Adds a Rust Analyzer configuration option to set a custom
target directory for builds. This is a workaround for Rust Analyzer
blocking debug builds while running `cargo check`. This change
should close#6007
According to the VS Code documentation, the vscode.open command opens the URL
_in the editor_ (https://code.visualstudio.com/api/references/commands).
However, in reality, it seems to do so only for file:// URLs, falling back to
other applications for other URL schemes (at least for HTTP/HTTPS).
Until now, the URL to the documentation was always HTTP based, so using the
vscode.open command was perfectly fine. However, displaying local documentation
will be supported from now on (see next commit). Local documentation is not
HTTP-based, but instead addressed via a file:// URL. The file URL would
therefore be opened in VS Code instead of in the browser — this is definitely
not what the user wants.
Therefore, the vscode.env.openExternal function is used instead, this function
never opens the URL in VS Code.
feat: add backtick to surrounding and auto-closing pairs
Makes backticks always complete as a pair and also surround the current selection, similar to double quotes. This is useful primarily in the context of markdown doc comments, but is applied globally for simplicity.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/11381
When building the Rust compiler with `./x check` from within VS Code,
the current `rustc` problem matcher thinks that the output from that
command that looks like this:
Build completed successfully in 0:00:26
is about a problem in a file named `0` on line 00, col 26. This wouldn't
be so bad if it wasn't for that VS Code tends to get stuck on this
problem because of problems with opening the file '0'.
The rust compiler will never output problems with a line or a column
that starts with 0, so change the regexp to require lines and cols to
begin with [1-9] to fix this problem.
extend check.overrideCommand and buildScripts.overrideCommand docs
Extend check.overrideCommand and buildScripts.overrideCommand docs regarding invocation strategy and location.
However something still seems a bit odd -- the docs for `invocationStrategy`/`invocationLocation` talk about "workspaces", but the setting that controls which workspaces are considered is called `linkedProjects`. Is a project the same as a workspace here or is there some subtle difference?
Increase the buffer size for discover project command
The default value for maxBuffer is 1 MiB[1]. If the discover project command returns stdout or stderr that is greater than 1 MiB, the extension would error with "RangeError: stderr maxBuffer length exceeded".
Set the default value for maxBuffer to 10 MiB for project discovery.
[1] https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_processexeccommand-options-callback
The default value for maxBuffer is 1 MiB[1]. If the discover project
command returns stdout or stderr that is greater than 1 MiB, the
extension would error with "RangeError: stderr maxBuffer length
exceeded".
Set the default value for maxBuffer to 10 MiB for project discovery.
[1] https://nodejs.org/api/child_process.html#child_processexeccommand-options-callback
Use the warning color when rust-analyzer is stopped
If the rust-analyzer server isn't running, we can't do much. Treat this state as a warning color, so it's more obvious.
Previously, clicking 'rust-analyzer' would stop the server
entirely. This was easy to do accidentally, and then the user has to
wait for the server to start up again.
editor/code: Break down CI steps to know what is failing easily
This do the thing I mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/15265#issuecomment-1634424385
This aims to improve CI status check more readable.
I tried to use [`jobs.<job_id>.if`](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-workflows/workflow-syntax-for-github-actions#jobsjob_idif) to make the configuration
more shortly once.
But it could not fire the `end-success` or `end-failure` status if some jobs in the workflow were skipped. This causes an integration problem with bors.
By their reasons, this patch still uses `jobs.<job_id>.steps[*].if`.
---
To do this change, we reorganize npm-script.
| previous | after |
|--------------------|----------------------------------------|
| `npm run lint` | `npm run lint && npm run format:check` |
| `npm run fix` | `npm run lint:fix && npm run format` |
The previous `npm run fix` sometimes does not complete fix automatically because ESLint's autofix doees not follow prettier's formatting. So we need to run `npm run lint:fix && npm run format` by this order.
To do this change, we reorganize npm-script.
| previous | after |
|--------------------|----------------------------------------|
| `npm run lint` | `npm run lint && npm run format:check` |
| `npm run fix` | `npm run lint:fix && npm run format` |
The previous `npm run fix` sometimes does not complete fix automatically
because ESLint's autofix doees not follow prettier's formatting.
So we need to run `npm run lint:fix && npm run format` by this order.
editor/code: Use `@tsconfig/strictest` to define type checking rules
Motivation
-----------
This change aims to make it easier to manage tsconfig by [``@tsconfig/strictest`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@tsconfig/strictest)` and intend to leave to create "ideal" rules about TypeScript's type checking.
Implementation
---------------
This change removes some duplicated rules defined in ``@tsconfig/strictest`` and add disabing some strict rules that fails with the current codebase.
Motivation
-----------
This change aims to make it easier to manage tsconfig.
This intend to leave to create "ideal" rules about TypeScript's type checking.
Implementation
---------------
This change removes some duplicated rules defined in `@tsconfig/strictest` and add disabing some strict rules
that fails with the current codebase.