9785: feature: Add completion for struct literals in which all fields are visible. r=Veykril a=Afourcat
This PR adds a new completion for struct literal.
It Implements the feature discussed in the issue #9610.
![RAExample3](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/35599359/128211142-116361e9-7a69-425f-83ea-473c6ea47b26.gif)
This PR introduce a repetition in the source files `crates/ide_completion/render/pattern.rs` and `crates/ide_completion/render/struct_literal.rs` that may be fix in another PR.
Co-authored-by: Alexandre Fourcat <afourcat@gmail.com>
Fix ide_completion tests.
Move 'complete_record_literal' call to the main completion function.
Fix a rendering bug when snippet not available.
Checks if an expression is expected before adding completion for struct literal.
Move 'completion struct literal with private field' test to 'expressions.rs' test file.
Update 'expect' tests with new check in 'complete record literal'.
9734: semantic highlighting: add reference hlmod r=matklad a=jhgg
This PR adds the "reference" highlight modifier!
I basically went around and looked for `HlMod::Mutable` to find the callsites to add a reference. I think these all make sense!
Co-authored-by: Jake Heinz <jh@discordapp.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake <jh@discordapp.com>
9773: internal: Improve `extract_function` assist r=Veykril a=Veykril
- fix: It doesn't try to overwrite parts of selected comments any longer
- fix: It doesn't wrap tail expressions and return types in a result or option unnecessarily
- feat?: It now adds a `const` modifier to the created function if extract somethings from a const context
Fixes#7840
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9764: fix: Don't use the module as the candidate node in fuzzy path flyimport r=Veykril a=Veykril
The problem was that the candidate node is whats being used for the scope, so using an inline module will yield the surrounding scope of the module instead of the scope of the module itself.
Also seems to fix the problem in this comment https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/9760#issuecomment-891125674, though I could not recreate that in a test for some reason.
Fixes#9760
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9751: Make `LoadCargoConfig`, `fn load_workspace_at` & `fn load_workspace` public again r=matklad a=regexident
This [commit](b24f816c0d) which restricted the visibility of `LoadCargoConfig`, `fn load_workspace_at` & `fn load_workspace` unfortunately effectively rendered every crate/tool that uses rust-analyzer as a library dead in the water.
On of such tools is [cargo-modules](https://github.com/regexident/cargo-modules), a tool for generating tree/graph visualizations of one's Rust project and is powered by rust-analyzer as a library.
For more context see the PRs that introduced those types/functions and made them `pub`:
- https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7595
- https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/7690
If kept as is rust-analyzer would effectively no longer be usable as a library.
cc `@SomeoneToIgnore`
Co-authored-by: Vincent Esche <regexident@gmail.com>
9752: feature: Declare proc-macro dependent crates in `rust-project.json` r=matklad a=tobywf
This adds the `is_proc_macro` flag in `rust-project.json`. By default, this is `false` and not required, so existing projects won't break/have the same behavior as before this change. If the flag is true, a dependency to the `proc_macro` sysroot crate is added (if it exists), so that rust-analyzer can resolve those imports.
This fixes#9726 .
I've also added some tests in the second commit. The first is a smoke test for a basic, minimal `rust-project.json` file. The second is a more targeted test for the flag. Both tests depend on the fake sysroot (a bunch of directories in the correct layout with empty `lib.rs` files), and also on `env!("CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR")` being an absolute path. I'm not sure if the later assumption is valid on all platforms. I wanted to at least try and add tests, but I'm happy to rework them or remove them if you don't think that's the way to go.
(You can license/relicense my contribution in any way you wish without contacting me.)
Co-authored-by: Toby Fleming <sourcecode@tobywf.com>
9746: internal: add API to check what are the max limits in practice r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
9739: generate function assist favors deref cmpt types r=matklad a=mahdi-frms
Fixes#9713
Although that's still not relying on sematic info.
Co-authored-by: mahdi-frms <mahdif1380@outlook.com>
Some features of rust-analyzer requires support for custom commands on
the client side. Specifically, hover & code lens need this.
Stock LSP doesn't have a way for the server to know which client-side
commands are available. For that reason, we historically were just
sending the commands, not worrying whether the client supports then or
not.
That's not really great though, so in this PR we add infrastructure for
the client to explicitly opt-into custom commands, via `extensions`
field of the ClientCapabilities.
To preserve backwards compatability, if the client doesn't set the
field, we assume that it does support all custom commands. In the
future, we'll start treating that case as if the client doesn't support
commands.
So, if you maintain a rust-analyzer client and implement
`rust-analyzer/runSingle` and such, please also advertise this via a
capability.
9731: feat: Add `replace_char_with_string` assist r=Veykril a=Veykril
Adds the counterpart for the `replace_string_with_char` assist and fixes the assist not escaping the `'` in the string `"'"` when transforming that to a char.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9700: fix: Remove the legacy macro scoping hack r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
This stops prepending `self::` to single-ident macro paths, resolving even legacy-scoped macros using the fixed-point algorithm. This is not correct, but a lot easier than fixing this properly (which involves pushing a new scope for every macro definition and invocation).
This allows resolution of macros from the prelude, fixing https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/9687.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
9693: feat: Add the Hover Range capability which enables showing the type of an expression r=matklad a=alexfertel
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/389
This PR extends the `textDocument/hover` method to allow getting the type of an expression. It looks like this:
![type_of_expression](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22298999/126914293-0ce49a92-545d-4005-a59e-9294fa2330d6.gif)
Edit: One thing I noticed is that when hovering a selection that includes a macro it doesn't work, so maybe this would need a follow-up issue discussing what problem that may have.
(PS: What a great project! I am learning a lot! 🚀)
Co-authored-by: Alexander Gonzalez <alexfertel97@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander González <alexfertel97@gmail.com>
9558: Do not erase Cargo diagnostics from the closed documents r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6850
The LSP specification at https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/specification-3-14/#textDocument_publishDiagnostics states that
> Diagnostics notification are sent from the server to the client to signal results of validation runs.
>
> Diagnostics are “owned” by the server so it is the server’s responsibility to clear them if necessary. The following rule is used for VS Code servers that generate diagnostics:
>
> * if a language is single file only (for example HTML) then diagnostics are cleared by the server when the file is closed.
> * if a language has a project system (for example C#) diagnostics are not cleared when a file closes. When a project is opened all diagnostics for all files are recomputed (or read from a cache).
>
> When a file changes it is the server’s responsibility to re-compute diagnostics and push them to the client. If the computed set is empty it has to push the empty array to clear former diagnostics. Newly pushed diagnostics always replace previously pushed diagnostics. There is no merging that happens on the client side.
So for projects we should not clear any diagnostics from cargo/json projects.
Our "standalone file" mode is in a way a project too, with sysroot attached and a potential support for dynamic standalone files.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
9593: fix: Adding remove_unused_param for method and fixing same for assoc func r=matklad a=feniljain
Solves #9571
Co-authored-by: vi_mi <fenil.jain2018@vitstudent.ac.in>
9681: Respect `#[doc(hidden)]` in dot-completion r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
This adds `CompletionContext::is_visible` as a convenience method that checks visibility, presence of `doc(hidden)`, and whether the completed item is in the same crate as the completion site or not. We only complete `doc(hidden)` items from the same crate.
This doesn't yet work for *all* completions: `qualified_path` completions use `Module::scope` and `ScopeDef`, which doesn't work with this.
Part of https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7718
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
9674: fix: Fix pattern name resolution when name is also occupied in type namespace r=flodiebold a=jonas-schievink
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8694
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
9634: minor update to excludeDirs doc r=lnicola a=dae
I saw reference to globs in #7755, but it doesn't look like they're
actually supported, and I had to dig through the source to discover
that the folders are relative to the workspace root. Further digging
was required to get VS Code from hanging for long periods trying to
watch giant Bazel folders that had already been excluded from Rust
Analyzer. Hopefully this tweak will save others the confusion :-)
Co-authored-by: Damien Elmes <gpg@ankiweb.net>
Co-authored-by: Damien Elmes <dae@users.noreply.github.com>
9453: Add first-class limits. r=matklad,lnicola a=rbartlensky
Partially fixes#9286.
This introduces a new `Limits` structure which is passed as an input
to `SourceDatabase`. This makes limits accessible almost everywhere in
the code, since most places have a database in scope.
One downside of this approach is that whenever you query limits, you
essentially do an `Arc::clone` which is less than ideal.
Let me know if I missed anything, or would like me to take a different approach!
Co-authored-by: Robert Bartlensky <bartlensky.robert@gmail.com>
9652: Don't concat path in replace_qualified assist when they start with a keyword r=Veykril a=Veykril
Also keep the path if we can't find a path to the item instead of becoming non applicable.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9637: Overhaul doc_links testing infra r=Veykril a=Veykril
and fix several issues with current implementation.
Fixes#9617
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9646: add 'use' prefix for any auto-import r=Veykril a=mahdi-frms
Fixes#9643
looks like there was an if condition that had to be removed.
Co-authored-by: mahdi-frms <mahdif1380@outlook.com>
Our project model code is rather complicated -- the logic for lowering
from `cargo metadata` to `CrateGraph` is fiddly and special-case. So
far, we survived without testing this at all, but this increasingly
seems like a poor option.
So this PR introduces a simple tests just to detect the most obvious
failures. The idea here is that, although we rely on external processes
(cargo & rustc), we are actually using their stable interfaces, so we
might just mock out the outputs.
Long term, I would like to try to virtualize IO here, so as to do such
mocking in a more principled way, but lets start simple.
Should we forgo the mocking and just call `cargo metadata` directly
perhaps? Touch question -- I personally feel that fast, in-process tests
are more important in this case than any extra assurance we get from
running the real thing.
Super-long term, we would probably want to extend our heavy tests to
cover more use-cases, but we should figure a way to do that without
slowing the tests down for everyone.
Perhaps we need two-tiered bors system, where we pull from `master` into
`release` branch only when an additional set of tests passes?
I saw reference to globs in #7755, but it doesn't look like they're
actually supported, and I had to dig through the source to discover
that the folders are relative to the workspace root. Further digging
was required to get VS Code from hanging for long periods trying to
watch giant Bazel folders that had already been excluded from Rust
Analyzer. Hopefully this tweak will save others the confusion :-)
9614: Parse input expressions for dbg! invocations in remove_dbg r=Veykril a=Veykril
Instead of inspecting the input tokentree manually, parse the input as `,` delimited expressions instead and act on that. This simplifies the assist quite a bit.
Fixes#8455
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9600: fix: Single-line and nested blocks in the `unwrap_block` assist r=Veykril a=patrick-gu
Fixes#8411
Rework the system for stripping whitespace and braces in the unwrap_block assist to allow correct unwrapping of blocks such as:
```rust
{ $0 0 }
```
into
```rust
0
```
and nested blocks, such as:
```rust
$0{
{
3
}
}
```
into
```rust
{
3
}
```
This is done by creating the `update_expr_string_with_pat` function (along with `update_expr_string` and `update_expr_string_without_newline`), which strips whitespace and braces in a way that ensures that only whitespace and a maximum of one brace are removed from the start and end of the expression string.
I have also created several tests to ensure that this functionality works correctly.
Co-authored-by: patrick-gu <55641350+patrick-gu@users.noreply.github.com>
9550: Proc macro multi abi proof of concept r=matklad a=alexjg
#8925 was irritating me so I thought I would have a bash at fixing it. What I've done here is copy the `crates/proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro` code (which is copied from `<RUST>/library/proc_macro`) to `crates/proc_macro_srv/src/proc_macro_nightly` and the modified the nightly version to include the changes from https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9047 and aeb7b183a2
This gives us the code to support both stable and nightly ABIs. Then we use the `proc_macro_api::version::read_dylib_info` to determine which version of the ABI to load when creating a `ProcMacroLibraryLibLoading` (which is now an enum).
This seems to work for me. The code could be cleaned up but I wanted to see if the approach makes sense before I spend more time on it.
I've split the change into two commits, the first is just copying and modifying the `proc_macro` crate, the second contains most of the interesting work around figuring out which ABI to use.
Co-authored-by: Alex Good <alex@memoryandthought.me>
Co-authored-by: alexjg <alex@memoryandthought.me>
In rust-analyzer, we avoid defualt impls for types which don't have
sensible, "empty" defaults. In particular, we avoid using invalid
indices for defaults and similar hacks.
Rather than a "Stable" and "Nightly" ABI we instead name ABIs based on
the version of the rust compiler in which they were introduced. We place
these ABIs in a new module - `proc_macro_srv::abis` - where we also add
some mchinery to abstract over ABIs. This should make it easy to add new
ABIs at a later date as the rust compiler evolves.
9535: internal: remove proc macro management thread r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Communication with the proc macro server process has always happened one request at a time, so the additional thread isn't really needed (it just forwarded each request, and sent back the response). This removes some indirection that was a bit hard to understand (a channel was allocated and sent over another channel to return the response).
Hope I'm not missing anything here
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
9569: internal: Explicitly check for reference locals or fields in Name classification r=Veykril a=Veykril
Closes#7524
Inlines all the calls to reference related name classification as well as emits both goto definition targets for field shorthands.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
This treats the consts generated by older synstructure versions like
unnamed consts. We should remove this at some point (at least after
Chalk has switched).
9567: remove unneded special case r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
9568: feat: add 'for' postfix completion r=lnicola a=mahdi-frms
![Peek 2021-07-11 16-45](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/62165556/125194692-a0aaf780-e267-11eb-952a-81de7955d9a1.gif)
adds #9561
used ```ele``` as identifier for each element in the iteration
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: mahdi-frms <mahdif1380@outlook.com>
9553: minor: Disambiguate replace with if let assist labels r=Veykril a=Veykril
Turns out we have two assists for replacing something with `if let` constructs, so having the cursor on a `let` keyword inside a match gave you two identical assist labels which is rather confusing.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9555: feat: Enable `auto_import` on ident patterns r=Veykril a=Veykril
Helpful for when you want to import a type in a pattern right before destructuring it.
9556: Bump deps r=lnicola a=lnicola
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
9548: add: Adding self keyword completion in complete_fn_param r=lnicola a=feniljain
Solves #9522
I haven't added Arc<self> for now as there were some conflicting opinions on it
Co-authored-by: vi_mi <fenil.jain2018@vitstudent.ac.in>
... instead of using `AliasTy`. Chalk turns the alias type into the
placeholder during unification anyway, which confuses our method
resolution logic.
Fixes#9530.
9519: Explicitly name all spawned threads r=weirdsmiley a=weirdsmiley
Fixes: [#9385](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/9385)
The thread name is shown in debugger as well as panic messages and this
patch makes it easier to follow a thread instead of looking through
full backtrace, by naming all spawned threads according to their
functioning.
Co-authored-by: Manas <manas18244@iiitd.ac.in>
The thread name is shown in debugger as well as panic messages and this
patch makes it easier to follow a thread instead of looking through
full backtrace, by naming all spawned threads according to their
functioning.
9500: internal: Only inline closure, literal and local arguments when used once r=Veykril a=Veykril
See https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9474#discussion_r663881507 for reasoning.
This still inlines single use closures and literals as naming these is usually not as useful. Prime examples being the Option/Result consuming functions like `map_or` etc.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9497: Wrap inlined closures in parens when inlined in an expression in `inline_call` r=Veykril a=Veykril
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Note that, while we don't currently have a fuzzy-matching score, it
makes sense to special-case postfix templates -- it's very annoying when
`.not()` gets sorted before `.not`. We might want to move this infra to
fuzzy matching, once we have that!
Before this PR, SourceChange used a bool and CompletionItem used an enum
to signify if edit is a snippet. It makes sense to use the same pattern
in both cases. `bool` feels simpler, as there's only one consumer of
this API, and all producers are encapsulated anyway (we check the
capability at the production site).
One source completion can produce up to two lsp completions.
Additionally, `preselct` and `sort_text` are global properties of the
whole set of completions, so the right granularity here is to convert
many completions.
As a side-benefit, we no loger allocate intermediate vec.
Moving tests to `rust-analyzer` crate allows removing walkdir dependency
from `xtask`. It does seem more reasonable to keep tidy tests outside of
the "build system" and closer to other integration tests.
* Keep codegen adjacent to the relevant crates.
* Remove codgen deps from xtask, speeding-up from-source installation.
This regresses the release process a bit, as it now needs to run the
tests (and, by extension, compile the code).