10181: Begining of lsif r=HKalbasi a=HKalbasi
This PR adds a `lsif` command to cli, which can be used as `rust-analyzer lsif /path/to/project > dump.lsif`. It now generates a valid, but pretty useless lsif (only supports folding ranges). The propose of this PR is to discussing about the structure of lsif generator, before starting anything serious.
cc `@matklad` #8696#3098
Co-authored-by: hamidreza kalbasi <hamidrezakalbasi@protonmail.com>
10105: RfC: Use `todo!()` instead of `()` for missing fields r=jonas-schievink a=jo-so
Most commonly a field of a struct can be initialized with its default value than an empty tuple.
Co-authored-by: Jörg Sommer <joerg@jo-so.de>
10332: minor: Allow overwriting RUST_BACKTRACE for the server manually r=jonas-schievink a=Veykril
Trying to figure out why we aren't getting backtraces for windows builds from CI, this let's one set the backtraces to `FULL`
Might be cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87481
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
With this patch, in these examples
```rust
fn main() {
"⊞$0";
}
```
```rust
struct S {
д$0 u8
}
```
entering ':' character in `$0` places shouldn't cause panics.
The generated code with `()` doesn't compile in most of the cases. To signal
the developer there's something to do, fill in `todo!()`.
Because the file *missing_fields.rs* contains the string `todo!()` it needs
an exception for the test *check_todo*.
When dealing with proc macros, there are two very different kinds of
errors:
* first, usual errors of "proc macro panicked on this particular input"
* second, the proc macro server might day if the user, eg, kills it
First kind of errors are expected and are a normal output, while the
second kind are genuine IO-errors.
For this reason, we use a curious nested result here: `Result<Result<T,
E1>, E2>` pattern, which is 100% inspired by http://sled.rs/errors.html
closes#9922
Turned out to be trivial after preliminary refactor.
The intended behavior is that we schedule cache priming once ws become
quiescent (that is, we fully load cargo project), and we continue to
rschedule it until it completes (priming might get cancelled by user
typing into a file).