diff options
author | bors[bot] <26634292+bors[bot]@users.noreply.github.com> | 2020-04-25 15:30:10 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | GitHub <[email protected]> | 2020-04-25 15:30:10 +0100 |
commit | fc57358efda7c028cbe8a438446cce5f540f48ca (patch) | |
tree | 402dd311ea4de95468c79eb8afa6722b7391dbb8 /crates/ra_syntax/test_data/lexer/ok/0004_numbers.txt | |
parent | 05981823bac91ba338110902fd435c6e3166f1d6 (diff) | |
parent | 0c12b7e8c8605e84873858da0c4aa170140c14bb (diff) |
Merge #4133
4133: main: eagerly prime goto-definition caches r=matklad a=BurntSushi
This commit eagerly primes the caches used by goto-definition by
submitting a "phantom" goto-definition request. This is perhaps a bit
circuitous, but it does actually get the job done. The result of this
change is that once RA is finished its initial loading of a project,
goto-definition requests are instant. There don't appear to be any more
surprise latency spikes.
This _partially_ addresses #1650 in that it front-loads the latency of the
first goto-definition request, which in turn makes it more predictable and
less surprising. In particular, this addresses the use case where one opens
the text editor, starts reading code for a while, and only later issues the
first goto-definition request. Before this PR, that first goto-definition request
is guaranteed to have high latency in any reasonably sized project. But
after this PR, there's a good chance that it will now be instant.
What this _doesn't_ address is that initial loading time. In fact, it makes it
longer by adding a phantom goto-definition request to the initial startup
sequence. However, I observed that while this did make initial loading
slower, it was overall a somewhat small (but not insignificant) fraction
of initial loading time.
-----
At least, the above is what I _want_ to do. The actual change in this PR is just a proof-of-concept. I came up with after an evening of printf-debugging. Once I found the spot where this cache priming should go, I was unsure of how to generate a phantom input. So I just took an input I knew worked from my printf-debugging and hacked it in. Obviously, what I'd like to do is make this more general such that it will always work.
I don't know whether this is the "right" approach or not. My guess is that there is perhaps a cleaner solution that more directly primes whatever cache is being lazily populated rather than fudging the issue with a phantom goto-definition request.
I created this as a draft PR because I'd really like help making this general. I think whether y'all want to accept this patch is perhaps a separate question. IMO, it seems like a good idea, but to be honest, I'm happy to maintain this patch on my own since it's so trivial. But I would like to generalize it so that it will work in any project.
My thinking is that all I really need to do is find a file and a token somewhere in the loaded project, and then use that as input. But I don't quite know how to connect all the data structures to do that. Any help would be appreciated!
cc @matklad since I've been a worm in your ear about this problem. :-)
Co-authored-by: Andrew Gallant <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'crates/ra_syntax/test_data/lexer/ok/0004_numbers.txt')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions