internal: Record import origins in ItemScope and PerNS
This records the import items definitions come from in the module scope (as well as what an import resolves to in an ItemScope). It does ignore glob imports as thats a lot more work for little to no gain, glob imports act as if the importing items are "inlined" into the scope which suffices for almost all use cases I believe (to my knowledge, attributes on them have little effect).
There is still a lot of work needed to make this available to the IDE layer, but this lays out the ground work for havin IDE layer support.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/14079
the "add missing members" assists: implemented substitution of default values of const params
To achieve this, I've made `hir::ConstParamData` store the default values
Fix signature help of methods from macros
Currently the receiver type is copied from AST instead re-formatting through `HirDisplay`. Macro generated functions seem to have no spaces and their signature help are rendered like `fn foo(&'amutself)` instead of `fn foo(&'a mut self)`.
internal: use `Cast::cast()` instead of explicit interning
I firmly believe that we should generally use `cast()` instead of interning `GenericArgData` to construct `GenericArg` because it's less verbose and more readable.
Report `incorrect-ident-case` for inner items
Fixes#15319
Although we have been collecting the diagnostics for inner items within function bodies, we were discarding them and never reported to the users. This PR makes sure that they are all reported and additionally collects the diagnostics for inner items within const bodies, static bodies, and enum variant bodies.
Map our diagnostics to rustc and clippy's ones
And control their severity by lint attributes `#[allow]`, `#[deny]` and ... .
It doesn't work with proc macros and I would like to fix that before merge but I don't know how to do it.
fix: deduplicate fields and types in completion
Fixes#15024
- `hir_ty::autoderef()` (which is only meant to be used outside `hir-ty`) now deduplicates types and completely resolves inference variables within.
- field completion now deduplicates fields of the same name and only picks such field of the first type in the deref chain.
Lower const params with a bad id
cc #7434
This PR adds an `InTypeConstId` which is a `DefWithBodyId` and lower const generic parameters into bodies using it, and evaluate them with the mir interpreter. I think this is the last unimplemented const generic feature relative to rustc stable.
But there is a problem: The id used in the `InTypeConstId` is the raw `FileAstId`, which changes frequently. So these ids and their bodies will be invalidated very frequently, which is bad for incremental analysis.
Due this problem, I disabled lowering for local crates (in library crate the id is stable since files won't be changed). This might be overreacting (const generic expressions are usually small, maybe it would be better enabled with bad performance than disabled) but it makes motivation for doing it in the correct way, and it splits the potential panic and breakages that usually comes with const generic PRs in two steps.
Other than the id, I think (at least I hope) other parts are in the right direction.
fix: implemeted lifetime transformation fot assits
A part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/13363
I expect to implement transformation of const params in a separate PR
Other assists and a completion affected:
- `generate_function` currently just ignores lifetimes and, consequently, is not affected
- `inline_call` and `replace_derive_with...` don't seem to need lifetime transformation
- `trait_impl` (a completion) is fixed and tested
MIR episode 5
This PR inits drop support (it is very broken at this stage, some things are dropped multiple time, drop scopes are wrong, ...) and adds stdout support (`println!` doesn't work since its expansion is dummy, but `stdout().write(b"hello world\n")` works if you use `RA_SYSROOT_HACK`) for interpreting. There is no useful unit test that it can interpret yet, but it is a good sign that it didn't hit a major road block yet.
In MIR lowering, it adds support for slice pattern and anonymous const blocks, and some fixes so that we can evaluate `SmolStr::new_inline` in const eval. With these changes, 57 failed mir body remains.