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Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
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6307: Add whitelist of safe intrinsics r=frazar a=frazar
This PR should fix #5996, where intrinsic operations where all marked as unsafe.
I'm rather new to this codebase, so I might be doing something *very* wrong. Please forgive me!
In particular, I'm not sure how to "check that we are in extern `rust-intrinsics`" as mentioned [in this comment](https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5996#issuecomment-709234802).
Co-authored-by: Francesco Zardi <[email protected]>
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Declaration names sounds like a name of declaration -- something you
can use for analysis. It empathically isn't, and is just a label
displayed in various UI. It's important not to confuse the two, least
we accidentally mix semantics with UI (I believe, there's already a
case of this in the FamousDefs at least).
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6130: Items case quick fix (snake_case / UPPER_SNAKE_CASE / CamelCase) r=matklad a=popzxc
Resolves #4598.
After a third try, it finally works. Boy, it appeared tougher than it seemed.
Initially I thought like "Ha, `rustc` already tells us where idents are named incorrectly. It shouldn't be that hard, should it?".
Well, the problems with the information provided by `rustc` appeared shortly:
- `rustc` warnings are `flycheck` warnings, which are slightly aside from our diagnostics with fixes.
When we map flycheck diagnostic to LSP, we can convert it into a fix, but only if it's marked as `Applicability::MachineApplicable`.
Name case fix is marked `Applicability::MaybeIncorrect`, and for a reason: it only suggest to rename symbol under cursor, without tracking any references.
- Warning spawned by `rustc` are identified by string labels rather than enum. It means that if one day the diagnostic will be renamed in `rustc`, `rust-analyzer` code will still compile, but won't find the required diagnostic by name anymore. If by chance this will happen when some unlucky guy will decide to create their first pull request, they'll be confused by suddenly failing tests (likely) not related to their changes.
- Even if we'll try to build fixes atop of `rustc` warnings, we'll have to do it in the `rust_analyzer::diagnostics::to_proto` module, which is far less
convenient for that matter than `ide` crate.
That's why I decided that it's worth a separate `rust-analyzer` diagnostic, which will implement `DiagnosticWithFix` trait.
After that, I discovered that currently `hir_ty::diagnostics` only check `DefWithBody` types, like function bodies. I had to add support for diagnostics
which look at any `ModuleDef`.
And of course, since I'd added a lot of new functionality, it required extensive testing.
That explains why the diff is so big for a (looking) relatively small feature.
I hope that this PR doesn't only add a small feature, but also creates a base for building another features.
## Example:
![case_quick_fix](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12111581/95008475-e07ee780-0622-11eb-9978-62a9ea0e7782.gif)
P.S. My eyes were bleeding when I had to write the code for the example...
6135: when generating new function, focus on return type instead of body r=matklad a=bnjjj
I made a little change when we use the assist to generate a new function, instead of focusing on the function body, it will focus on return type
Co-authored-by: Igor Aleksanov <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Coenen <[email protected]>
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check
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6199: Fix `mut self` not emitting mutable binding on `self` use r=matklad a=Veykril
Prior to this, when `self` in a function is taken by value and bound mutably, its use inside of the method body won't be marked `mutably`.
Fixes #5461
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <[email protected]>
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5917: Add a command to open docs for the symbol under the cursor r=matklad a=zacps
#### Todo
- [ ] Decide if there should be a default keybind or context menu entry
- [x] Figure out how to get the documentation path for methods and other non-top-level defs
- [x] Design the protocol extension. In future we'll probably want parameters for local/remote documentation URLs, so that should maybe be done in this PR?
- [x] Code organisation
- [x] Tests
Co-authored-by: Zac Pullar-Strecker <[email protected]>
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Currently a method only has defaultness if it is a provided trait
method, but this will change when specialisation is available and may
need to become a concept known to hir.
I opted to go for a 'fewest changes' approach given specialisation is
still under development.
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Previously, "find all references" on a variant field wouldn't find any
references outside the defining module. This is because variant fields
were incorrectly assumed to be private, like struct fields without
explicit visibility, but they actually inherit the enum's visibility.
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closes #6092
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6124: Better normalized crate name usage r=jonas-schievink a=SomeoneToIgnore
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5343
Closes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5932
Uses normalized name for code snippets (to be able to test the fix), hover messages and documentation rewrite links (are there any tests for those?).
Also renamed the field to better resemble the semantics.
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <[email protected]>
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6139: Make find_path_prefixed configurable r=matklad a=Veykril
This makes `find_path_prefixed` more configurable allowing one to choose whether it always returns absolute paths, self-prefixed paths or to ignore local imports when building the path.
The config names are just thrown in here, taking better names if they exist :)
This should fix #6131 as well?
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <[email protected]>
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6019: Remove make::path_from_text r=matklad a=Veykril
This removes the `make::path_from_text` function, which according to a note should've been private. I removed it since it didn't really serve a purpose as it was simply wrapping `make::ast_from_text`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <[email protected]>
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6033: Make name resolution resolve proc macros instead of relying purely on the build system r=matklad a=jonas-schievink
This makes name resolution look at proc-macro declaration attributes like `#[proc_macro_derive]` and defines the right proc macro in the macro namespace, fixing unresolved custom derives like `thiserror::Error` (which can cause false positives, now that we emit diagnostics for unresolved imports).
This works even when proc-macro support is turned off, in which case we fall back to a dummy expander that always returns an error. IMO this is the right way to handle at least the name resolution part of proc. macros, while the *expansion* itself should rely on the build system to build and provide the macro DLL. It does mean that they may go out of sync, but we can provide diagnostics if that happens (something like "could not find macro X in crate Y – ensure that all files of crate Y are saved").
I think it is valuable to be able to reason about proc macros even when we can't expand them, since proc macro expansion can break between Rust releases or users might not want to turn it on for performance reasons. It allows us to provide better diagnostics on any proc macro invocation we're not expanding (like a weak warning that informs the user that proc macro support is turned off, or that it has been disabled because the server crashed).
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/5763
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <[email protected]>
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proc-macro crates only export proc-macros, but currently other items
are also considered public (and show up in completion)
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The new attribute-based resolution takes care of this
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6085: Mark unresolved imports diagnostic as experimental r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
It causes a lot of false positives for people. We collected all of the known ones during the last week.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <[email protected]>
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It handles fn-like macros too, and will handle attribute macros in the
future
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6016: Emit diagnostics for unresolved imports and extern crates r=jonas-schievink a=jonas-schievink
AFAIK, we don't have any major bugs in name resolution that would cause a lot of false positives here (except procedural attribute macro support and some rare issues around `#[path]` on module files), so these are *not* marked as experimental diagnostics right now.
I noticed that diagnostics in a file sometimes don't get displayed after opening, but require some edit to be performed. This seems like a preexisting issue though.
Co-authored-by: Jonas Schievink <[email protected]>
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