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author | Ryan Cumming <[email protected]> | 2019-06-26 22:52:19 +0100 |
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committer | Ryan Cumming <[email protected]> | 2019-06-26 23:08:26 +0100 |
commit | e052ca9d614e946a6cea4875ae50c68d77088257 (patch) | |
tree | c71ae4c1757f53786150f6ea638d3641ea82fdb2 /editors/code/package-lock.json | |
parent | 5536a249145fc67c415ad48738e62fc2a9e848ff (diff) |
Swallow expected `rustfmt` errors
My workflow in Visual Studio Code + Rust Analyzer has become:
1. Make a change to Rust source code using all the analysis magic
2. Save the file to trigger `cargo watch`. I have format on save enabled
for all file types so this also runs `rustfmt`
3. Fix any diagnostics that `cargo watch` finds
Unfortunately if the Rust source has any syntax errors the act of saving
will pop up a scary "command has failed" message and will switch to the
"Output" tab to show the `rustfmt` error and exit code.
I did a quick survey of what other Language Servers do in this case.
Both the JSON and TypeScript servers will swallow the error and return
success. This is consistent with how I remember my workflow in those
languages. The syntax error will show up as a diagnostic so it should
be clear why the file isn't formatting.
I checked the `rustfmt` source code and while it does distinguish "parse
errors" from "operational errors" internally they both result in exit
status of 1. However, more catastrophic errors (missing `rustfmt`,
SIGSEGV, etc) will return 127+ error codes which we can distinguish from
a normal failure.
This changes our handler to log an info message and feign success if
`rustfmt` exits with status 1.
Another option I considered was only swallowing the error if the
formatting request came from format-on-save. However, the Language
Server Protocol doesn't seem to distinguish those cases.
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