Abstract more over ItemTreeLoc-like structs
Allows reducing some code duplication by using functions generic over said structs. The diff isn't negative due to me adding some additional impls for completeness.
feat: Add incorrect case diagnostics for traits and their associated items
Updates incorrect case diagnostic to:
- Check traits and their associated items
- Ignore trait implementations except for patterns in associated function bodies
Also cleans up `hir-ty::diagnostics::decl_check` a bit (mostly to make it a bit more DRY and easier to maintain)
Also fixes: #8675 and fixes: #8225
internal: even more `tracing`
As part of profiling completions, I added some additional spans and moved `TyBuilder::subst_for_def` closer to its usage site (the latter had a small impact on completion performance. Thanks for the tip, Lukas!)
internal: `tracing` improvements and followups
Hi folks! Building on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16394, I've got a few small tweaks:
- Removed the accidental `mod.rs` usage that I introduced.
- Removed a panic in `pat_analysis.rs`.
- Recorded the event kind in `handle_event` to better distinguish what _kind_ of event is being handled.
- Did a small refactor of `hprof` to have somewhat more linear control flow, and more importantly, write the recorded fields to the output.
The end result is the following:
<img width="1530" alt="A screenshot of Visual Studio Code on a Mac. `hprof.rs` is open, with " src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/assets/2067774/bd11dde5-b2da-4774-bc38-bcb4772d1192">
This commit also adds `tracing` to NotificationDispatcher/RequestDispatcher,
bumps `rust-analyzer-salsa` to 0.17.0-pre.6, `always-assert` to 0.2, and
removes the homegrown `hprof` implementation in favor of a vendored
tracing-span-tree.
fix: Acknowledge `pub(crate)` imports in import suggestions
rust-analyzer has logic that discounts suggesting `use`s for private imports, but that logic is unnecessarily strict - for instance given this code:
```rust
mod foo {
pub struct Foo;
}
pub(crate) use self::foo::*;
mod bar {
fn main() {
Foo$0;
}
}
```
... RA will suggest to add `use crate::foo::Foo;`, which not only makes the code overly verbose (especially in larger code bases), but also is disjoint with what rustc itself suggests.
This commit adjusts the logic, so that `pub(crate)` imports are taken into account when generating the suggestions; considering rustc's behavior, I think this change doesn't warrant any extra configuration flag.
Note that this is my first commit to RA, so I guess the approach taken here might be suboptimal - certainly feels somewhat hacky, maybe there's some better way of finding out the optimal import path 😅
rust-analyzer has logic that discounts suggesting `use`s for private
imports, but that logic is unnecessarily strict - for instance given
this code:
```rust
mod foo {
pub struct Foo;
}
pub(crate) use self::foo::*;
mod bar {
fn main() {
Foo$0;
}
}
```
... RA will suggest to add `use crate::foo::Foo;`, which not only makes
the code overly verbose (especially in larger code bases), but also is
disjoint with what rustc itself suggests.
This commit adjusts the logic, so that `pub(crate)` imports are taken
into account when generating the suggestions; considering rustc's
behavior, I think this change doesn't warrant any extra configuration
flag.
Note that this is my first commit to RA, so I guess the approach taken
here might be suboptimal - certainly feels somewhat hacky, maybe there's
some better way of finding out the optimal import path 😅
fix: try obligation of `IndexMut` when infer
Closes#15842.
This issue arises because `K` is ambiguous if only inferred from `Index` trait, but is unique if inferred from `IndexMut`, but r-a doesn't use this info.
Fix panic with closure inside array len
I was working on #15947 and found out that we panic on this test:
```
fn main() {
let x = [(); &(&'static: loop { |x| {}; }) as *const _ as usize]
}
```
This PR fixes the panic. Closures in array len are still broken, but closure in const eval is not stable anyway.
TokenMap -> SpanMap rewrite
Opening early so I can have an overview over the full diff more easily, still very unfinished and lots of work to be done.
The gist of what this PR does is move away from assigning IDs to tokens in arguments and expansions and instead gives the subtrees the text ranges they are sourced from (made relative to some item for incrementality). This means we now only have a single map per expension, opposed to map for expansion and arguments.
A few of the things that are not done yet (in arbitrary order):
- [x] generally clean up the current mess
- [x] proc-macros, have been completely ignored so far
- [x] syntax fixups, has been commented out for the time being needs to be rewritten on top of some marker SyntaxContextId
- [x] macro invocation syntax contexts are not properly passed around yet, so $crate hygiene does not work in all cases (but most)
- [x] builtin macros do not set spans properly, $crate basically does not work with them rn (which we use)
~~- [ ] remove all uses of dummy spans (or if that does not work, change the dummy entries for dummy spans so that tests will not silently pass due to havin a file id for the dummy file)~~
- [x] de-queryfy `macro_expand`, the sole caller of it is `parse_macro_expansion`, and both of these are lru-cached with the same limit so having it be a query is pointless
- [x] docs and more docs
- [x] fix eager macro spans and other stuff
- [x] simplify include! handling
- [x] Figure out how to undo the sudden `()` expression wrapping in expansions / alternatively prioritize getting invisible delimiters working again
- [x] Simplify InFile stuff and HirFIleId extensions
~~- [ ] span crate containing all the file ids, span stuff, ast ids. Then remove the dependency injection generics from tt and mbe~~
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/10300
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/15685