2979: vscode: now we are actually using tslib r=matklad a=Veetaha
We had an incorrect setup where `tslib` was in `devDependencies`.
FYI:
tslib is a runtime dependency, it contains functions that are used by transpiled JavaScript in order not to inline them in each file.
For example:
```ts
// foo.ts (source code)
import * as foo from "foo";
// ---------------------------
// foo.js (compiled output)
"use strict";
var __importStar = (this && this.__importStar) || function (mod) {
if (mod && mod.__esModule) return mod;
var result = {};
if (mod != null) for (var k in mod) if (Object.hasOwnProperty.call(mod, k)) result[k] = mod[k];
result["default"] = mod;
return result;
};
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
const foo = __importStar(require("foo"));
```
As you see, `tsc` generated that `__importStar` helper function in compiled output. And it generates it per each file if you don't enable `"importHelpers": true`. Now with `importHelpers` enabled we get the following picture:
```ts
// foo.ts (source code)
import * as foo from "foo";
// ---------------------------
// foo.js (compiled output)
"use strict";
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
const tslib_1 = require("tslib");
const foo = tslib_1.__importStar(require("foo"));
```
It saves some bundle size, but I am not entirely sure wheter we want that. Discussions are welcome!
Co-authored-by: Veetaha <gerzoh1@gmail.com>
2964: Improve responsiveness of the cargo check status label r=matklad a=lnicola
This is still not ideal because the label displays the crate that was just checked, not the one that's currently being checked. But it should give the impression of being faster.
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
2963: Emacs fixes r=matklad a=flodiebold
- use provided environment for runnables (finally set `RUST_BACKTRACE`)
- implement `selectAndApplySourceChange` so auto-import works 🙂
cc @brotzeit
2967: Disable optimizations for some build-time crates r=matklad a=lnicola
This speeds up a release build on my laptop from 4m 13s to 3m 33s. It's a bit disappointing, but we don't get perfect parallelism during the build. The non-RA dependencies finish building around 72s as opposed to 112s.
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <florian.diebold@freiheit.com>
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
2061: Theme loading and "editor.tokenColorCustomizations" support. r=matklad a=seivan
Fixes: [Issue#1294](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/1294#issuecomment-497450325)
TODO:
- [x] Load themes
- [x] Load existing `ralsp`-prefixed overrides from `"workbench.colorCustomizations"`.
- [x] Load overrides from `"editor.tokenColorCustomizations.textMateRules"`.
- [x] Use RA tags to load `vscode.DecorationRenderOptions` (colors) from theme & overrides.
- [x] Map RA tags to common TextMate scopes before loading colors.
- [x] Add default scope mappings in extension.
- [x] Cache mappings between settings updates.
- [x] Add scope mapping configuration manifest in `package.json`
- [x] Load configurable scope mappings from settings.
- [x] Load JSON Scheme for text mate scope rules in settings.
- [x] Update [Readme](https://github.com/seivan/rust-analyzer/blob/feature/themes/docs/user/README.md#settings).
Borrowed the theme loading (`scopes.ts`) from `Tree Sitter` with some modifications to reading `"editor.tokenColorCustomizations"` for merging with loaded themes and had to remove the async portions to be able to load it from settings updates.
~Just a PoC and an idea I toyed around with a lot of room for improvement.~
For starters, certain keywords aren't part of the standard TextMate grammar, so it still reads colors from the `ralsp` prefixed values in `"workbench.colorCustomizations"`.
But I think there's more value making the extension work with existing themes by maping some of the decoration tags to existing key or keys.
<img width="453" alt="Screenshot 2019-11-09 at 17 43 18" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/55424/68531968-71b4e380-0318-11ea-924e-cdbb8d5eae06.png">
<img width="780" alt="Screenshot 2019-11-09 at 17 41 45" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/55424/68531950-4b8f4380-0318-11ea-8f85-24a84efaf23b.png">
<img width="468" alt="Screenshot 2019-11-09 at 17 40 29" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/55424/68531952-51852480-0318-11ea-800a-6ae9215f5368.png">
These will merge with the default ones coming with the extension, so you don't have to implement all of them and works well with overrides defined in settings.
```jsonc
"editor.tokenColorCustomizations": {
"textMateRules": [
{
"scope": "keyword",
"settings": {
"fontStyle": "bold",
}
},
]
},
```
Edit: The idea is to work with 90% of the themes out there by working within existing scopes available that are generally styled. It's not to say I want to erase the custom Rust scopes - those should still remain and eventually worked into a custom grammar bundle for Rust specific themes that target those, I just want to make it work with generic themes offered on the market place for now.
A custom grammar bundle and themes for Rust specific scopes is out of... scope for this PR.
We'll make another round to tackle those issues.
Current fallbacks implemented
```typescript
[
'comment',
[
'comment',
'comment.block',
'comment.line',
'comment.block.documentation'
]
],
['string', ['string']],
['keyword', ['keyword']],
['keyword.control', ['keyword.control', 'keyword', 'keyword.other']],
[
'keyword.unsafe',
['storage.modifier', 'keyword.other', 'keyword.control', 'keyword']
],
['function', ['entity.name.function']],
['parameter', ['variable.parameter']],
['constant', ['constant', 'variable']],
['type', ['entity.name.type']],
['builtin', ['variable.language', 'support.type', 'support.type']],
['text', ['string', 'string.quoted', 'string.regexp']],
['attribute', ['keyword']],
['literal', ['string', 'string.quoted', 'string.regexp']],
['macro', ['support.other']],
['variable', ['variable']],
['variable.mut', ['variable', 'storage.modifier']],
[
'field',
[
'variable.object.property',
'meta.field.declaration',
'meta.definition.property',
'variable.other'
]
],
['module', ['entity.name.section', 'entity.other']]
```
Co-authored-by: Seivan Heidari <seivan.heidari@icloud.com>
2583: Use prettier settings in ts-lint r=matklad a=edwin0cheng
This PR add `tslint-plugin-prettier` extension in ts-lint, which "runs prettier rules as tslint rules." and remove `quotemark` from ts-lint and let prettier to handle it.
And also fix#2515
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
2568: Add option to disable all-targets. r=matklad a=pftbest
Can be useful in embedded.
Co-authored-by: Vadzim Dambrouski <vadzim.dambrouski@promwad.com>
2571: Fixed a typo in settings r=matklad a=omerbenamram
@lnicola found a typo in the description for one of the settings introduced in #2559.
Co-authored-by: Omer Ben-Amram <omerbenamram@gmail.com>
2565: Fixed syntax highlighting not refreshing on windows. r=matklad a=omerbenamram
I was encoutering the same probelm described in #1690.
It seems that events initiated by the frontend with `rust-analyzer/decorationsRequest` would go through.
So whenever a user switches tabs, highlighting will update.
However, when decorations are initiated by a notification with `rust-analyzer/publishDecorations`, it would fail on this check here 6cbd8a4a4b/editors/code/src/notifications/publish_decorations.ts (L15) (`targetEditor` will always be `undefined`).
This is because it's trying to match the uri `rust-analyzer` sends (which uses an uppercase drive letter) to the uri provided at `editor.document.uri.toString()`, which is both escaped (uses `%3a` for `:`), and uses a lowercase letter drive.
Aparrently this was an issue for some other extensions aswell - https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/68325.
But this is the defined behavior - c110d84460/src/vs/vscode.d.ts (L1304)
This fix is only relevant for windows.
I've opted for a server-side fix, since rust will always return uppercase letters for drives, there seems to be no other easy solution than manipulating the Url string before sending it to the frontend.
Closes#1690.
Co-authored-by: Omer Ben-Amram <omerbenamram@gmail.com>
2508: Code: don't check for ra_lsp_server on Windows r=matklad a=lnicola
Workaround for https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/2503#issuecomment-562980020.
~~(not yet tested on Windows)~~
We can't run `ra_lsp_server --version` right now because the server doesn't seem to handle arguments (so it hangs).
Co-authored-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
This commit implements a general truncation framework for HirFormatter
that keeps track of how much has been output so far. This information
can then be used to perform truncation inside the language server,
instead of relying on the client.
Initial support is implemented for truncating types hints using the
maxInlayHintLength server config option. The existing solution in the
VSCode extension has been removed in favor of letting the server
truncate type hints.
1984: Bump rollup and vsce r=matklad a=kjeremy
I got sick of the vsce warning on install and noticed that rollup was also out of date.
Co-authored-by: kjeremy <kjeremy@gmail.com>
The old `vscode` package is outdated and it is recommened to switch to
these two new packages. This also solves a problem of a missing `.d.ts`
for `vscode` in Nixos.
- only send request if workspace is initialized (emacs-lsp doesn't seem to
prevent sending requests before the initialized notification is sent)
- check whether we're still in the correct buffer before sending request
1652: Improve type hints behavior r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
This PR fixed the following type hints issues:
* Restructures the `InlayKind` enum contents based on the discussion here: https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/1606#issuecomment-515968055
* Races described in #1639
* Caches the latest decorations received for each file to show them the next time the file is opened (instead of a new server request)
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
1458: Run VS Code tests on CI r=matklad a=etaoins
This is actually much faster than I expected; it takes about 13 seconds to download VS Code and run the unit tests. This means the VS Code tests are still significantly faster than the Rust ones.
If this ends up being unreliable we can always remove it later or move it to a separate optional job.
We also need to ignore the `.vscode-test` directory when running `prettier` or it will get upset about some temporary JSON files VS Code creates.
cc @killercup
Co-authored-by: Ryan Cumming <etaoins@gmail.com>
1459: Include primary span label in VS Code diagnostics r=matklad a=etaoins
In most cases the primary label span repeats information found elsewhere in the diagnostic. For example, with E0061:
```json
{
"message": "this function takes 2 parameters but 3 parameters were supplied",
"spans": [{"label": "expected 2 parameters"}]
}
```
However, with some mismatched type errors (E0308) the expected type only appears in the primary span's label, e.g.:
```json
{
"message": "mismatched types",
"spans": [{"label": "expected usize, found u32"}]
}
```
I initially added the primary span label to the message unconditionally. However, for most error types the child diagnostics repeat the primary span label with more detail. `rustc` also renders the duplicate text but because the span label and child diagnostics appear in visually distinct places it's not as confusing.
This takes a heuristic approach where it will only add the primary span label if there are no child message lines. For most error types the child messages repeat the primary span label with more detail.
Co-authored-by: Ryan Cumming <etaoins@gmail.com>
This adds `unreachable_code` to the list of diagnostic codes we map to
`Unnecessary` in Visual Studio Code. This is consistent with what the
TypeScript language server does.
In most cases the primary label span repeats information found elsewhere
in the diagnostic. For example, with E0061:
```
{
"message": "this function takes 2 parameters but 3 parameters were supplied",
"spans": [{"label": "expected 2 parameters"}]
}
```
However, with some mismatched type errors (E0308) the expected type only
appears in the primary span's label, e.g.:
```
{
"message": "mismatched types",
"spans": [{"label": "expected usize, found u32"}]
}
```
I initially added the primary span label to the message unconditionally.
However, for most error types the child diagnostics repeat the primary
span label with more detail. `rustc` also renders the duplicate text but
because the span label and child diagnostics appear in visually distinct
places it's not as confusing.
This takes a heuristic approach where it will only add the primary span
label if there are no child message lines.
This is actually much faster than I expected; it takes about 13 seconds
to download VS Code and run the unit tests. This means the VS Code tests
are still significantly faster than the Rust ones.
If this ends up being unreliable we can always remove it later or move
it to a separate optional job.
We also need to ignore the `.vscode-test` directory when running
`prettier` or it will get upset about some temporary JSON files VS Code
creates.
1454: Fix `cargo watch` code action filtering r=etaoins a=etaoins
There are two issues with the implementation of `provideCodeActions` introduced in #1439:
1. We're returning the code action based on the file its diagnostic is in; not the file the suggested fix is in. I'm not sure how often fixes are suggested cross-file but it's something we should handle.
2. We're not filtering code actions based on the passed range. The means if there is any suggestion in a file we'll show an action for every line of the file. I naively thought that VS Code would filter for us but that was wrong.
Unfortunately the VS Code `CodeAction` object is very complex - it can handle edits across multiple files, run commands, etc. This makes it complex to check them for equality or see if any of their edits intersects with a specified range.
To make it easier to work with suggestions this introduces a `SuggestedFix` model object and a `SuggestFixCollection` code action provider. This is a layer between the raw Rust JSON and VS Code's `CodeAction`s. I was reluctant to introduce another layer of abstraction here but my attempt to work directly with VS Code's model objects was worse.
Co-authored-by: Ryan Cumming <etaoins@gmail.com>
`tslint` doesn't catch this because TypeScript has had this check
builtin since 2.9. However, it's disabled by default so right now
nothing is checking for unused variables.
There are two issues with the implementation of `provideCodeActions`
introduced in #1439:
1. We're returning the code action based on the file its diagnostic is
in; not the file the suggested fix is in. I'm not sure how often
fixes are suggested cross-file but it's something we should handle.
2. We're not filtering code actions based on the passed range. The means
if there is any suggestion in a file we'll show an action for every
line of the file. I naively thought that VS Code would filter for us
but that was wrong.
Unfortunately the VS Code `CodeAction` object is very complex - it can
handle edits across multiple files, run commands, etc. This makes it
complex to check them for equality or see if any of their edits
intersects with a specified range.
To make it easier to work with suggestions this introduces a
`SuggestedFix` model object and a `SuggestFixCollection` code action
provider. This is a layer between the raw Rust JSON and VS Code's
`CodeAction`s. I was reluctant to introduce another layer of abstraction
here but my attempt to work directly with VS Code's model objects was
worse.