By default, `spawn` inherits stderr/stdout/stderr of the parent
process, and so, if child, for example does fcntl(O_NONBLOCK), weird
stuff happens to us.
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/lsp-server/pull/10
2920: Better handle illformed node id from metadata r=matklad a=edwin0cheng
In some rare cases, deps node-id from cargo-metadata do not match its version-id, which cause a panic in `cargo-workspace.rs`. This PR try to ignore these ill-formed node id from `cargo-metadata`. An alternative is return `Err` in these cases but I think make it resilience is a better choice here.
Related #2767
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
2895: Rewrite ra_prof's profile printing r=michalt a=michalt
This changes the way we print things to first construct a mapping from
events to the children and uses that mapping to actually print things.
It should not change the actual output that we produce.
The new approach two benefits:
* It avoids a potential quadratic behavior of the previous approach.
For instance, for a vector of N elements:
```
[Message{level: (N - 1)}, ..., Message{level: 1}, Message{level: 0}]
```
we would first do a linear scan to find entry with level 0, then
another scan to find one with level 1, etc.
* It makes it much easier to improve the output in the future, because
we now pre-compute the children for each entry and can easily take
that into account when printing.
Signed-off-by: Michal Terepeta <michal.terepeta@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Michal Terepeta <michal.terepeta@gmail.com>
We previously used serde's stream deserializer to read json blobs from
the cargo output. It has an issue though: If the deserializer encounters
invalid input, it gets stuck reporting the same error again and again
because it is unable to foward over the input until it reaches a new
valid object.
Reading a line at a time and manually deserializing fixes this issue,
because cargo makes sure to only outpu one json blob per line, so should
we encounter invalid input, we can just skip a line and continue.
The main reason this would happen is stray printf-debugging in
procedural macros, so we still report that an error occured, but we
handle it gracefully now.
Fixes#2935
2931: Added documentation to test_utils r=matklad a=Veetaha
Added some doc comments to test_utils functions while studying this crate. They should be all stable enough to document them.
Also some minor code relocation in `parse_fixture()` closer to its usage according to the advice of @matklad.
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <gerzoh1@gmail.com>
2924: Modify ordering of drops in check watcher to only ever have one cargo r=matklad a=kiljacken
Due to the way drops are ordered when assigning to a mutable variable we
were launching a new cargo sub-process before letting the old one quite.
By explicitly replacing the original watcher with a dummy first, we
ensure it is dropped and the process is completed, before we start the
new process.
Co-authored-by: Emil Lauridsen <mine809@gmail.com>
Due to the way drops are ordered when assigning to a mutable variable we
were launching a new cargo sub-process before letting the old one quite.
By explicitly replacing the original watcher with a dummy first, we
ensure it is dropped and the process is completed, before we start the
new process.
2810: Improves reference search by StructLiteral r=mikhail-m1 a=mikhail-m1
Hey, I've made some changes to improve search for struct literals, now it works for `struct Foo<|> {`, `struct Foo <|>{`, `struct Foo<|>(`. Unfortunately tuple creation is represented as a call expression, so for tuples it works only is search is started in a tuple declaration. It leads to incorrect classification of function calls during search phase, but from user perspective it's not visible and works as expected. May be it worth to add a comment or rename it to remove this misleading classification. Issue #2549.
Co-authored-by: Mikhail Modin <mikhailm1@gmail.com>
2887: Initial auto import action implementation r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/2180
Adds an auto import action implementation.
This implementation is not ideal and has a few limitations:
* The import search functionality should be moved into a separate crate accessible from ra_assists.
This requires a lot of changes and a preliminary design.
Currently the functionality is provided as a trait impl, more on that here: https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/2180#issuecomment-575690942
* Due to the design desicion from the previous item, no doctests are run for the new aciton (look for a new FIXME in the PR)
* For the same reason, I have to create the mock trait implementaion to test the assist
* Ideally, I think we should have this feature as a diagnostics (that detects an absense of an import) that has a corresponding quickfix action that gets evaluated on demand.
Curretly we perform the import search every time we resolve the import which looks suboptimal.
This requires `classify_name_ref` to be moved from ra_ide, so not done currently.
A few improvements to the imports mechanism to be considered later:
* Constants like `ra_syntax::SyntaxKind::NAME` are not imported, because they are not present in the database
* Method usages are not imported, they are found in the database, but `find_use_path` does not return any import paths for them
* Some import paths returned by the `find_use_path` method end up in `core::` or `alloc::` instead of `std:`, for example: `core::fmt::Debug` instead of `std::fmt::Debug`.
This is not an error techically, but still looks weird.
* No detection of cases where a trait should be imported in order to be able to call a method
* Improve `auto_import_text_edit` functionality: refactor it and move away from the place it is now, add better logic for merging the new import with already existing imports
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>