9558: Do not erase Cargo diagnostics from the closed documents r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6850
The LSP specification at https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/specification-3-14/#textDocument_publishDiagnostics states that
> Diagnostics notification are sent from the server to the client to signal results of validation runs.
>
> Diagnostics are “owned” by the server so it is the server’s responsibility to clear them if necessary. The following rule is used for VS Code servers that generate diagnostics:
>
> * if a language is single file only (for example HTML) then diagnostics are cleared by the server when the file is closed.
> * if a language has a project system (for example C#) diagnostics are not cleared when a file closes. When a project is opened all diagnostics for all files are recomputed (or read from a cache).
>
> When a file changes it is the server’s responsibility to re-compute diagnostics and push them to the client. If the computed set is empty it has to push the empty array to clear former diagnostics. Newly pushed diagnostics always replace previously pushed diagnostics. There is no merging that happens on the client side.
So for projects we should not clear any diagnostics from cargo/json projects.
Our "standalone file" mode is in a way a project too, with sysroot attached and a potential support for dynamic standalone files.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
9634: minor update to excludeDirs doc r=lnicola a=dae
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 :-)
Co-authored-by: Damien Elmes <gpg@ankiweb.net>
Co-authored-by: Damien Elmes <dae@users.noreply.github.com>
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 :-)
Note that, while we don't currently have a fuzzy-matching score, it
makes sense to special-case postfix templates -- it's very annoying when
`.not()` gets sorted before `.not`. We might want to move this infra to
fuzzy matching, once we have that!
Before this PR, SourceChange used a bool and CompletionItem used an enum
to signify if edit is a snippet. It makes sense to use the same pattern
in both cases. `bool` feels simpler, as there's only one consumer of
this API, and all producers are encapsulated anyway (we check the
capability at the production site).
One source completion can produce up to two lsp completions.
Additionally, `preselct` and `sort_text` are global properties of the
whole set of completions, so the right granularity here is to convert
many completions.
As a side-benefit, we no loger allocate intermediate vec.
Moving tests to `rust-analyzer` crate allows removing walkdir dependency
from `xtask`. It does seem more reasonable to keep tidy tests outside of
the "build system" and closer to other integration tests.
* Keep codegen adjacent to the relevant crates.
* Remove codgen deps from xtask, speeding-up from-source installation.
This regresses the release process a bit, as it now needs to run the
tests (and, by extension, compile the code).