Today, rust-analyzer (and rustc, and bat, and IntelliJ) fail badly on
some kinds of maliciously constructed code, like a deep sequence of
nested parenthesis.
"Who writes 100k nested parenthesis" you'd ask?
Well, in a language with macros, a run-away macro expansion might do
that (see the added tests)! Such expansion can be broad, rather than
deep, so it bypasses recursion check at the macro-expansion layer, but
triggers deep recursion in parser.
In the ideal world, the parser would just handle deeply nested structs
gracefully. We'll get there some day, but at the moment, let's try to be
simple, and just avoid expanding macros with unbalanced parenthesis in
the first place.
closes#9358
We generally avoid "syntax only" helper wrappers, which don't do much:
they make code easier to write, but harder to read. They also make
investigations harder, as "find_usages" needs to be invoked both for the
wrapped and unwrapped APIs
9700: fix: Remove the legacy macro scoping hack r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
This stops prepending `self::` to single-ident macro paths, resolving even legacy-scoped macros using the fixed-point algorithm. This is not correct, but a lot easier than fixing this properly (which involves pushing a new scope for every macro definition and invocation).
This allows resolution of macros from the prelude, fixing https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/9687.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
9453: Add first-class limits. r=matklad,lnicola a=rbartlensky
Partially fixes#9286.
This introduces a new `Limits` structure which is passed as an input
to `SourceDatabase`. This makes limits accessible almost everywhere in
the code, since most places have a database in scope.
One downside of this approach is that whenever you query limits, you
essentially do an `Arc::clone` which is less than ideal.
Let me know if I missed anything, or would like me to take a different approach!
Co-authored-by: Robert Bartlensky <bartlensky.robert@gmail.com>
9637: Overhaul doc_links testing infra r=Veykril a=Veykril
and fix several issues with current implementation.
Fixes#9617
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
In rust-analyzer, we avoid defualt impls for types which don't have
sensible, "empty" defaults. In particular, we avoid using invalid
indices for defaults and similar hacks.
This treats the consts generated by older synstructure versions like
unnamed consts. We should remove this at some point (at least after
Chalk has switched).