The `LifetimeParam` and `Local` variants use `source()` to find their
range. Now that `source()` returns an `Option` we need to handle the
`None` case.
In #6901 some special case handling for proc-macros was introduced to
prevent panicing as they have no AST. Now the new HasSource::source
method is used that returns an option.
Generally this was a pretty trivial change, the only thing of much
interest is that `hir::MacroDef` now implements `TryToNav` not `ToNav`
as this allows us to handle `HasSource::source` now returning an option.
7116: Fix deep syntax tree bug generated by proc-macro r=jonas-schievink a=edwin0cheng
This PR fixed a bug from `semver-parser` and `pest_derive` crates which generate a very deep syntax tree such that serde reject to de-serialize. To fix this bug, we disabled recursion limit in `serde` (by calling [`Deserializer::disable_recursion_limit`](https://docs.rs/serde_json/1.0.61/serde_json/struct.Deserializer.html#method.disable_recursion_limit))
I have a feeling that we still need some way to protect against bad proc-macro generating huge syntax node, but I have no idea right now.
r? @jonas-schievink
Fixes#7103
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>
7102: Fix completion of Default struct update syntax r=Veykril a=nick96
Previously the inserted text was always `..Default::default()` which ends up as `...Default::default()`
if `.` was typed. Now checks if the current token is `.` and inserts `.Default::default()`
if it is, so `..Default::default()` is correctly completed.
I think there's probably a better way to implement this context aware completion because I've seen it in other parts of rust-analyzer as a user but I'm not sure how to do it.
Fixes#6969
Co-authored-by: Nick Spain <nicholas.spain@stileeducation.com>
7071: Pass --all-targets to "cargo check" when discovering external resources r=matklad a=WasabiFan
There is a repro case and background in the linked issue.
In short, the goal of this MR is to allow rust-analyzer to discover proc-macros which come from your tests (including, most importantly, dev-dependencies).
By default, `cargo check` implies the equivalent of `--lib --bins`, meaning it'll check your libraries and binaries -- but not tests! This means proc-macros (or, I guess, build scripts as well) weren't discovered by rust-analyzer if they came from tests.
One solution would be to manually add `--lib --bins --tests` (i.e., just augment the effective options to include tests). However, in this MR, I threw in `--all-targets`, which [according to the docs](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/commands/cargo-check.html#target-selection) implies `--benches --examples` too. I have absolutely no idea what repercussions that will have on rust-analyzer for other projects, nor do I know if it's a problem that build scripts will now be discovered for tests/examples/benches. But I am not aware of a reason you _wouldn't_ want to discover these things in your examples too.
I think the main drawback of this change is that it will likely slow down the `cargo check`. At a minimum, it'll now be checking your tests _and_ their dependencies. The `cargo check` docs also say that including `--tests` as I have here may cause your lib crate to be built _twice_, once for the normal target and again for unit tests. My reading of that caveat suggests that "building twice" means it's built once for the tests _inside_ your lib, with a test profile, and again for any consumers of your lib, now using a normal release profile or similar. This doesn't seem surprising.
Very minor caveat: `--tests` will not include tests within a binary if it has `test = false` set in `Cargo.toml`. (I discovered this manually by trial-and-error, but hey, it actually says that in the docs!) This is likely not an issue, but _does_ mean that if you are -- for whatever reason -- disabling tests like that and then manually specifying `cargo test --package <...> --bin <...>` to run them, rust-analyzer will remain unaware of proc-macros in your tests.
I have confirmed this fixes the original issue in my sandbox example linked in #7034 and in my own project in which I originally discovered this. I've left it configured as my default RA language server and will report back if I notice any unexpected side-effects.
Fixes#7034
Co-authored-by: Kaelin Laundry <wasabifan@outlook.com>
In an attempt to fix#6052 and #4249 this attempts to detect
if rustfmt is a rustup proxy which isn't installed, and reports
the error message to the user for them to fix.
In theory this ought to be memoised but for now it'll do as-is.
Future work might be to ask the user if they would like us to
trigger the installation (if possible).
Signed-off-by: Daniel Silverstone <dsilvers@digital-scurf.org>
Previously the inserted text was always `..Default::default()` which ends up as `...Default::default()`
if `.` was typed. Now checks if the current token is `.` and inserts `.Default::default()`
if it is, so `..Default::default()` is correctly completed.
Fixes#6969
7083: Refactor mbe parsing code r=edwin0cheng a=edwin0cheng
Inspire by #5426 , this PR refactor out the parsing code such that it only parsed on `mbe::Rule`, but not on invocations.
However, it just improve the overall performance unnoticeablely :(
Co-authored-by: Edwin Cheng <edwin0cheng@gmail.com>