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
I've noticed that there are various suggestions that rust-analyzer seems
to filter out, even if they make sense.
Here's an example of where it seems like there should be a suggestion,
but there isn't:
![https://i.imgur.com/wsjM6iz.png](https://i.imgur.com/wsjM6iz.png)
It turns out that this specific suggestion is not considered
`MachineApplicable`, which are the only suggestions that rust-analyzer
accepts. However if you read the documentation for `MachineApplicable`,
b3897e3d13/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs (L27-L29)
then you realize that these are specifically only those suggestions that
rust-analyzer could even automatically apply (in some distant future,
behind some setting or so). Other suggestions that may have some
semantic impact do not use `MachineApplicable`. So all other suggestions
are still intended to be suggested to the user, just not automatically
applied without the user being consulted.
b3897e3d13/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs (L22-L24)
So with that in mind, rust-analyzer should almost definitely not filter
out `MaybeIncorrect` (which honestly is named horribly, it just means
that it's a semantic change, not just a syntactical one).
Then there's `HasPlaceholders` which basically is just another semantic
one, but with placeholders. The user will have to make some adjustments,
but the suggestion still is perfectly valid. rust-analyzer could
probably detect those placeholders and put proper "tab through" markers
there for the IDE, but that's not necessary for now.
Then the last one is `Unspecified` which is so unknown that I don't even
know how to judge it, meaning that the suggestion should probably also
just be suggested to the user and then they can decide.
So with all that in mind, I'm proposing to get rid of the check for
Applicability entirely.
7465: Only hide parameter hints for path, field and methodcall expressions r=SomeoneToIgnore a=Veykril
Doing this check for other expressions makes little sense to me.
Fixes#7458
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7457: Add no-buffering file logging and wait for a debugger option. r=vsrs a=vsrs
Adds two command line flags: `--no-buffering` and `--wait-dbg`.
Not sure if someone else needs this, but personally I found both flags extremely useful trying to figure out why RA does not work with Visual Studio. Or better to say why Visual Studio does not work with RA.
Co-authored-by: vsrs <vit@conrlab.com>
7433: Support Macro v2 in mbe r=jonas-schievink a=edwin0cheng
Added `mbe::MacroDef` for Macro v2.
cc @jonas-schievink
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7426: Create all `ModuleId`s through a `DefMap` method r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
`ModuleId` needs to be able to represent blocks, and only the
associated `DefMap` will know how to construct that `ModuleId`
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7399: Make `ModuleId`'s `krate` field private and audit uses r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
Detail should be rendered as shtort one line, just dumping fn header
there is not useful, despite the fact that TS does this.
The fact that this is a function should be indicated by the icon, the
same goes for pub/const/async etc qualitfiers
name is already present in the lable (and arg list should be a part of
that, as in idea)
But the return type is the small genuinerlly useful bit of info we can show here
7310: Add assist: add lifetime to type r=matklad a=bnjjj
close#7200
7395: Obtain `ModuleId`'s `DefMap` through a method r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Once `ModuleId` can represent modules inside block expressions, this will be required in order to obtain the correct `DefMap`. Otherwise existing code might use a `LocalModuleId` from the wrong `DefMap` and cause a panic.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Coenen <5719034+bnjjj@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7353: Add LifetimeParam and ConstParam to CompletionItemKind r=matklad a=Veykril
Adds `LifetimeParam` and `ConstParam` to `CompletionItemKind` and maps them both to `TypeParam` in the protocol conversion as there are no equivalents, so nothing really changes there.
`ConstParam` could be mapped to `Const` I guess but I'm split on whether that would be better?
Additions were solely inspired by (the single) test output for const params.
Also sorts the variants of `CompletionItemKind` and its to_proto match.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7386: Handle box with allocator r=flodiebold a=tweksteen
In 1.49.0, the definition of Box was modified to support an optional
Allocator[1]. Adapt the parsing of the `box` keyword to supply the
expected number of parameters to the constructor.
[1] f288cd2e17Fixes: #6956
Co-authored-by: Thiébaud Weksteen <tweek@google.com>
In 1.49.0, the definition of Box was modified to support an optional
Allocator[1]. Adapt the parsing of the `box` keyword to supply the
expected number of parameters to the constructor.
[1] f288cd2e17
7348: Fix broken link in intra-doc r=edwin0cheng a=sasurau4
Fix#5546
The intra-doc link doesn't work fine for trait associated method.
Co-authored-by: Daiki Ihara <sasurau4@gmail.com>
7387: Refactor build script specific data r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
It refactors for separating logic for build script specific data.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7375: Add support for running name resolution in block expressions r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This adds a `block_def_map` query that runs the name resolution algorithm on a block expression, and returns a `DefMap` that stores links to the parent `DefMap` (either the containing block or the crate-level `DefMap`). Blocks with no inner items return the parent's `DefMap` as-is, to avoid creating unnecessarily long `DefMap` chains.
Path resolution is updated to recurse into the parent `DefMap` after looking up a path in the original `DefMap`.
I've added a few new tests for this, but outside of those this isn't used yet.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7359: ItemTree: store a mapping from blocks to inner items r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
To do name resolution within block expressions, we need to know which inner items are located inside each block expression. This adds such a mapping to `ItemTree`, replacing the previous one, which was seemingly unused other than to access all the inner items.
This also assigns `AstId`s to block expressions, which is needed to store the mapping in salsa.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7341: Fix warnings when running `cargo doc --document-private-items` r=Veykril a=jyn514
These were the warnings previously:
<details>
```
warning: could not parse code block as Rust code
--> crates/stdx/src/lib.rs:137:9
|
137 | /// ∀ x in slice[..idx]: pred(x)
| _________^
138 | | /// && ∀ x in slice[idx..]: !pred(x)
| |____^
|
= note: error from rustc: unknown start of token: \u{2200}
warning: 1 warning emitted
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= note: `#[warn(broken_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: 2 warnings emitted
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= note: `#[warn(broken_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: 2 warnings emitted
```
</details>
This does *not* fix the following warning, because it is actually rust
code and rustdoc is being over eager:
```
warning: Rust code block is empty
--> crates/parser/src/grammar.rs:16:5
|
16 | //! ```
| _____^
17 | | //! // test function_with_zero_parameters
18 | | //! // fn foo() {}
19 | | //! ```
| |_______^
|
help: mark blocks that do not contain Rust code as text
|
16 | //! ```text
| ^^^^^^^
```
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79816 should make this
configurable so the warning can be `allow`ed.
Co-authored-by: Joshua Nelson <jyn514@gmail.com>
These were the warnings previously:
```
warning: could not parse code block as Rust code
--> crates/stdx/src/lib.rs:137:9
|
137 | /// ∀ x in slice[..idx]: pred(x)
| _________^
138 | | /// && ∀ x in slice[idx..]: !pred(x)
| |____^
|
= note: error from rustc: unknown start of token: \u{2200}
warning: 1 warning emitted
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= note: `#[warn(broken_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: 2 warnings emitted
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= note: `#[warn(broken_intra_doc_links)]` on by default
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: unresolved link to `package`
--> crates/base_db/src/input.rs:181:15
|
181 | /// it's [package].name, can be different for other project types or even
| ^^^^^^^ no item named `package` in scope
|
= help: to escape `[` and `]` characters, add '\' before them like `\[` or `\]`
warning: 2 warnings emitted
```
This does *not* fix the following warning, because it is actually rust
code and rustdoc is being over eager:
```
warning: Rust code block is empty
--> crates/parser/src/grammar.rs:16:5
|
16 | //! ```
| _____^
17 | | //! // test function_with_zero_parameters
18 | | //! // fn foo() {}
19 | | //! ```
| |_______^
|
help: mark blocks that do not contain Rust code as text
|
16 | //! ```text
| ^^^^^^^
```
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79816 should make this
configurable so the warning can be `allow`ed.
7340: Remove obsolete RangeInfo usage in references r=Veykril a=Veykril
Didn't even realize these were only here for renaming as well!
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7336: Rename `CrateDefMap` to `DefMap` r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
I propose handling local items by computing a `DefMap` for every block expression, using the regular (early) name resolution algorithm. The result of that will be a `DefMap` that has a reference to the parent `DefMap`, which is either the one computed for the containing block expression, or the crate's root `DefMap`. Name resolution will fall back to a name in the parent `DefMap` if it cannot be resolved in the inner block.
The `DefMap`s computed for block expressions will go through a separate query that can be garbage-collected much more aggressively, since these `DefMap`s should be cheap to compute and are never part of a crate's public API.
The first step towards that is to make `CrateDefMap` not specific to crates anymore, hence this rename (if this plans sounds reasonable).
cc https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7325 and https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/1165
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7339: Delete optional arg for inline attr and add doc alias attr completion r=lnicola a=bnjjj
close#7167
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Coenen <5719034+bnjjj@users.noreply.github.com>
7331: shrink_to_fit `TokenMap`'s backing storage r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Reduces `HygieneFrameQuery`'s memory usage by like 10 MB or so
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
7291: Wrap remaining self/super/crate in Name{Ref} r=matklad a=Veykril
That should be the remaining special casing for `self` 🎉
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
I've noticed a bunch of "main loop too long" warnings in console when
typing in Cargo.toml. Profiling showed that the culprit is `rustc
--print cfg` call.
I moved it to the background project loading phase, where it belongs.
This highlighted a problem: we generally use single `cfg`, while it
really should be per crate.
7276: Remove map module from la-arena public API r=lnicola a=arzg
It’s unlikely that more items will be added to the module, so it’s simpler for users if `ArenaMap` is re-exported and the module made private.
This doesn’t compile for the same reason that #7275 doesn’t:
> This pull request doesn’t compile because dependencies on la-arena go through crates.io, so existing dependencies on the crate are referencing an old version. As such, this PR will only compile once a new la-arena version has been published.
Co-authored-by: Aramis Razzaghipour <aramisnoah@gmail.com>
7211: Fixed expr meta var after path colons in mbe r=matklad a=edwin0cheng
Fixes#7207
Added `L_DOLLAR` in `ITEM_RECOVERY_SET` , but I don't know whether it is a good idea.
r? @matklad
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7257: vfs documentation r=matklad a=arnaudgolfouse
This documents every item in the `vfs` crate, except for a few private, windows-specific items.
Co-authored-by: Arnaud <arnaud.golfouse@free.fr>
7110: Deduplicate macros when offering completion r=matklad a=AdnoC
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7081
When iterating over the names within the `hir_def::resolver::Scope` for a module, track what macros are in the `hir_def::item_scope::ItemScope::legacy_macros` collection for the module. When iterating over names from the prelude, do not proccess the name if it had been in the `legacy_macros` collection.
This is implemented with a `FxHashSet` in the `Scope::process_names` function that is populated when iterating over `legacy_macros` and checked when iterating over the prelude.
Alternative implementation could instead query the `legacy_macros` `FxHashMap` directly when processing names in the prelude.
Also, I'd like to add a test for this, but I'm not sure where it could be added.
Co-authored-by: AdnoC <adam.r.cutler@gmail.com>
7260: Render Fn* trait objects and impl types as rust does r=matklad a=Veykril
Also fixes raw ptr impl types being rendered ambiguously with multiple predicates.
This moves out the `FamousDefs::Fixture` into its own file as well, cause I figured it is big enough to get its own file at this point + we also get highlighting this way when editing it.
Fixes#3012
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
7220: same level folder rename for will_rename_files r=kjeremy a=ShuiRuTian
use tricky way to support folder rename.
Another step after #7009 and for #4471
Co-authored-by: ShuiRuTian <158983297@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: Song Gao <158983297@qq.com>