyze a specific target (`--lib`/`--bin <BIN>`/…) from a specific package (`--package`). The targets/packages of a crate can be obtained via `ProjectWorkspace::load(…)`, which currently is performed inside of `fn load_cargo`, effectively making the returned `ProjectWorkspace` inaccessible to the outer caller. With this information one can then provide early error handling via CLI (in case of ambiguities or invalid arguments, etc), instead of `fn load_cargo` failing with a possibly obscure error message. It also allows for annotating the persisted caches with its specific associated package/target selector and short-circuit quickly if a matching cache is found on disk, significantly cutting load times.
Before:
```rust
pub struct LoadCargoConfig {
pub cargo_config: &CargoConfig,
pub load_out_dirs_from_check: bool,
pub with_proc_macro: bool,
}
pub fn load_cargo(
root: &Path,
config: &LoadCargoConfig
) -> Result<(AnalysisHost, vfs::Vfs)> {
// ...
}
```
After:
```rust
pub fn load_workspace(
root: &Path,
config: &CargoConfig,
progress: &dyn Fn(String),
) -> Result<ProjectWorkspace> {
// ...
}
pub struct LoadCargoConfig {
pub load_out_dirs_from_check: bool,
pub with_proc_macro: bool,
}
pub fn load_cargo(
ws: ProjectWorkspace,
config: &LoadCargoConfig,
progress: &dyn Fn(String),
) -> Result<(AnalysisHost, vfs::Vfs)> {
// ...
}
```
Co-authored-by: Vincent Esche <regexident@gmail.com>
7657: utf8 r=matklad a=matklad
- Prepare for utf-8 offsets
- reduce code duplication in tests
- Make utf8 default, implement utf16 in terms of it
- Make it easy to add additional context for offset conversion
- Implement utf8 offsets
closes#7453
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
7687: Specialization for async traits r=matklad a=arnaudgolfouse
Fixes#7669.
Adapting the parser seemed to be all that was needed, but I am not very experienced with the codebase. Is this enough ?
Co-authored-by: Arnaud <arnaud.golfouse@laposte.net>
7620: Support control flow in `extract_function` assist r=matklad a=cpud36
Support `return`ing from outer function, `break`ing and `continue`ing outer loops when extracting function.
# Example
Transforms
```rust
fn foo() -> i32 {
let items = [1,2,3];
let mut sum = 0;
for &item in items {
<|>if item == 42 {
break;
}<|>
sum += item;
}
sum
}
```
Into
```rust
fn foo() -> i32 {
let items = [1,2,3];
let mut sum = 0;
for &item in items {
if fun_name(item) {
break;
}
sum += item;
}
sum
}
fn fun_name(item: i32) -> bool {
if item == 42 {
return true;
}
false
}
```
![add_explicit_type_infer_type](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/107544222-0fadf280-6bdb-11eb-9625-ed6194ba92c0.gif)
# Features
Supported variants
- break and function does not return => uses `bool` and plain if
- break and function does return => uses `Option<T>` and matches on it
- break with value and function does not return => uses `Option<T>` and if let
- break with value and function does return => uses `Result<T, U>` and matches on t
- same for `return` and `continue`(but we can't continue with value)
Assist does handle nested loops and nested items(like functions, modules, impls)
Try `expr?` operator is allowed together with `return Err(_)` and `return None`.
`return expr` is not allowed.
# Not supported
## Mixing `return` with `break` or `continue`
If we have e.g. a `return` and a `break` in the selected code, it is unclear what the produced code should look like.
We can try `Result<T, Option<U>>` or something like that, but it isn't idiomatic, nor it is established. Otherwise, implementation
is relatively simple.
## `break` with label
Not sure how to handle different labels for multiple `break`s.
[edit] implemented try `expr?`
Co-authored-by: Vladyslav Katasonov <cpud47@gmail.com>
7661: Start LSP 3.17 support r=kjeremy a=kjeremy
Companion to https://github.com/gluon-lang/lsp-types/pull/199 which <strike>has not been merged yet</strike> has been merged.
This doesn't opt into any 3.17 functionality yet.
Co-authored-by: Jeremy Kolb <kjeremy@gmail.com>
7656: Implement constructor usage search for almost all items r=matklad a=Veykril
This PR moves the filering for enum constructors to the HIR, with this unprefixed variants as well as when the enum has been renamed via use will then still show up properly.
We now walk the ast of the `NameRef` up until we find a `PathExpr`(which also handles `CallExpr` for tuple-type structs and variants already) or a `RecordExpr`. For enum search we then take the `path` out of that expression and do a resolution on it to compare it with the definition enum.
With this PR we now support searching for all constructor literals, Unit-, Tuple- and Record-Structs, Unit-, Tuple- and Record-Variants as well as Unions.
There is one shortcoming due to how the search is triggered. Unit Variants constructors can't be searched as we have no position for it to kick off the search(since a comma doesn't have to exist for the last variant).
Closes#2549 though it doesn't implement it as outlined in the issue since the reference kind was removed recently, though I believe the approach taken here is better personally.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7643: Automatically detect the rustc-src directory (fixes#3517) r=matklad a=bnjbvr
If the configured rustcSource was not set, then try to automatically
detect a source for the sysroot rustc directory.
I wasn't sure how to do it in the case of the project.json file, though.
7663: Tolerate spaces in nix binary patching r=matklad a=CertainLach
If path to original file contains space (I.e on code insiders, where
default data directory is ~/Code - Insiders/), then there is syntax
error evaluating src arg.
Instead pass path as str, and coerce to path back in nix expression
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Bouvier <public@benj.me>
Co-authored-by: Yaroslav Bolyukin <iam@lach.pw>
7668: Finalize rename infra rewrite r=matklad a=Veykril
This should be the final PR in regards to rewriting rename stuff, #4290.
It addresses 3 things:
- Currently renaming import aliases causes some undesired behavior(see #5198) which is why this PR causes us to just return an error if an attempt at renaming an alias is made for the time being. Though this only prevents it from happening when the alias import is renamed, so its not too helpful.
- Fixes#6898
- If we are inside a macro file simply rename the input name node as there isn't really a way to do any of the fancy shorthand renames and similar things as for that we would have to exactly know what the macro generates and what not.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7664: refactor impl generation in assists r=Veykril a=jDomantas
Follow-up to #7659: all impl generation in assists (at least what I found) is now done through `utils::{generate_impl_text, generate_trait_impl_text}`.
Co-authored-by: Domantas Jadenkus <djadenkus@gmail.com>
7665: Don't classify attribute macros as their path unless it's a function with the proc_macro_attribute attribute r=Veykril a=Veykril
bors r+
Closes#6389
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
For all struct kinds, unions and enums, as well as for record- and
tuple-variants but not for unit-variants, as these have no trailing
character we can anchor the search to. Functionality wise it is
implemented though.
In some situations we reloaded the workspace in the tests after having reported
to be ready. There's two fixes here:
1. Add a version to the VFS config and include that version in progress reports,
so that we don't think we're done prematurely;
2. Delay status transitions until after changes are applied. Otherwise the last
change during loading can potentially trigger a workspace reload, if it contains
interesting changes.
7617: Add getter/setter assists r=Veykril a=yoshuawuyts
This patch makes progress towards the design outlined in https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5943, and includes a small refactor which closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7607. All together this patch does 4 things:
- Adds a `generate_getter` assist.
- Adds a `generate_getter_mut` assist.
- Adds a `generate_setter` assist.
- Moves the `generate_impl_text` function from `generate_new` into `utils` (which closes#7607).
## Design Notes
I've chosen to follow the [Rust API guidelines on getters](https://rust-lang.github.io/api-guidelines/naming.html#getter-names-follow-rust-convention-c-getter) as closely as possible. This deliberately leaves "builder pattern"-style setters out of scope.
Also, similar to https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7570 this assist generates doc comments. I think this should work well in most cases, and for the few where it doesn't it's probably easily edited. This makes it slightly less correct than the #7570 implementation, but I think this is still useful enough to include for many of the same reasons.
The reason why this PR contains 3 assists, rather than 1, is because each of them is so similar to the others that it felt more noisy to do them separately than all at once. The amount of code added does not necessarily reflect that, but hope that still makes sense.
## Examples
**Input**
```rust
struct Person {
name: String, // <- cursor on "name"
}
```
**generate getter**
```rust
struct Person {
name: String,
}
impl Person {
/// Get a reference to the person's name.
fn name(&self) -> &String {
&self.name
}
}
```
**generate mut getter**
```rust
struct Person {
name: String,
}
impl Person {
/// Get a mutable reference to the person's name.
fn name_mut(&mut self) -> &mut String {
&mut self.name
}
}
```
**generate setter**
```rust
struct Person {
name: String,
}
impl Person {
/// Set the person's name.
fn set_name(&mut self, name: String) {
self.name = name;
}
}
```
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts+github@gmail.com>
7572: Add `find_or_create_impl_block` to assist utils r=matklad a=yoshuawuyts
This is another continuation of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7562, introducing a small util to either find an `impl` block, or create a new one if none exists. I copied this code from the `generate_new` assist into https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7562, and this unifies both into a helper.
It doesn't feel super polished in its current state, but my hope is that this is enough of a starting point that it can be expanded on later. For example something that would be useful would be a flag which either returns the index of the start of the block, or the end of the block.
Anyway, I hope this is useful. Thanks!
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
7574: Remove various redundant clones r=kjeremy a=yoshuawuyts
I noticed when running clippy through RA that there are a few instances where `clone` is called where it's not actually needed. I figured a small patch to remove these might be welcome here.
Thanks!
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
7505: Widen Highlights root range to covering element r=Veykril a=Veykril
There have been a few issues about/containing spurious syntax highlighting panics, which all seem to come from the `rust_analyzer::handlers::handle_semantic_tokens_range` request, which I believe this to be the cause of as the text range we want to highlight here is currently potentially smaller than that of the covering element, so we might highlight something that is inside the covering element, but outside of the text range we wish to highlight causing the assert to fail.
Unfortunately this isn't really easy to test since I have yet to find a reproducible cause(#7504 doesn't work for me cause I can't seem to checkout the given commit).
See #7504, #7298, #7299 and #7416, all of those contain an assertion failure in syntax highlighting, but only in the range request.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7570: Add doc gen to the `generate_enum_match_method` assist r=yoshuawuyts a=yoshuawuyts
Implements a small extension to https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7562, generating default comments. I wasn't sure if this would fit the goals of Rust-Analyzer, so I chose to split it into a separate PR. This is especially useful when writing code in a codebase which uses `#![warn(missing_docs)]` lint, as many production-grade libraries do.
The comments we're generating here are similar to the ones found on [`Option::is_some`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/option/enum.Option.html#method.is_some) and [`Result::is_err`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.is_err). I briefly considered only generating these for `pub` types, but they seem small and unobtrusive enough that they're probably useful in the general case. Thanks!
## Example
__input__
```rust
pub(crate) enum Variant {
Undefined,
Minor, // cursor here
Major,
}
```
__output__
```rust
pub(crate) enum Variant {
Undefined,
Minor,
Major,
}
impl Variant {
/// Returns `true` if the variant is [`Minor`].
pub(crate) fn is_minor(&self) -> bool {
matches!(self, Self::Minor)
}
}
```
## Future Directions
This opens up the path to adding an assist for generating these comments on existing `is_` methods. This would make it both easy to document new code, and update existing code with documentation.
7571: Cleanup decl_check r=Veykril a=Veykril
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7562: add `generate_enum_match` assist r=matklad a=yoshuawuyts
This adds a `generate_enum_match` assist, which generates `is_` variants for enums (e.g. `Option::{is_none,is_some}` in std). This is my first attempt at contributing to Rust-Analyzer, so I'm not sure if I've gotten everything right. Thanks!
## Example
**Input**
```rust
pub(crate) enum Variant {
Undefined,
Minor, // cursor here
Major,
}
```
**Output**
```rust
pub(crate) enum Variant {
Undefined,
Minor,
Major,
}
impl Variant {
pub(crate) fn is_minor(&self) -> bool {
matches!(self, Self::Minor)
}
}
```
## Future Directions
I made this as a stepping stone for some of the more involved refactors (e.g. #5944). I'm not sure yet how to create, use, and test `window.showQuickPick`-based asssists in RA. But once that's possible, it'd probably be nice to be able to generate match methods in bulk through the quickpick UI rather than one-by-one:
```
[x] Select enum members to generate methods for. (3 selected) [ OK ]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[x] Undefined
[x] Minor
[x] Major
```
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts+github@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
7568: Fix merging of `segment_index` in path resolution r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This caused associated item lookup to fail when modifying `resolver.rs` to handle block expressions with inner items.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7535: Extract function assist r=cpud36 a=cpud36
This PR adds `extract function/method` assist. closes#5409.
# Supported features
Assist should support extracting from expressions(`1`, `2 + 2`, `loop { }`) and from a series of statements, e.g.:
```rust
foo();
$0bar();
baz();$0
quix();
```
Assist also supports extracting parameters, like:
```rust
fn foo() -> i32 {
let n = 1;
$0n + 1$0
}
// -
fn foo() -> i32 {
let n = 1;
fun_name(n)
}
fn fun_name(n: i32) -> i32 {
n + 1
}
```
Extracting methods also generally works.
Assist allows referencing outer variables, both mutably and immutably, and handles handles access to variables local to extracted function:
```rust
fn foo() {
let mut n = 1;
let mut m = 2;
let mut moved_v = Vec::new();
let mut ref_mut_v = Vec::new();
$0
n += 1;
let k = 1;
moved_v.push(n);
let r = &mut m;
ref_mut_v.push(*r);
let h = 3;
$0
n = ref_mut_v.len() + k;
n -= h + m;
}
// -
fn foo() {
let mut n = 1;
let mut m = 2;
let mut moved_v = Vec::new();
let mut ref_mut_v = Vec::new();
let (k, h) = fun_name(&mut n, moved_v, &mut m, &mut ref_mut_v);
n = ref_mut_v.len() + k;
n -= h + m;
}
fn fun_name(n: &mut i32, mut moved_v: Vec<i32>, m: &mut i32, ref_mut_v: &mut Vec<i32>) -> (i32, i32) {
*n += 1;
let k = 1;
moved_v.push(*n);
let r = m;
ref_mut_v.push(*r);
let h = 3;
(k, h)
}
```
So we handle both input and output paramters
# Showcase
![extract_cursor_in_range_3](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/106980190-c9870800-6770-11eb-83d9-3d36b2550ff6.gif)
![fill_match_arms_discard_wildcard](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/106980197-cbe96200-6770-11eb-96b0-14c27894fac0.gif)
![ide_db_helpers_handle_kind](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/106980201-cdb32580-6770-11eb-9e6e-6ac8155d65ac.gif)
![ide_db_imports_location_local_query](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/4218373/106980205-cf7ce900-6770-11eb-8516-653c8fcca807.gif)
# Working with non-`Copy` types
Consider the following example:
```rust
fn foo() {
let v = Vec::new();
$0
let n = v.len();
$0
let is_empty = v.is_empty();
}
```
`v` must be a parameter to extracted function.
The question is, what type should it have.
It could be `v: Vec<i32>`, or `v: &Vec<i32>`.
The former is incorrect for `Vec<i32>`, but the later is silly for `i32`.
To resolve this we need to know if the type implements `Copy` trait.
I didn't find any api available from assists to query this.
`hir_ty::method_resolution::implements` seems relevant, but is isn't publicly re-exported from `hir`.
# Star(`*`) token and pointer dereference
If I understand correctly, in order to create expression like `*p`, one should use `ast::make::expr_prefix(T![*], ...)`, which
in turn calls `token(T![*])`.
`token` does not have star in `tokens::SOURCE_FILE`, so this panics.
I had to add `*` to `SOURCE_FILE` to make it work.
Correct me if this is not intended way to do this.
# Lowering access `value -> mut ref -> shared ref`
Consider the following example:
```rust
fn foo() {
let v = Vec::new();
$0 let n = v.len(); $0
}
```
`v` is not used after extracted function body, so both `v: &Vec<i32>` and `v: Vec<i32>` would work.
Currently the later would be chosen.
We can however check the body of extracted function and conclude that `v: &Vec<i32>` is sufficient.
Using `v: &Vec<i32>`(that is a minimal required access level) might be a better default.
I am unsure.
# Cleanup
The assist seems to be reasonably handling most of common cases.
If there are no concerns with code it produces(i.e. with test cases), I will start cleaning up
[edit]
added showcase
Co-authored-by: Vladyslav Katasonov <cpud47@gmail.com>
7541: Use block_def_map in body lowering (third time's the charm) r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
After https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7380 and https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7506 both had to be reverted, this should have finally resolved all remaining bugs.
Most importantly, the optimization to skip `block_def_map` computation when the block contains no inner items was fixed (which fortunately was simpler than expected).
I've ran `analysis-stats` on libstd locally, which works fine, and also ran this PR locally for a short while without issues.
Note that this *still* has no (or almost no) user-facing impact, because the rest of r-a still relies on some local item support hacks.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
there are a few currently limitations:
* no modifications of function body
* does not handle mutability and references
* no method support
* may produce incorrect results