[Prettier][1] is an up-to date code formatter for JavaScript ecosystem.
For settings we rely on [EditorConfig][2] for things like tab style and
size (with added bonus that the code editor with an EditorConfig plugin
does some automated code formatting on file save for you). Unfortunately,
Prettier's Glob handling isn't great:
1. `*.{ts,js,json}` has no effect
2. Similarly, in a list of globs `*.ts,*.js,*.json` only the first glob
has an effect, the rest are ignored.
That's why the file looks the way it does.
The only other setting we change is line width. [Lukas][3] suggested we
use 100 instead of 80, because that's what Rustfmt is using.
[1]: https://prettier.io
[2]: https://editorconfig.org
[3]: https://github.com/Veykril
feat: Support variable substitution in VSCode settings
Currently support a subset of [variables provided by VSCode](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/variables-reference) in `server.extraEnv` section of Rust-Analyzer settings:
* `workspaceFolder`
* `workspaceFolderBasename`
* `cwd`
* `execPath`
* `pathSeparator`
Also, this PR adds support for general environment variables resolution. You can declare environment variables and reference them from other variables like this:
```JSON
"rust-analyzer.server.extraEnv": {
"RUSTFLAGS": "-L${env:OPEN_XR_SDK_PATH}",
"OPEN_XR_SDK_PATH": "${workspaceFolder}\\..\\OpenXR-SDK\\build\\src\\loader\\Release"
},
```
The order of variable declaration doesn't matter, you can reference variables before defining them. If the variable is not present in `extraEnv` section, VSCode will search for them in your environment. Missing variables will be replaced with empty string. Circular references won't be resolved and will be passed to rust-analyzer server process as is.
Closes#9626, but doesn't address use cases where people want to use values provided by `rustc` or `cargo`, such as `${targetTriple}` proposal #11649
Config revamp
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/11790
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/12115
This PR changes a lot of config names, and a few ones are being merged or split apart. The reason for this is that our configuration names currently are rather inconsistent and some where poorly chosen in regards to extensability. This PR plans to fix that.
We still allow the old config names by patching them to the new ones before deserializing to keep backwards compatability with other clients (the VSCode client will auto update the config) but ideally we will get rid of that layer in the future.
Here is a list of the changes:
These are simple renames `old_name | alias1 | alias2 ... -> new_name` (the vscode client will fix these up automagically):
```
assist_allowMergingIntoGlobImports -> imports_merge_glob
assist_exprFillDefault -> assist_expressionFillDefault
assist_importEnforceGranularity -> imports_granularity_enforce
assist_importGranularity | assist_importMergeBehavior | assist_importMergeBehaviour -> imports_granularity_group
assist_importGroup -> imports_group_enable
assist_importPrefix -> imports_prefix
cache_warmup -> primeCaches_enable
cargo_loadOutDirsFromCheck -> cargo_buildScripts_enable
cargo_runBuildScripts | cargo_runBuildScriptsCommand -> cargo_runBuildScripts_overrideCommand
cargo_useRustcWrapperForBuildScripts -> cargo_runBuildScripts_useRustcWrapper
completion_snippets -> completion_snippets_custom
diagnostics_enableExperimental -> diagnostics_experimental_enable
experimental_procAttrMacros -> procMacro_attributes_enable
highlighting_strings -> semanticHighlighting_strings_enable
highlightRelated_breakPoints -> semanticHighlighting_breakPoints_enable
highlightRelated_exitPoints -> semanticHighlighting_exitPoints_enable
highlightRelated_yieldPoints -> semanticHighlighting_yieldPoints_enable
highlightRelated_references -> semanticHighlighting_references_enable
hover_documentation -> hover_documentation_enable
hover_linksInHover | hoverActions_linksInHover -> hover_links_enable
hoverActions_debug -> hoverActions_debug_enable
hoverActions_enable -> hoverActions_enable_enable
hoverActions_gotoTypeDef -> hoverActions_gotoTypeDef_enable
hoverActions_implementations -> hoverActions_implementations_enable
hoverActions_references -> hoverActions_references_enable
hoverActions_run -> hoverActions_run_enable
inlayHints_chainingHints -> inlayHints_chainingHints_enable
inlayHints_closureReturnTypeHints -> inlayHints_closureReturnTypeHints_enable
inlayHints_hideNamedConstructorHints -> inlayHints_typeHints_hideNamedConstructorHints
inlayHints_parameterHints -> inlayHints_parameterHints_enable
inlayHints_reborrowHints -> inlayHints_reborrowHints_enable
inlayHints_typeHints -> inlayHints_typeHints_enable
lruCapacity -> lru_capacity
runnables_cargoExtraArgs -> runnables_extraArgs
runnables_overrideCargo -> runnables_command
rustcSource -> rustc_source
rustfmt_enableRangeFormatting -> rustfmt_rangeFormatting_enable
```
These are configs that have been merged or split apart, which have to be manually updated by the user:
```
callInfo_full -> signatureInfo_detail, signatureInfo_documentation_enable
cargo_allFeatures, cargo_features -> cargo_features
checkOnSave_allFeatures, checkOnSave_features -> checkOnSave_features
completion_addCallArgumentSnippets completion_addCallParenthesis -> completion_callable_snippets
```
feat: allow customizing the command for running build scripts
I have tested this locally and it fixed#9201 with some small changes on the compiler side with suggestions from https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/9201#issuecomment-1019554086.
I have also added an environment variable `IS_RA_BUILDSCRIPT_CHECK` for crates to detect that it is a check for buildscripts, and allows defaulting to bogus values for expected environment variables.
10802: Allow clients to configure the global workspace search limit r=Veykril a=knutwalker
Playing around with [helix](https://helix-editor.com) I realized that the global worksapce symbol search works different compared to vs-code.
Helix requires all possible symbols in one query and does no subsequent refinement searched.
This PR adds a configuration option to override the default search limit with the default being the currently hardocded value.
Helix users can increment this limit for their instance with a config like
```toml
[[language]]
name = "rust"
language-server = { command = "rust-analyzer" }
[language.config]
workspace = { symbol = { search = { limit = 65536 }}}
```
Other editors are not affected by this change.
Co-authored-by: Paul Horn <dev@knutwalker.engineer>
11445: Upstream inlay hints r=lnicola a=lnicola
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/2797
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/3394 (since now resolve the hints for the range given only, not for the whole document. We don't actually resolve anything due to [hard requirement](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/11445#issuecomment-1035227434) on label being immutable. Any further heavy actions could go to the `resolve` method that's now available via the official Code API for hints)
Based on `@SomeoneToIgnore's` branch, with a couple of updates:
- I squashed, more or less successfully, the commits on that branch
- downloading the `.d.ts` no longer works, but you can get it manually from https://raw.githubusercontent.com/microsoft/vscode/release/1.64/src/vscode-dts/vscode.proposed.inlayHints.d.ts
- you might need to pass `--enable-proposed-api matklad.rust-analyzer`
- if I'm reading the definition right, `InlayHintKind` needs to be serialized as a number, not string
- this doesn't work anyway -- the client-side gets the hints, but they don't display
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
11281: ide: parallel prime caches r=jonas-schievink a=jhgg
cache priming goes brrrr... the successor to #10149
---
this PR implements a parallel cache priming strategy that uses a topological work queue to feed a pool of worker threads the crates to index in parallel.
## todo
- [x] should we keep the old prime caches?
- [x] we should use num_cpus to detect how many cpus to use to prime caches. should we also expose a config for # of worker CPU threads to use?
- [x] something is wonky with cancellation, need to figure it out before this can merge.
Co-authored-by: Jake Heinz <jh@discordapp.com>
11145: feat: add config to use reasonable default expression instead of todo! when filling missing fields r=Veykril a=bnjjj
Use `Default::default()` in struct fields when we ask to fill it instead of putting `todo!()` for every fields
before:
```rust
pub enum Other {
One,
Two,
}
pub struct Test {
text: String,
num: usize,
other: Other,
}
fn t_test() {
let test = Test {<|>};
}
```
after:
```rust
pub enum Other {
One,
Two,
}
pub struct Test {
text: String,
num: usize,
other: Other,
}
fn t_test() {
let test = Test {
text: String::new(),
num: 0,
other: todo!(),
};
}
```
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Coenen <5719034+bnjjj@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Coenen Benjamin <benjamin.coenen@hotmail.com>
By changing the scope of this configuration to `machine-overridible`,
this setting becomes fully local for the VS Code instance the user is
running.
Having this setting excluded from syncing should help avoid
inconveniences for users who have VS Code installed on two different
operating systems, where the paths to the language server binary would
very likely mismatch.
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.
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 :-)
9264: feat: Make documentation on hover configurable r=Veykril a=Veykril
This also implements deprecation support for config options as this renames `hoverActions_linksInHover` to `hover_linksInHover`.
Fixes#9232
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9258: minor: Give `ImportPrefix` variants better config names r=matklad a=Veykril
I feel like `crate` and `self` work better than `by_crate` and `by_self`. The only reason for the current names were that `Self` doesn't work for the variant name on the rust side so I forgot about setting proper config names on serde layer.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
9267: fix: Code: update the LSP server without asking r=matklad a=lnicola
Most LSP extensions seem to do the same thing, and this is causing some
confusion for users who don't notice the update prompt before Code hides
it.
9279: minor: Document installation via Homebrew r=matklad a=Svetlitski
`rust-analyzer` can be installed via [Homebrew](https://brew.sh) (AKA`brew`) on macOS. I've added instructions on how to do so to the documentation. Additionally, I added a `.gitignore` rule to ignore the HTML documentation produced by `asciidoctor manual.adoc` so that it is not accidentally checked into `git`.
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
Co-authored-by: Kevin Svetlitski <kevin_svetlitski@berkeley.edu>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
8873: Implement import-granularity guessing r=matklad a=Veykril
This renames our `MergeBehavior` to `ImportGranularity` as rustfmt has it as the purpose of them are basically the same. `ImportGranularity::Preserve` currently has no specific purpose for us as we don't have an organize imports assist yet, so it currently acts the same as `ImportGranularity::Item`.
We now try to guess the import style on a per file basis and fall back to the user granularity setting if the file has no specific style yet or where it is ambiguous. This can be turned off by setting `import.enforceGranularity` to `true`.
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/8870
Co-authored-by: Lukas Tobias Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>