5968: Lookup ADT and associated type names for chalk debugging / tweak chalk interner r=flodiebold a=nathanwhit
This PR improves the chalk program writing integration by looking up the names for ADTs and associated types, making the output much more readable.
There are also a few small changes to the interner, which gives some nice performance improvements. We clone `Ty`s and `ProgramClause`s relatively often in chalk, so wrapping them in `Arc`s is a perf win. This takes the time for performing type inference on the rust-analyzer codebase from 40s to 33s on my machine.
Co-authored-by: Nathan Whitaker <nathan.whitaker01@gmail.com>
5940: Implement "Replace `impl Trait` function argument with the named generic" assist. r=matklad a=alekseysidorov
Fixes#5085
Co-authored-by: Aleksei Sidorov <gorthauer87@yandex.ru>
5935: Rewrite import insertion r=matklad a=Veykril
This is my attempt at refactoring the import insertion #3947. I hope what I created here is somewhat in line with what was requested, it wouldn't surprise me .
`common_prefix` is a copy from `merge_imports.rs` so those should be unified somewhere, `try_merge_trees` is also copied from there but slighly modified to take the `MergeBehaviour` enum into account.
`MergeBehaviour` should in the end become a configuration option, and the order if `ImportGroup` probably as well?
I'm not too familiar with the assist stuff and the like which is why I dont know what i have to do with `insert_use_statement` and `find_insert_use_container` for now.
I will most likely add more test cases in the end as well as I currently only tried to hit every path in `find_insert_position`.
Some of the merge tests also fail atm due to them not sorting what they insert. There is also this test case I'm not sure if we want to support it. I would assume we want to? https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/5935/files#diff-6923916dd8bdd2f1ab4b984adacd265fR540-R547
The entire module was rewritten so looking at the the file itself is probably better than looking at the diff.
Regarding the sub issues of #3947:
- #3301: This is fixed with the rewrite, what this implementation does is that it scans through the first occurence of groupings and picks the appropriate one out. This means the user can actually rearrange the groupings on a per file basis to their liking. If a group isnt being found it is inserted according to the `ImportGroup` variant order(Would be nice if this was configurable I imagine).
- #3831: This should be fixed with the introduced `MergeBehaviour` enum and it's `Last` variant.
- #3946: This should also be [fixed](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/5935/files#diff-6923916dd8bdd2f1ab4b984adacd265fR87)
- #5795: This is fixed in the sense that the grouping search picks the first group that is of the same kind as the import that is being added. So if there is a random import in the middle of the program it should only be considered if there is no group of the same kind in the file already present.
- the last point in the list I havent checked yet, tho I got the feeling that it's not gonna be too simple as that will require knowledge of whether in this example `ast` is a crate or the module that is already imported.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
`hir` should know nothing about URLs, markdown and html. It should
only be able to:
* resolve stringy path from documentation
* generate canonical stringy path for a def
In contrast, link rewriting should not care about semantics of paths
and names resolution, and should be concern only with text mangling
bits.
5893: Allow running a test as a binary r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
If a test uses `harness = false`, it just contains an `fn main` that is executed via `cargo test`. This adds support for that.
Note though that Cargo doesn't actually tell us whether `harness = false`, so this hint will always show up when you put an `fn main` into an integration test. Normally people shouldn't be doing that if they do use the harness though.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonas.schievink@ferrous-systems.com>
Overlapping indels are a bug. Checking this *always* is tricky (needs
a sorted data structure to not suffer O(N^2) perf). But
opportunistically checking small indels should give provide 80% of the
benefits.
4873: Resolve links in hover documentation r=matklad a=zacps
This PR resolves links in hover documentation. Both the upcoming intra-doc-links style and the old "path-based" style.
## Todo
* [x] More tests
* [ ] Benchmark (Is there an easy way to benchmark this?)
* [x] ~~Resolve issues with the markdown parser/get rid of it~~ Migrate to `pulldown_cmark_to_cmark`
* [x] Reorganise code (Tips appreciated)
---
Fixes#503
Co-authored-by: Zac Pullar-Strecker <zacmps@gmail.com>
4776: Do a weekly minor publish to crates.io r=matklad a=pksunkara
This is the same system I set up on Chalk repo.
Every week it creates a new minor version, pushes it to github and then deploys it to crates.io.
Co-authored-by: Pavan Kumar Sunkara <pavan.sss1991@gmail.com>
5845: Omit lenses for not runnable doctests r=matklad a=SomeoneToIgnore
Ideally, we should properly parse the doctest attributes before, but since I need it for the code lens only, this way should suffice for now
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
We might want to provide more efficient impls for check if usages
exist, limiting the search, filtering and cancellation, so let's
violate YAGNI a bit here.
Main one: instead of adding a parameter to function to handle special
case, make the caller handle it.
Second main one: make sure that function does a reasonable thing.
`highlight_def` picks a color for def, *regardless* of the context
the def is use. Feeding an info from the call-site muddies the
responsibilities here.
Minor smells, flagging the function as having space for improvement in
the first place:
* many parameters, some of which are set as constants on most
call-sites (introduce severalfunction instad)
* boolean param (add two functions instead)
5643: Add new consuming modifier, apply consuming and mutable to methods r=matklad a=Nashenas88
This adds a new `consuming` semantic modifier for syntax highlighters.
This also emits `mutable` and `consuming` in two cases:
- When a method takes `&mut self`, then it now has `function.mutable` emitted.
- When a method takes `self`, and the type of `Self` is not `Copy`, then `function.consuming` is emitted.
CC @flodiebold
Co-authored-by: Paul Daniel Faria <Nashenas88@users.noreply.github.com>
5695: Added completion for unstable features r=matklad a=Fihtangolz
Added xtask for downloading list of unstable features from the unstable book and codegen for it. Also included small changes from linter.
Co-authored-by: Dmitry <mamhigtt@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dmitry Opokin <mamhigtt@gmail.com>
5682: Add an option to disable diagnostics r=matklad a=popzxc
As far as I know, currently it's not possible to disable a selected type of diagnostics provided by `rust-analyzer`.
This causes an inconvenient situation with a false-positive warnings: you either have to disable all the diagnostics, or you have to ignore these warnings.
There are some open issues related to this problem, e.g.: https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5412, https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5502
This PR attempts to make it possible to selectively disable some diagnostics on per-project basis.
Co-authored-by: Igor Aleksanov <popzxc@yandex.ru>
5687: Fix document symbols order r=matklad a=magurotuna
Resolves#5655
And adds tests for `handle_document_symbol`, both with `hierarchical_symbols` enabled and with it disabled.
Previously document symbols were displayed in reverse order in sublime text with its LSP plugin, but this patch fixes it like this:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23649474/89709020-fbccce00-d9b6-11ea-83b0-c88dc9f7977f.png)
Co-authored-by: Yusuke Tanaka <yusuktan@maguro.dev>
5758: SSR: Explicitly autoderef and ref placeholders as needed r=matklad a=davidlattimore
Structural search replace now inserts *, & and &mut in the replacement to match any auto[de]ref in the matched code.
e.g. `$a.foo() ==>> bar($a)` might convert `x.foo()` to `bar(&mut x)`
Co-authored-by: David Lattimore <dml@google.com>
The idea here is that, on CI, we only want to cache crates.io
dependencies, and not local crates. This keeps the size of the cache
low, and also improves performance, as network and moving files on
disk (on Windows) can be slow.
5776: Fix eslint errors on .eslintrc.js and rollup.config.js r=matklad a=fuafa
Eslint complains if these two files does not include in the `tsconfig.json`.
```
Parsing error: "parserOptions.project" has been set for @typescript-eslint/parser.
The file does not match your project config: .eslintrc.js.
The file must be included in at least one of the projects provided.eslint
```
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/20750310/90338269-176d4f80-e01b-11ea-8710-3ea817b235d2.png)
5780: Fixup whitespace when adding missing impl items r=matklad a=jDomantas
Generate properly formatted whitespace when adding impl items - with an empty line between items and removing extra whitespace that often appears at the end.
This is my first time working on rust analyzer so I'm not very familiar with its internal APIs. If there's a better way to do such syntax tree editing I'd be glad to hear it.
Co-authored-by: xiaofa <xiaofalzx@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: jDomantas <djadenkus@gmail.com>
5766: Hacky support for fn-like proc macros r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
It turns out that this is all that's needed to get something like this working:
```rust
#[proc_macro]
pub fn function_like_macro(_args: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
TokenStream::from_str("fn fn_success() {}").unwrap()
}
```
```rust
function_like_macro!();
fn f() {
fn_success();
}
```
The drawback is that it also makes this work, because there is no distinction between different proc macro kinds in the rest of r-a:
```rust
#[derive(function_like_macro)]
struct S {}
fn f() {
fn_success();
}
```
Another issue is that it seems to panic, and then panic, when using this on the rustc code base, due to some issue in the inscrutable proc macro bridge code.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <jonasschievink@gmail.com>
Conjecture: it's impossible to use hir::Path *correctly* from an IDE.
I am not entirely sure about this, and we might need to add it back at
some point, but I have to arguments that convince me that we probably
won't:
* `hir::Path` has to know about hygiene, which an IDE can't set up
properly.
* `hir::Path` lacks identity, but you actually have to know identity
to resolve it correctly