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Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
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Rust Analyzer

Build Status Build status

Rust Analyzer is an experimental modular compiler frontend for the Rust language, which aims to lay a foundation for excellent IDE support.

It doesn't implement much of compiler functionality yet, but the white-space preserving Rust parser works, and there are significant chunks of overall architecture (indexing, on-demand & lazy computation, snapshotable world view) in place. Some basic IDE functionality is provided via a language server.

Quick Start

Rust analyzer builds on Rust >= 1.30.0 (currently in beta) and uses the 2018 edition.

# run tests
$ cargo test

# show syntax tree of a Rust file
$ cargo run --package ra_cli parse < crates/ra_syntax/src/lib.rs

# show symbols of a Rust file
$ cargo run --package ra_cli symbols < crates/ra_syntax/src/lib.rs

To try out the language server, see these instructions. Please note that the server is not ready for general use yet. If you are looking for a Rust IDE that works, use IntelliJ Rust or RLS. That being said, the basic stuff works, and rust analyzer is developed in the rust analyzer powered editor.

Current Status and Plans

Rust analyzer aims to fill the same niche as the official Rust Language Server, but uses a significantly different architecture. More details can be found in this thread, but the core issue is that RLS works in the "wait until user stops typing, run the build process, save the results of the analysis" mode, which arguably is the wrong foundation for IDE.

Rust Analyzer is a hobby project at the moment, there's exactly zero guarantees that it becomes production-ready one day.

The near/mid term plan is to work independently of the main rustc compiler and implement at least simplistic versions of name resolution, macro expansion and type inference. The purpose is two fold:

  • to quickly bootstrap usable and useful language server: solution that covers 80% of Rust code will be useful for IDEs, and will be vastly simpler than 100% solution.

  • to understand how the consumer-side of compiler API should look like (especially it's on-demand aspects). If you have get_expression_type function, you can write a ton of purely-IDE features on top of it, even if the function is only partially correct. Plugin in the precise function afterwards should just make IDE features more reliable.

The long term plan is to merge with the mainline rustc compiler, probably around the HIR boundary? That is, use rust analyzer for parsing, macro expansion and related bits of name resolution, but leave the rest (including type inference and trait selection) to the existing rustc.

Getting in touch

@matklad can be found at Rust discord, in #ides-and-editors.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md and ARCHITECTURE.md

License

Rust analyzer is primarily distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0).

See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.