- replace tokio's env-filter with a smaller&simpler targets filter
- reshuffle logging infra a bit to make sure there's only a single place
where we read environmental variables
- use anyhow::Result in rust-analyzer binary
This code replaces the thread pool implementation we were using
previously (from the `threadpool` crate). By making the thread pool
aware of QoS, each job spawned on the thread pool can have a different
QoS class.
This commit also replaces every QoS class used previously with Default
as a temporary measure so that each usage can be chosen deliberately.
This makes code more readale and concise,
moving all format arguments like `format!("{}", foo)`
into the more compact `format!("{foo}")` form.
The change was automatically created with, so there are far less change
of an accidental typo.
```
cargo clippy --fix -- -A clippy::all -W clippy::uninlined_format_args
```
The reason for that was that we were calculating the crate defmaps
of the file we are saving by accident causing us to get stuck waiting
on their expensive computation, while we only need the relevant crate
id.
10080: internal: don't shut up the compiler when it says the code's buggy r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
It's good that rust-analyzer doesn't belly-up on a panic in some random
assist.
It is less good that rust-analyzer devs only know that the assists are
buggy when they are actively looking at the logs.
Historically, we intentinally violated JSON-RPC spec here by hard
crashing. The idea was to poke both the clients and servers to fix
stuff.
However, this is confusing for server implementors, and falls down in
one important place -- protocol extension are not always backwards
compatible, which causes crashes simply due to version mismatch. We
had once such case with our own extension, and one for semantic
tokens.
So let's be less adventerous and just err on the err side!