fix: Don't emit "missing items" diagnostic for negative impls
Negative impls can't have items, so there is no reason for this diagnostic.
LMK if I should add a test somewhere. Also LMK if that's not how we usually check multiple things in an if in r-a.
fix: Fix view mir, hir and eval function not working when cursor is inside macros
I broke the view ones completely by inverting the macro check by accident a few days ago but we don't talk about that.
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
feat: Prioritize import suggestions based on the expected type
Hi, this is a draft PR to solve #15384. `Adt` types work and now I have a few questions :)
1. What other types make sense in this context? Looking at [ModuleDef](05666441ba/crates/hir/src/lib.rs (L275)) I am thinking everything except Modules.
2. Is there an existing way of converting between `ModeuleDef` and `hir::Type` in the rustanalyzer code base?
3. Does this approach seem sound to you?
Ups: Upon writing this I just realised that the enum test is invalided as there are no enum variants and this no variant is passed as a function argument.
fix: resolve Self type references in delegate method assist
This PR makes the delegate method assist resolve any `Self` type references in the parameters or return type. It also works across macros such as the `uint_impl!` macro used for `saturating_mul` in the issue example.
Closes#14485
fix: Fix item tree lowering pub(self) to pub()
Prior to this, the item tree lowered `pub(self)` visibility to `pub()`
Fix#15134 - tested with a unit test and
a manual end-to-end test of building rust-analyzer from my branch and opening the reproduction repository
Before
Private functions have RawVisibility module, but were
missed because take_types returned None early. After resolve_visibility
returned None, Visibility::Public was set instead and private functions
ended up being offered in autocompletion.
Choosing such a function results in an immediate error diagnostic
about using a private function.
After
Pattern match of take_types that returns None and
query for Module-level visibility from the original_module
Fix#15134 - tested with a unit test and a manual end-to-end
test of building rust-analyzer from my branch and opening
the reproduction repository
REVIEW
Refactor to move scope_def_applicable and check function visibility
from a module
Please let me know what's the best way to add a unit tests to
nameres, which is where the root cause was
Fix panic with closure inside array len
I was working on #15947 and found out that we panic on this test:
```
fn main() {
let x = [(); &(&'static: loop { |x| {}; }) as *const _ as usize]
}
```
This PR fixes the panic. Closures in array len are still broken, but closure in const eval is not stable anyway.
feat: Allow navigation targets to be duplicated when the focus range lies in the macro definition site
![Code_KI1EfbAHRZ](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/3757771/2cc82e5c-320f-4de2-9d55-fe975d180f2a)
Basically if a name of an item originates from the macro definition we now point to that as well as the creating macro call.
Big diff because I also made `FileId`s field private due to some debugging I had to do (having a searchable constructor makes things easier).
Add support for making lib features internal
We have the notion of an "internal" lang feature: a feature that is never intended to be stabilized, and using which can cause ICEs and other issues without that being considered a bug.
This extends that idea to lib features as well. It is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115623: instead of using an attribute to declare lib features internal, we simply do this based on the name. Everything ending in `_internals` or `_internal` is considered internal.
Then we rename `core_intrinsics` to `core_intrinsics_internal`, which fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115597.
fix: Insert fn call parens only if the parens inserted around field name
Fixes#16014.
Sorry I missed it in previous PR. I've added a test as level to prevent regressions again.
Give any suggestions to improve the test if anything.
TokenMap -> SpanMap rewrite
Opening early so I can have an overview over the full diff more easily, still very unfinished and lots of work to be done.
The gist of what this PR does is move away from assigning IDs to tokens in arguments and expansions and instead gives the subtrees the text ranges they are sourced from (made relative to some item for incrementality). This means we now only have a single map per expension, opposed to map for expansion and arguments.
A few of the things that are not done yet (in arbitrary order):
- [x] generally clean up the current mess
- [x] proc-macros, have been completely ignored so far
- [x] syntax fixups, has been commented out for the time being needs to be rewritten on top of some marker SyntaxContextId
- [x] macro invocation syntax contexts are not properly passed around yet, so $crate hygiene does not work in all cases (but most)
- [x] builtin macros do not set spans properly, $crate basically does not work with them rn (which we use)
~~- [ ] remove all uses of dummy spans (or if that does not work, change the dummy entries for dummy spans so that tests will not silently pass due to havin a file id for the dummy file)~~
- [x] de-queryfy `macro_expand`, the sole caller of it is `parse_macro_expansion`, and both of these are lru-cached with the same limit so having it be a query is pointless
- [x] docs and more docs
- [x] fix eager macro spans and other stuff
- [x] simplify include! handling
- [x] Figure out how to undo the sudden `()` expression wrapping in expansions / alternatively prioritize getting invisible delimiters working again
- [x] Simplify InFile stuff and HirFIleId extensions
~~- [ ] span crate containing all the file ids, span stuff, ast ids. Then remove the dependency injection generics from tt and mbe~~
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/10300
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15685
Implement completion for the callable fields.
Fixes#14656
PR is opened with basic changes. It could be improved by having a new `SymbolKind` for the callable fields and implementing a separate render function similar to the `render_method` for the new `SymbolKind`.
It could also be done without any changes to the `SymbolKind` of course, have the new function called based on the type of field.
I prefer the former method.
Please give any thoughts or changes you think is appropriate for this method. I could start working on that in this same PR.
chore: remove unused `PhantomData`
This PR removes an unused `PhantomData` in `FileItemTreeId`.
*Note:* I am not sure how this should be implemented, maybe as a type instead of a wrapper struct? I'd be happy to do so if needed 👍
This commit addresses the issue of excessive and unrelated errors
generated by top-level `let` statements. Now, only a single error is
produced, indicating that `let` statements are invalid at the top level.
internal: simplify the removal of dulicate workspaces.
### Summary:
Refactoring the duplicate removal process for `workspaces` in `fetch_workspaces`.
### Changes Made:
Replaced `[].iter().enumerate().skip(...).filter_map(...)` with a more concise `[i+1..].positions(...)` provided by `itertools`, which enhances clarity without changing functionality
### Impact:
This change aims to enhance the duplicate removal process for `workspaces`. This change has been tested on my machine.
Please review and provide feedback. Thanks!
fix: Dedup duplicate crates with differing origins in CrateGraph construction
Partially fixes#15656 . Until now the condition for deduplication in crate graphs were the strict equality of two crates. One problem that arises from this is that in certain conditions when we see the same crate having different `CrateOrigin`s the first occurrence would be kept. This approach however results in some unwanted results such as making renaming forbidden as this has been recently only made available for local crates. The given example in #15656 can still not be resolved with this PR as that involves taking inconsistencies between dependencies into consideration. This will be addressed in a future PR.
Make data reflect a case where dev deps are existent.
base-db::CrateGraph::extend now adds dev dependencies for a crate
in case of its upgrading from a CrateOrigin::Lib kind of a crate to a
CrateOrigin::Local one.
Partially fixes#15656 . When a crate graph is extended which is the case when new workspaces are added to the project
the rules for deduplication were too strict. One problem that arises from this is that in certain conditions
when we see the same crate having different `CrateOrigin`s the first form would be maintained. This approach however
results in some unwanted results such as making renaming forbidden as this has been recently only made available for
local crates. The given example in #15656 can still not be resolved with this PR as that involves taking inconsistencies
between dependencies into consideration. This will be addressed in a future PR.
ensure renames happen after edit
This is a bugfix for an issue I fould while working on helix. Rust-analyzer currently always sends any filesystem edits (rename/file creation) before any other edits. When renaming a file that is also being edited that would mean that the edit would be discarded and therefore an incomplete/incorrect refactor (or even cause the creation of a new file in helix altough that is probably a pub on our side).
Example:
* create a module: `mod foo` containing a `pub sturct Bar;`
* reexport the struct uneder a different name in the `foo` module using a *fully qualified path*: `pub use crate::foo::Bar as Bar2`.
* rename the `foo` module to `foo2` using rust-analyzer
* obsereve that the path is not correctly updated (rust-analyer first sends a rename `foo.rs` to `foo2.rs` and then edits `foo.rs` after)
This PR fixes that issue by simply executing all rename operations after all edit operations (while still executing file creation operations first). I also added a testcase similar to the example above.
Relevent excerpt from the LSP standard:
> Since version 3.13.0 a workspace edit can contain resource operations (create, delete or rename files and folders) as well. If resource operations are present clients need to execute the operations in the order in which they are provided. So a workspace edit for example can consist of the following two changes: (1) create file a.txt and (2) a text document edit which insert text into file a.txt. An invalid sequence (e.g. (1) delete file a.txt and (2) insert text into file a.txt) will cause failure of the operation. How the client recovers from the failure is described by the client capability: workspace.workspaceEdit.failureHandling
fix: Diagnose everything in nested items, not just def diagnostics
Turns out we only calculated def diagnostics for these before (was wondering why I wasn't getting any type mismatches)
internal: Migrate assists to the structured snippet API, part 4
Continuing from #15260
Migrates the following assists:
- `add_turbo_fish`
- `add_type_ascription`
- `destructure_tuple_binding`
- `destructure_tuple_binding_in_subpattern`
I did this a while ago, but forgot to make a PR for the changes until now. 😅
minor: Make "Expand macro" command title more explicit
Closes [#15856](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15856).
I opted for "caret", since it's the better term (cursor is the mouse), but I'm not sure how popular it is these days.
Due to the way the current tree mutation api works, we need to collect
changes before we can apply them to the real syntax tree, and also can only
switch to a file once.
`destructure_tuple_binding_in_sub_pattern` also gets migrated even
though can't be used.
Try to update parser/event doc
`TokenSource` and `TreeSink` has been refactored as part of #10765, they no longer exist in code repo. This pr tries to remove them from event module level comment to prevent confusion.
They've been deprecated for four years.
This commit includes the following changes.
- It eliminates the `rustc_plugin_impl` crate.
- It changes the language used for lints in
`compiler/rustc_driver_impl/src/lib.rs` and
`compiler/rustc_lint/src/context.rs`. External lints are now called
"loaded" lints, rather than "plugins" to avoid confusion with the old
plugins. This only has a tiny effect on the output of `-W help`.
- E0457 and E0498 are no longer used.
- E0463 is narrowed, now only relating to unfound crates, not plugins.
- The `plugin` feature was moved from "active" to "removed".
- It removes the entire plugins chapter from the unstable book.
- It removes quite a few tests, mostly all of those in
`tests/ui-fulldeps/plugin/`.
Closes#29597.
feat: generate descriptors for all unstable features
Most unstable features don't have their own chapter in the unstable book, so a rustc helper tool (`src/tools/unstable-book-gen`) generates shims to fill the gaps.
Run this tool to generate the full unstable-book source before parsing it.
String literals diagnose
Continues the work from #15744 to add diagnosis errors to Str, ByteStr, and CStr literal kinds.
Also replaces `unescape_char` for `unescape_byte` to use the correct method for Byte literals.
internal: port anymap
## Description
- The anymap crate has been ported. During this process, unnecessary features for rust-analyzer have been removed.
- From the tests that were checking the existing licenses, the anymap license (`BlueOak-1.0.0 OR MIT OR Apache-2.0`) has been removed.
## Requests
- While porting the code this time, I have tried to respect the original author's intentions and have kept the comments/codes as much as possible. Please don't hesitate to tell me if you think the comments/codes also need to be appropriately modified.
- If there are any necessary changes regarding the licensing or anything else, please let me know so I can fix them.
## Issue
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15500
feat: implement tuple return type to tuple struct assist
This PR implements the `convert_tuple_return_type_to_struct` assist, for converting the return type of a function or method from a tuple to a tuple struct. Additionally, it moves the `to_camel_case` and `char_has_case` functions from `case_conv` to `stdx` so that they can be used similar to `to_lower_snake_case`.
[tuple_return_type_to_tuple_struct.webm](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/52933714/2803ff58-fde3-4144-9495-7c7c7e139075)
Currently, the assist puts the struct definition above the function, or above the nearest `impl` or `trait` if applicable and only rewrites literal tuples that are returned in the body of the function. Additionally, it only attempts to rewrite simple tuple pattern usages with the corresponding tuple struct pattern but does so across files and modules.
I think that this is sufficient for the majority of use cases but I could be wrong. One thing I'm still not sure how to approach is handling `Self` and generics/lifetimes in the tuple type to be extracted. I was thinking of either manually figuring out what lifetimes and generics are in scope and using them (sort of similar to the `generate_function` assist) or maybe using `ctx.sema.resolve_type` and `generic_params` on `hir::Type` but this seems to not deal with lifetimes.
Closes#14293
Add dedicated field for `target_dir` in the configurations for Cargo
and Flycheck. Also change the directory to be a `PathBuf` as opposed to
a `String` to be more appropriate to the operating system.
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
fix: ensure `rustfmt` runs when configured with `./`
(Hopefully) resolves https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15595. This change kinda approaches canonicalization—which I am not a fan of—but only in service of making `./`-configured commands run correctly.
Longer-term, I feel like this code should be removed once `rustfmt` supports recursive searches of configuration files or interpolation of values like `${workspace_folder}` lands in rust-analyzer.
## Testing
I cloned `rustc`, setup rust-analyzer as suggested in the [`rustc` dev guide](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/building/suggested.html#configuring-rust-analyzer-for-rustc), saved and formatted files in `src/tools/miri` and `compiler`, and saw `rustfmt` (seemingly) correctly.
fix: allow more kinds of if let patterns in guarded return assist
Removes the checks that require the pattern to be a tuple struct with exactly 1 field that is unqualified and has an identifier pattern in it. I'm not sure if there should be more checks in place but they seem unnecessary now?
Closes#15695
fix: make bool_to_enum assist create enum at top-level
This pr makes the `bool_to_enum` assist create the `enum` at the next closest module block or at top-level, which fixes a few tricky cases such as with an associated `const` in a trait or module:
```rust
trait Foo {
const $0BOOL: bool;
}
impl Foo for usize {
const BOOL: bool = true;
}
fn main() {
if <usize as Foo>::BOOL {
println!("foo");
}
}
```
Which now properly produces:
```rust
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)]
enum Bool { True, False }
trait Foo {
const BOOL: Bool;
}
impl Foo for usize {
const BOOL: Bool = Bool::True;
}
fn main() {
if <usize as Foo>::BOOL == Bool::True {
println!("foo");
}
}
```
I also think it's a bit nicer, especially for local variables, but didn't really know to do it in the first PR :)
fix: panic with wrapping/unwrapping result return type assists
With the `wrap_return_type_in_result` assist, the following code results in a panic (note the lack of a semicolon):
```rust
fn foo(num: i32) -> $0i32 {
return num
}
=>
thread 'handlers::wrap_return_type_in_result::tests::wrap_return_in_tail_position' panicked at crates/syntax/src/ted.rs:137:41:
called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value
```
I think this is because it first walks the body expression to change any `return` expressions and then walks all tail expressions, resulting in the `return num` being changed twice since it is both a `return` and in tail position. This can also happen when a `match` is in tail position and `return` is used in a branch for example. Not really sure how big of an issue this is in practice though since this seems to be the only case that is impacted and can be reduced to just `num` instead of `return num`.
This also occurs with the `unwrap_result_return_type` assist but panics with the following instead:
```
thread 'handlers::unwrap_result_return_type::tests::wrap_return_in_tail_position' panicked at /rustc/3223b0b5e8dadda3f76c3fd1a8d6c5addc09599e/library/alloc/src/string.rs:1766:29:
assertion failed: self.is_char_boundary(n)
```
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?
minor : Deunwrap convert_comment_block and desugar_doc_comment
Closes subtask 13 of #15398 . I still don't know a more idiomatic way for the for loops I added, any suggestion would make me happy.
Although it doesn't panic now, further changes to how we recover from incomplete syntax
may cause this assist to panic. To mitigate this a test case has been added.