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).
10005: Extend `CargoConfig.unset_test_crates` r=matklad a=regexident
This is to allow for efficiently disabling `#[cfg(test)]` on all crates (by passing `unset_test_crates: UnsetTestCrates::All`) without having to first load the crate graph, when using rust-analyzer as a library.
(FYI: The change doesn't seem to be covered by any existing tests.)
Co-authored-by: Vincent Esche <regexident@gmail.com>
10080: internal: don't shut up the compiler when it says the code's buggy r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
It's good that rust-analyzer doesn't belly-up on a panic in some random
assist.
It is less good that rust-analyzer devs only know that the assists are
buggy when they are actively looking at the logs.
I don't think there's anything wrong with project_model depending on
proc_macro_api directly -- fundamentally, both are about gluing our pure
data model to the messy outside world.
However, it's easy enough to avoid the dependency, so why not.
As an additional consideration, `proc_macro_api` now pulls in `base_db`.
project_model should definitely not depend on that!
cargo llvm-lines shows that path_to_error bloats the code. I don't think
I've needed this functionality recently, seems that we've fixed most of
the serialization problems. So let's just remove it. Should be easy to
add back if we ever need it, and it does make sense to keep the
`from_json` function around.
9830: Enable more assists to generate default trait body impls r=Veykril a=yoshuawuyts
Enable more assists to benefit from trait body generation. Follow-up to #9825 and #9814.
__edit:__ I'd like to move the existing tests to this new file too, but I'll do that in a follow-up PR.
Co-authored-by: Yoshua Wuyts <yoshuawuyts@gmail.com>
From the dawn of time, when dinosaurs roamed the and we didn't have
hierarchical profiling, there was the `latest_requests` infra we used to
track the time of ten last requests.
Today, no one is actually using it and, what's more, it itself became
pretty useless -- LSP grew way more chatty, and 10 requests don't really
paint any kind of picture.
Personally, it's been years since I last looked at latest requests in
the status output.
So, let's remove a tiny bit of state from the big ball of complexity
that is `GlobalState` and `main_loop`!
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