I've noticed that there are various suggestions that rust-analyzer seems
to filter out, even if they make sense.
Here's an example of where it seems like there should be a suggestion,
but there isn't:
![https://i.imgur.com/wsjM6iz.png](https://i.imgur.com/wsjM6iz.png)
It turns out that this specific suggestion is not considered
`MachineApplicable`, which are the only suggestions that rust-analyzer
accepts. However if you read the documentation for `MachineApplicable`,
b3897e3d13/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs (L27-L29)
then you realize that these are specifically only those suggestions that
rust-analyzer could even automatically apply (in some distant future,
behind some setting or so). Other suggestions that may have some
semantic impact do not use `MachineApplicable`. So all other suggestions
are still intended to be suggested to the user, just not automatically
applied without the user being consulted.
b3897e3d13/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs (L22-L24)
So with that in mind, rust-analyzer should almost definitely not filter
out `MaybeIncorrect` (which honestly is named horribly, it just means
that it's a semantic change, not just a syntactical one).
Then there's `HasPlaceholders` which basically is just another semantic
one, but with placeholders. The user will have to make some adjustments,
but the suggestion still is perfectly valid. rust-analyzer could
probably detect those placeholders and put proper "tab through" markers
there for the IDE, but that's not necessary for now.
Then the last one is `Unspecified` which is so unknown that I don't even
know how to judge it, meaning that the suggestion should probably also
just be suggested to the user and then they can decide.
So with all that in mind, I'm proposing to get rid of the check for
Applicability entirely.
7457: Add no-buffering file logging and wait for a debugger option. r=vsrs a=vsrs
Adds two command line flags: `--no-buffering` and `--wait-dbg`.
Not sure if someone else needs this, but personally I found both flags extremely useful trying to figure out why RA does not work with Visual Studio. Or better to say why Visual Studio does not work with RA.
Co-authored-by: vsrs <vit@conrlab.com>
7353: Add LifetimeParam and ConstParam to CompletionItemKind r=matklad a=Veykril
Adds `LifetimeParam` and `ConstParam` to `CompletionItemKind` and maps them both to `TypeParam` in the protocol conversion as there are no equivalents, so nothing really changes there.
`ConstParam` could be mapped to `Const` I guess but I'm split on whether that would be better?
Additions were solely inspired by (the single) test output for const params.
Also sorts the variants of `CompletionItemKind` and its to_proto match.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
I've noticed a bunch of "main loop too long" warnings in console when
typing in Cargo.toml. Profiling showed that the culprit is `rustc
--print cfg` call.
I moved it to the background project loading phase, where it belongs.
This highlighted a problem: we generally use single `cfg`, while it
really should be per crate.
7220: same level folder rename for will_rename_files r=kjeremy a=ShuiRuTian
use tricky way to support folder rename.
Another step after #7009 and for #4471
Co-authored-by: ShuiRuTian <158983297@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: Song Gao <158983297@qq.com>
7218: Fix typos r=Veykril a=regexident
Apart from the very last commit on this PR (which fixes a public type's name) all changes are non-breaking.
Co-authored-by: Vincent Esche <regexident@gmail.com>
After we started reporting progress when running cargo check during
loading, it is possible to crash the client with two identical progress
tokens.
This points to a deeper issue: we might be running several cargo checks
concurrently, which doesn't make sense.
This commit linearizes all workspace fetches, making sure no updates are
lost.
As an additional touch, it also normalizes progress & result reporting,
to make sure they stand in sync.
This leaks a lot of LSP details into ide layer, which we want to avoid:
c9cec381bc/docs/dev (lsp-independence)
Additionally, all what this infra does is providing a toggle for
auto-import completion, but we already have one!
Rather than eagerly converting JSON, we losslessly keep it as is, and
change the shape of user-submitted data at the last moment.
This also allows us to remove a bunch of wrong Defaults
7068: Add VSCode command to view the hir of a function body r=theotherphil a=theotherphil
Will fix https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7061. Very rough initial version just to work out where I needed to wire everything up.
@matklad would you be happy merging a hir visualiser of some kind? If so, do you have any thoughts on what you'd like it show, and how?
I've spent very little time on this thus far, so I'm fine with throwing away the contents of this PR, but I want to avoid taking the time to make this more polished/interactive/useful only to discover that no-one else has any interest in this functionality.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1974256/103236081-bb58f700-493b-11eb-9d12-55ae1b870f8f.png)
Co-authored-by: Phil Ellison <phil.j.ellison@gmail.com>
7115: Migrate HasSource::source to return Option r=matklad a=nick96
I've made a start on fixing #6913 based on the provided work plan, migrating `HasSource::source` to return an `Option`. The simple cases are migrated but there are a few that I'm unsure exactly how they should be handled:
- Logging the processing of functions in `AnalysisStatsCmd::run`: In verbose mode it includes the path to the module containing the function and the syntax range. I've handled this with an if-let but would it be better to blow up here with `expect`? I'm not 100% on the code paths but if we're processing a function definition then the source should exist.
I've handled `source()` in all code paths as `None` being a valid return value but are there some cases where we should just blow up? Also, all I've done is bubble up the returned `None`s, there may be some places where we can recover and still provide something.
Co-authored-by: Nick Spain <nicholas.spain@stileeducation.com>
Co-authored-by: Nick Spain <nicholas.spain96@gmail.com>
In an attempt to fix#6052 and #4249 this attempts to detect
if rustfmt is a rustup proxy which isn't installed, and reports
the error message to the user for them to fix.
In theory this ought to be memoised but for now it'll do as-is.
Future work might be to ask the user if they would like us to
trigger the installation (if possible).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Silverstone <dsilvers@digital-scurf.org>
Assist vs UnresolvedAssist split doesn't really pull its weight. This
is especially bad if we want to include `Assist` as a field of
diagnostics, where we'd have to make the thing generic.
7030: Support labels in reference search r=matklad a=Veykril
Implements general navigation for labels, goto def, rename and gives labels their own semantic highlighting class.
Fixes#6966
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
Avoid mutation of snapshot's config -- that's spooky action at a
distance. Instead, copy it over to a local variable.
This points out a minor architecture problem, which we won't fix right
away.
Various `ide`-level config structs, like `AssistConfig`, are geared
towards one-shot use when calling a specific methods. On the other
hand, the large `Config` struct in `rust-analyzer` is a long-term
config store.
The fact that `Config` stores `AssistConfig` is accidental -- a better
design would probably be to just store `ConfigData` inside `Config`
and create various `Config`s on the fly out of it.
6993: Clean up descriptions for settings r=matklad a=rherrmann
Use two consecutive newlines (`\n\n`) to actually continue text on a
new line.
Use proper markup to reference related settings.
Consistently format references to files, command line arguments, etc.
as `code`. Format mentions of UI elements in _italic_.
Fix typos, add missing full-stops, add missing default values.
Co-authored-by: Rüdiger Herrmann <ruediger.herrmann@gmx.de>
Use two consecutive newlines (`\n\n`) to actually continue text on a
new line.
Use proper markup to reference related settings.
Consistently format references to files, editor commands, command line
arguments, files, etc. as `code`.
Fix typos, add missing full-stops, add missing default values.
Curiously, LSP uses different enums for those, and unsurprising and
annoyingly, there are things which exist in one but not in the other.
Let's not repeat the mistake and unify the two things
6785: Fix "no value set for FileTextQuery(FileId(..))" r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/6622
Let's hope I got it right this time, but I feel like I slowly begin to understand the main loop logic.
bors r+
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
6761: Make config.rs a single source of truth for configuration. r=matklad a=matklad
Configuration is editor-independent. For this reason, we pick
JSON-schema as the repr of the source of truth. We do specify it using
rust-macros and some quick&dirty hackery though.
The idea for syncing truth with package.json is to just do that
manually, but there's a test to check that they are actually synced.
I'll add something like `rust-analyzer --config-schema` in a follow-up
commit.
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>