do not normalize `use foo::{self}` to `use foo`
It changes behaviour and can cause collisions. E.g. for the following snippet
```rs
mod foo {
pub mod bar {}
pub const bar: i32 = 8;
}
// transforming the below to `use foo::bar;` causes the error:
//
// the name `bar` is defined multiple times
use foo::bar::{self};
const bar: u32 = 99;
fn main() {
let local_bar = bar;
}
```
we still normalize
```rs
use foo::bar;
use foo::bar::{self};
```
to `use foo::bar;` because this cannot cause collisions.
See: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/17140#issuecomment-2079189725
It changes behaviour and can cause collisions. E.g. for the following snippet
```rs
mod foo {
pub mod bar {}
pub const bar: i32 = 8;
}
// tranforming the below to `use foo::bar;` causes the error:
//
// the name `bar` is defined multiple times
use foo::bar::{self};
const bar: u32 = 99;
fn main() {
let local_bar = bar;
}
```
we still normalize
```rs
use foo::bar;
use foo::bar::{self};
```
to `use foo::bar;` because this cannot cause collisions.
See: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/17140#issuecomment-2079189725
Feat: hide double underscored symbols from symbol search
Fixes#17272 by changing the default behavior of query to skip results that start with `__` (two underscores).
Not sure if this has any far reaching implications - a review would help to understand if this is the right place to do the filtering, and if it's fine to do it by default on the query.
If you type `__` as your search, then we'll show the matching double unders, just in case you actually need the symbol.
feat: More callable info
With this PR we retain more info about callables other than functions, allowing for closure parameter type inlay hints to be linkable as well as better signature help around closures and `Fn*` implementors.
When viewing traces, it's slightly confusing when the span name doesn't
match the function name. Ensure the names are consistent.
(It might be worth moving most of these to use #[tracing::instrument]
so the name can never go stale. @davidbarsky suggested that is marginally
slower, so I've just done the simple change here.)
It is bitset semantically --- many categorical things can be true about
a reference at the same time.
In parciular, a reference can be a "test" and a "write" at the same
time.
internal: Compress file text using LZ4
I haven't tested properly, but this roughly looks like:
```
1246 MB
59mb 4899 FileTextQuery
1008 MB
20mb 4899 CompressedFileTextQuery
555kb 1790 FileTextQuery
```
We might want to test on something more interesting, like `bevy`.
Add more methods for resolving definitions from AST to their corresponding HIR types
In order to be able to add these methods with consistent naming I had to also rename two existing methods that would otherwise be conflicting/confusing:
`Semantics::to_module_def(&self, file: FileId) -> Option<Module>` (before)
`Semantics::file_to_module_def(&self, file: FileId) -> Option<Module>` (after)
`Semantics::to_module_defs(&self, file: FileId) -> impl Iterator<Item = Module>` (before)
`Semantics::file_to_module_defs(&self, file: FileId) -> impl Iterator<Item = Module>` (after)
(the PR is motivated by an outside use of the `ra_ap_hir` crate that would benefit from being able to walk a `hir::Function`'s AST, resolving its exprs/stmts/items to their HIR equivalents)
fix: use 4 spaces for indentation in macro expansion
Partial fix for #16471.
In the previous code, the indentation produced by macro expansion was set to 2 spaces. This PR modifies it to 4 spaces for the sake of consistency.
performance: Speed up Method Completions By Taking Advantage of Orphan Rules
(Continues https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16498)
This PR speeds up method completions by doing two things without regressing `analysis-stats`[^1]:
- Filter candidate traits prior to calling `iterate_path_candidates` by relying on orphan rules (see below for a slightly more in-depth explanation). When generating completions [on `slog::Logger`](5e9e59c312/common/src/ledger.rs (L78)) in `oxidecomputer/omicron` as a test, this PR halved my completion times—it's now 454ms cold and 281ms warm. Before this PR, it was 808ms cold and 579ms warm.
- Inline some of the method candidate checks into `is_valid_method_candidate` and remove some unnecessary visibility checks. This was suggested by `@Veykril` in [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16498#issuecomment-1929864427).
We filter candidate traits by taking advantage of orphan rules. For additional details, I'll rely on `@WaffleLapkin's` explanation [from Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/185405-t-compiler.2Frust-analyzer/topic/Trait.20Checking/near/420942417):
> A type `A` can only implements traits which
> 1. Have a blanket implementation (`impl<T> Trait for T {}`)
> 2. Have implementation for `A` (`impl Trait for A {}`)
>
> Blanket implementation can only exist in `Trait`'s crate. Implementation for `A` can only exist in `A`'s or `Trait`'s crate.
Big thanks to Waffle for its keen observation!
---
I think some additional improvements are possible:
- `for_trait_and_self_ty` seemingly does not distinguish between `&T`, `&mut T`, or `T`, resulting in seemingly irrelevant traits like `tokio::io::AsyncWrite` being being included for, e.g., `&slog::Logger`. I don't know they're being considered due to the [autoref/autoderef behavior](a02a219773/crates/hir-ty/src/method_resolution.rs (L945-L962)), but I wonder if it'd make sense to filter by mutability earlier and not consider trait implementations that require `&mut T` when we only have a `&T`.
- The method completions [spend a _lot_ of time in unification](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/185405-t-compiler.2Frust-analyzer/topic/Trait.20Checking/near/421072356), and while there might be low-hanging fruit there, it might make more sense to wait for the new trait solver in `rustc`. I dunno.
[^1]: The filtering occurs outside of typechecking, after all.
Setup infra for handling auto trait bounds disabled due to perf problems
This patch updates some of the partially-implemented functions of `ChalkContext as RustIrDatabase`, namely `adt_datum()` and `impl_provided_for()`. With those, we can now correctly work with auto trait bounds and distinguish methods based on them.
Resolves#7856 (the second code; the first one is resolved by #13074)
**IMPORTANT**: I don't think we want to merge this until #7637 is resolved. Currently this patch introduces A LOT of unknown types and type mismtaches as shown below. This is because we cannot resolve items like `hashbrown::HashMap` in `std` modules, leading to auto trait bounds on them and their dependents unprovable.
|crate (from `rustc-perf@c52ee6` except for r-a)|e3dc5a588f07d6f1d3a0f33051d4af26190abe9e|HEAD of this branch|
|---|---|---|
|rust-analyzer @ e3dc5a588f |exprs: 417528, ??ty: 907 (0%), ?ty: 114 (0%), !ty: 1|exprs: 417528, ??ty: 1704 (0%), ?ty: 403 (0%), !ty: 20|
|ripgrep|exprs: 62120, ??ty: 2 (0%), ?ty: 0 (0%), !ty: 0|exprs: 62120, ??ty: 132 (0%), ?ty: 58 (0%), !ty: 11|
|webrender/webrender|exprs: 94355, ??ty: 49 (0%), ?ty: 16 (0%), !ty: 2|exprs: 94355, ??ty: 429 (0%), ?ty: 130 (0%), !ty: 7|
|diesel|exprs: 132591, ??ty: 401 (0%), ?ty: 5129 (3%), !ty: 31|exprs: 132591, ??ty: 401 (0%), ?ty: 5129 (3%), !ty: 31|
Abstract more over ItemTreeLoc-like structs
Allows reducing some code duplication by using functions generic over said structs. The diff isn't negative due to me adding some additional impls for completeness.
internal: even more `tracing`
As part of profiling completions, I added some additional spans and moved `TyBuilder::subst_for_def` closer to its usage site (the latter had a small impact on completion performance. Thanks for the tip, Lukas!)
This commit also adds `tracing` to NotificationDispatcher/RequestDispatcher,
bumps `rust-analyzer-salsa` to 0.17.0-pre.6, `always-assert` to 0.2, and
removes the homegrown `hprof` implementation in favor of a vendored
tracing-span-tree.
`cargo clippy --fix`
This PR is the result of running `cargo clippy --fix && cargo fmt` in the root of the repository. I did not manually review all the changes, but just skimmed through a few of them. The tests still pass, so it seems fine.
Add a new config to allow renaming of non-local defs
With #15656 we started disallowing renaming of non-local items. Although this makes sense there are some false positives that impacted users' workflows. So this config aims to mitigate this by giving users the liberty to disable this feature.
The reason why this is a draft is that I saw one of the tests fail and I am not sure if the "got" result even syntactically makes sense
Test case is :
```rust
check(
"Baz",
r#"
//- /lib.rs crate:lib new_source_root:library
pub struct S;
//- /main.rs crate:main deps:lib new_source_root:local
use lib::S$0;
"#,
"use lib::Baz;"
);
```
```
Left:
use lib::Baz;
Right:
use lib::Baz;Baz
Diff:
use lib::Baz;Baz
```
With #15656 we started disallowing renaming of non-local items.
Although this makes sense there are some false positives that
impacted users' workflows. So this config aims to mitigate this
by giving users the liberty to disable this feature.
internal: Follow rustfmt's algorithm for ordering imports when ordering and merging use trees
Updates use tree ordering and merging utilities to follow rustfmt's algorithm for ordering imports.
The [rustfmt implementation](6356fca675/src/imports.rs) was used as reference.
fix: Acknowledge `pub(crate)` imports in import suggestions
rust-analyzer has logic that discounts suggesting `use`s for private imports, but that logic is unnecessarily strict - for instance given this code:
```rust
mod foo {
pub struct Foo;
}
pub(crate) use self::foo::*;
mod bar {
fn main() {
Foo$0;
}
}
```
... RA will suggest to add `use crate::foo::Foo;`, which not only makes the code overly verbose (especially in larger code bases), but also is disjoint with what rustc itself suggests.
This commit adjusts the logic, so that `pub(crate)` imports are taken into account when generating the suggestions; considering rustc's behavior, I think this change doesn't warrant any extra configuration flag.
Note that this is my first commit to RA, so I guess the approach taken here might be suboptimal - certainly feels somewhat hacky, maybe there's some better way of finding out the optimal import path 😅
rust-analyzer has logic that discounts suggesting `use`s for private
imports, but that logic is unnecessarily strict - for instance given
this code:
```rust
mod foo {
pub struct Foo;
}
pub(crate) use self::foo::*;
mod bar {
fn main() {
Foo$0;
}
}
```
... RA will suggest to add `use crate::foo::Foo;`, which not only makes
the code overly verbose (especially in larger code bases), but also is
disjoint with what rustc itself suggests.
This commit adjusts the logic, so that `pub(crate)` imports are taken
into account when generating the suggestions; considering rustc's
behavior, I think this change doesn't warrant any extra configuration
flag.
Note that this is my first commit to RA, so I guess the approach taken
here might be suboptimal - certainly feels somewhat hacky, maybe there's
some better way of finding out the optimal import path 😅
Resolve panic in `generate_delegate_methods`
Fixes#16276
This PR addresses two issues:
1. When using `PathTransform`, it searches for the node corresponding to the `path` in the `source_scope` during `make::fn_`. Therefore, we need to perform the transform before `make::fn_` (similar to the problem in issue #15804). Otherwise, even though the tokens are the same, their offsets (i.e., `span`) differ, resulting in the error "Can't find CONST_ARG@xxx."
2. As mentioned in the first point, `PathTransform` searches for the node corresponding to the `path` in the `source_scope`. Thus, when transforming paths, we should update nodes from right to left (i.e., use **reverse of preorder** (right -> left -> root) instead of **postorder** (left -> right -> root)). Reasons are as follows:
In the red-green tree (rowan), we do not store absolute ranges but instead store the length of each node and dynamically calculate offsets (spans). Therefore, when modifying the left-side node (such as nodes are inserted or deleted), it causes all right-side nodes' spans to change. This, in turn, leads to PathTransform being unable to find nodes with the same paths (due to different spans), resulting in errors.
fix: Fix `ast::Path::segments` implementation
calling `ast::Path::segments` on a qualifier currently returns all the segments of the top path instead of just the segments of the qualifier.
The issue can be summarized by the simple failing test below:
```rust
#[test]
fn path_segments() {
//use ra_ap_syntax::ast;
let path: ast::Path = ...; // e.g. `ast::Path` for "foo::bar::item".
let path_segments: Vec<_> = path.segments().collect();
let qualifier_segments: Vec<_> = path.qualifier().unwrap().segments().collect();
assert_eq!(path_segments.len(), qualifier_segments.len() + 1); // Fails because `LHS = RHS`.
}
```
This PR:
- Fixes the implementation of `ast::Path::segments`
- Fixes `ast::Path::segments` callers that either implicitly relied on behavior of previous implementation or exhibited other "wrong" behavior directly related to the result of `ast::Path::segments` (all callers have been reviewed, only one required modification)
- Removes unnecessary (and now unused) `ast::Path::segments` alternatives
SymbolInformation::kind is finer-grained than the SCIP symbol suffix.
This also fixes a bug where all type aliases where treated like type
parameters.
```
trait SomeTrait {
type AssociatedType; // ← this is SomeTrait#[AssociatedType]
}
type MyTypeAlias = u8; // ← this used to be [MyTypeAlias]
// and now is MyTypeAlias#
```