Fixes:
- [x] an issue where directories would only match by prefix, causing
both a directory and a file to be matched if in the same directory
- [x] An issue where you could not continue a file completion when
selecting a directory, as `tab` on a file would always run the command.
This effectively disabled directory sub queries.
- [x] Inconsistent rendering of files and directories in the slash
command
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: max <max@zed.dev>
This PR:
- Makes slash commands easier to compose by adding a concept,
`CompletionIntent`. When using `tab` on a completion in the assistant
panel, that completion item will be expanded but the associated command
will not be run. Using `enter` will still either run the completion item
or continue command composition as before.
- Fixes a bug where running `/diagnostics` on a project with no
diagnostics will delete the entire command, rather than rendering an
empty header.
- Improves the autocomplete rendering for files, showing when
directories are selected and re-arranging the results to have the file
name or trailing directory show first.
<img width="642" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-13 at 8 12 43 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/97c96cd2-741f-4f15-ad03-7cf78129a71c">
Release Notes:
- N/A
Adds support for [Goto
Declaration](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#textDocument_declaration)
LSP command.
I am particularly interested in [this for Rust
projects](https://rust-analyzer.github.io/manual.html#go-to-declaration),
to be able to navigate to the place where a trait method is declared,
coming from a trait method implementation.
I noticed this was something I could do in VSCode before, but was
somehow missing is Zed. Thanks to the already existing infrastructure
for Goto Definition, I just followed and copy-paste-adapted it for Goto
Declaration.
As a bonus, I added `ctrl-F12` and `alt-ctrl-F12` as default macOS
keybindings for `GoToDeclaration` and `GoToDeclarationSplit`,
respectively. They are not keybindings from another editor, but I
figured they made sense to be grouped along with the other *F12
commands.
### Release Notes:
- Added "Go to declaration" editor action.
- vim: Breaking change to keybindings after introduction of the `Go to
declaration` editor action. The new keybindings are the following (and
can be found [here](https://zed.dev/docs/vim), alongside the other key
bindings):
- `g d` - Go to definition
- `g D` - Go to declaration
- `g y` - Go to type definition
- `g I` - Go to implementation
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ee5c10a8-94f0-4e50-afbb-6f71db540c1b
---------
Co-authored-by: Thorsten Ball <mrnugget@gmail.com>
This PR removes the primary/secondary distinction for
`CachedLspAdapter`s.
After #15624 we weren't relying on the `is_primary` field anywhere, so
we can remove it.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR updates how we determine the "primary" language server for a
buffer to make it respect the order specified by the `language_servers`
setting.
Previously we were relying on the language servers to be registered in
the right order in order to select the primary one effectively.
However, in my testing I observed some cases where a native language
server (e.g., `tailwindcss-language-server`) could end up first in the
list of language servers despite not being first in the
`language_servers` setting.
While this wasn't a problem for the Tailwind or ESLint language servers
on account of them being defined natively with the designation of
"secondary" language servers, this could cause problems with
extension-based language servers.
To remedy this, every time we start up language servers we reorder the
list of language servers for a given language to reflect the order in
the `language_servers` setting. This ordering then allows us to treat
the first language server in the list as the "primary" one.
Related issues:
- https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/15023
- https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/15279
Release Notes:
- The ordering of language servers will now respect the order in the
`language_servers` setting.
- The first language server in this list will be used as the primary
language server.
We were reporting file count as worktree entry count, which led to us
missing some of the entries in /file command completion.
/cc @bennetbo
The other components that used `PathMatchCandidateSet` are
`/diagnostics` and file finder. File finder is unaffected, as it used
`Candidates::Files` - thus previously reported count was correct for it;
`/diagnostics` were using `::Entries` as well, so it could miss entries
just like `/files`.
Release Notes:
- Fixed /file and /diagnostics slash commands omitting entries in it's
completions menu.
This also rolls back the `TerminalWorkDir` abstraction I added for the
original remoting, and tidies up the terminal creation code to be clear
about whether we're creating a task *or* a terminal. The previous logic
was a little muddy because it assumed we could be doing both at the same
time (which was not true).
Release Notes:
- remoting alpha: Removed the ability to specify `gh cs ssh` or `gcloud
compute ssh` etc. See https://zed.dev/docs/remote-development for
alternatives.
- remoting alpha: Added support for terminal and tasks to new
experimental ssh remoting
This fixes#12125 and addresses what's described in here:
-
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4977#issuecomment-2162094388
Before the changes in this PR, when running tasks, they inherited the
Zed process environment, but that might not be the process environment
that you'd get if you `cd` into a project directory.
We already ran into that problem with language servers and we fixed it
by loading the shell environment in the context of a projects root
directory and then passing that to the language servers when starting
them (or when looking for their binaries).
What the change here does is to add the behavior for tasks too: we use
the project-environment as the base environment with which to spawn
tasks. Everything else still works the same, except that the base env is
different.
Release Notes:
- Improved the environment-variable detection when running tasks so that
tasks can now access environment variables as if the task had been
spawned in a terminal that `cd`ed into a project directory. That means
environment variables set by `direnv`/`asdf`/`mise` and other tools are
now picked up.
([#12125](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/12125)).
Demo:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8bfcc98f-0f9b-4439-b0d9-298aef1a3efe
This also refactors the BufferStore + WorktreeStore interfaces to make
them cleaner, more fully encapsulating the RPC aspects of their
functionality.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This is related to #15023 where we have the running Rubocop LSP that
provides diagnostics and formatting capabilities. Rubocop LSP sends its
capabilities
back to Zed without support for "textDocument/definition" request, Zed
actually does not check that and sends a request to Rubocop that results
in the server error "Unsupported method: textDocument/definition".
The fix here is related to
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/14666
Release Notes:
- N/A
This adds support for detecting line comments in the
[Jupytext](https://jupytext.readthedocs.io/) format. When line comments
such as `# %%` is present, invoking `repl: run` will evaluate the code
between these line comments as a unit.
/cc @rgbkrk
```py
# %%
# This is my first block
print(1)
print(2)
# %%
# This is my second block
print(3)
```
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Co-authored-by: Antonio <antonio@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Thorsten <thorsten@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Thorsten Ball <mrnugget@gmail.com>
Fixes#4822
- [x] Release note
- [ ] Surface formatting errors via a toast
- [x] Doc updates
- [x] Have "language-server" accept an optional name of the server.
Release Notes:
- `format` and `format_on_save` now accept an array of formatting
actions to run.
- `language_server` formatter option now accepts the name of a language
server to use (e.g. `{"language_server": {"name: "ruff"}}`); when not
specified, a primary language server is used.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thorsten <thorsten@zed.dev>
Per the LSP spec, we should pass .data field of diagnostics into code
action request:
```
/**
* A data entry field that is preserved between a
* `textDocument/publishDiagnostics` notification and
* `textDocument/codeAction` request. *
* @since 3.16.0 */ data?: LSPAny;
```
Release Notes:
- Fixed rare cases where a code action triggered by diagnostic may not
be available for use.
This is a first step towards allowing you to edit remote projects
directly over SSH. We'll start with a pretty bare-bones feature set, and
incrementally add further features.
### Todo
Distribution
* [x] Build nightly releases of `zed-remote-server` binaries
* [x] linux (arm + x86)
* [x] mac (arm + x86)
* [x] Build stable + preview releases of `zed-remote-server`
* [x] download and cache remote server binaries as needed when opening
ssh project
* [x] ensure server has the latest version of the binary
Auth
* [x] allow specifying password at the command line
* [x] auth via ssh keys
* [x] UI password prompt
Features
* [x] upload remote server binary to server automatically
* [x] opening directories
* [x] tracking file system updates
* [x] opening, editing, saving buffers
* [ ] file operations (rename, delete, create)
* [ ] git diffs
* [ ] project search
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
Note that this shouldn't have any visible user-facing behavior yet. The
feature is incomplete but we wanna merge early to avoid a long-running
branch.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan <nathan@zed.dev>
This is a follow-up to #14666 in which I noticed that we don't need that
additional check, since each request will check whether it's supported
via the call to `check_capabilities` before sending the request.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13633 by not
sending `source.organizeImports` to the ESLint language server anymore.
Turns out that ESLint tells us through its capabilities that it doesn't
support that code action kind, but we ignored that.
What this code does is to check whether a given server supports specific
code action kinds.
It does this in two places:
1. When constructing the request: we now filter down the list of
requested `kinds`, in case we can do so. If we can't filter down the
list, we keep the previous behavior of sending the
`language_server.code_action_kinds()`
2. Before sending the request: we now check whether the server even
supports sending the request.
This fixes the issue by only sending actions to servers that support it.
I tested this with various language servers and setups and everything
still works (or works better). But of course there are a ton of
different combinations of language servers and code actions and file
types, so I couldn't test them all.
Release Notes:
- Fix ESLint language server adding comments on save if the
`source.organizeImports` code action was used on save. Zed now filters
out code actions sent to the language servers by checking whether they
are supported first.
([#13633](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13633)).
This adds the ability for Zed to restore unsaved buffers on restart. The
user is no longer prompted to save/discard/cancel when trying to close a
Zed window with dirty buffers in it. Instead those dirty buffers are
stored and restored on restart.
It does this by saving the contents of dirty buffers to the internal
SQLite database in which Zed stores other data too. On restart, if there
are dirty buffers in the database, they are restored.
On certain events (buffer changed, file saved, ...) Zed will serialize
these buffers, throttled to a 100ms, so that we don't overload the
machine by saving on every keystroke. When Zed quits, it waits until all
the buffers are serialized.
### Current limitations
- It does not persist undo-history (right now we don't persist/restore
undo-history regardless of dirty buffers or not)
- It does not restore buffers in windows without projects/worktrees.
Example: if you open a new window with `cmd-shift-n` and type something
in a buffer, this will _not_ be stored and you will be asked whether to
save/discard on quit. In the future, we want to fix this by also
restoring windows without projects/worktrees.
### Demo
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/45c63237-8848-471f-8575-ac05496bba19
### Related tickets
I'm unsure about closing them, without also fixing the 2nd limitation:
restoring of worktree-less windows. So let's wait until that.
- https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4985
- https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4683
### Note on performance
- Serializing editing buffer (asynchronously on background thread) with
500k lines takes ~200ms on M3 Max. That's an extreme case and that
performance seems acceptable.
Release Notes:
- Added automatic restoring of unsaved buffers. Zed can now be closed
even if there are unsaved changes in buffers. One current limitation is
that this only works when having projects open, not single files or
empty windows with unsaved buffers. The feature can be turned off by
setting `{"session": {"restore_unsaved_buffers": false}}`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennet@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Antonio <antonio@zed.dev>
Release Notes:
- linux: Added a fallback Open picker for when XDG is not working
- Added a new setting `use_system_path_prompts` (default true) that can
be disabled to use Zed's builtin keyboard-driven prompts.
---------
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
Provide a current, broken state as an experimental way to browse
diagnostics.
The diagnostics are grouped by lines and reduced into a block that, in
case of multiple diagnostics per line, could be toggled back and forth
to show more diagnostics on the line.
Use `grouped_diagnostics::Deploy` to show the panel.
Issues remaining:
* panic on warnings toggle due to incorrect excerpt manipulation
* badly styled blocks
* no key bindings to navigate between blocks and toggle them
* overall odd usability gains for certain groups of people
Due to all above, the thing is feature-gated and not exposed to regular
people.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Follow-up of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/12909
* Fully preserve LSP data when sending it via collab, and only strip it
on the client.
* Avoid extra custom request handlers, and extend multi LSP server query
protocol instead.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This is a ~small~ pure refactor that's a step toward SSH remoting. I've
extracted the Project's buffer state management into a smaller, separate
struct called `BufferStore`, currently in the same crate. I did this as
a separate PR to reduce conflicts between main and `remoting-over-ssh`.
The idea is to make use of this struct (and other smaller structs that
make up `Project`) in a dedicated, simpler `HeadlessProject` type that
we will use in the SSH server to model the remote end of a project. With
this approach, as we develop the headless project, we can avoid adding
more conditional logic to `Project` itself (which is already very
complex), and actually make `Project` a bit smaller by extracting out
helper objects.
Release Notes:
- N/A
I don't intend fully on getting this merged, this is just an experiment
on using `direnv` directly without relying on shell-specific behaviours.
It works though, so this finally closes#8633
Release Notes:
- Fixed nushell not picking up `direnv` environments by directly
interfacing with it using `direnv export`
---------
Co-authored-by: Thorsten Ball <mrnugget@gmail.com>
TODO:
- [ ] File a PR with Yarn to add Zed to the list of supported IDEs.
Fixes: https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10107
Fixes: https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13706
Release Notes:
- Improved experience in projects using Yarn. Run `yarn dlx
@yarnpkg/sdks base` in the root of your project in order to elevate your
experience.
---------
Co-authored-by: Saurabh <79586784+m4saurabh@users.noreply.github.com>
The biggest hurdle turned out to be use of `Arc<Language>` in maps, as
`clippy::mutable_key_type` started triggering on it (due to - I suppose
- internal mutability on `HighlightMap`?). I switched over to using
`LanguageId` as the key type in some of the callsites, as that's what
`Language` uses anyways for it's hash/eq, though I've still had to
suppress the lint outside of language crate.
/cc @maxdeviant , le clippy guru.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This pull request introduces collaboration for the assistant panel by
turning `Context` into a CRDT. `ContextStore` is responsible for sending
and applying operations, as well as synchronizing missed changes while
the connection was lost.
Contexts are shared on a per-project basis, and only the host can share
them for now. Shared contexts can be accessed via the `History` tab in
the assistant panel.
<img width="1819" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/482957/c7ae46d2-cde3-4b03-b74a-6e9b1555c154">
Please note that this doesn't implement following yet, which is
scheduled for a subsequent pull request.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Release Notes:
- Move snippet support into core editor experience, marking the official
extension as deprecated. Snippets now show up in any buffer (including
plain text buffers).
Context:
@bennetbo spotted a regression in handling of `cargo run` task in zed
repo following a merge of #13658. We've started invoking `cargo run`
from the folder of an active file whereas previously we did it from the
workspace root. We brainstormed few solutions that involved adding a
separate task that gets invoked at a workspace level, but I realized
that a cleaner solution may be to finally add user-configured task
variables. This way, we can choose which crate to run by default at a
workspace level.
This has been originally brought up in the context of javascript tasks
in
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/12118#issuecomment-2129232114
Note that this is intended for internal use only for the time being.
/cc @RemcoSmitsDev we should be unblocked on having runner-dependant
tasks now.
Release notes:
- N/A
This PR replaces the `lazy_static!` usages in the `paths` crate with
`OnceLock` from the standard library.
This allows us to drop the `lazy_static` dependency from this crate.
The paths are now exposed as accessor functions that reference a private
static value.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Previously we were using a single globset::Glob in PathMatcher; higher
up the stack, we were then resorting to using a list of PathMatchers.
globset crate exposes a GlobSet type that's better suited for this use
case. In my benchmarks, using a single PathMatcher with GlobSet instead
of a Vec of PathMatchers with Globs is about 3 times faster with the
default 'file_scan_exclusions' values. This slightly improves our
project load time for projects with large # of files, as showcased in
the following videos of loading a project with 100k source files. This
project is *not* a git repository, so it should measure raw overhead on
our side.
Current nightly: 51404d4ea0https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/24362066/e0aa9f8c-aae6-4348-8d42-d20bd41fcd76
versus this PR:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/24362066/408dcab1-cee2-4c9e-a541-a31d14772dd7
Release Notes:
- Improved performance in large worktrees
Release Notes:
- Added a more detailed message in place of the generic `checking...`
messages when Rust-analyzer is running.
- Added a rate limit for language server status messages, to reduce
noisiness of those updates.
- Added a `cancel language server work` action which will cancel
long-running language server tasks.
---------
Co-authored-by: Richard <richard@zed.dev>
This PR extracts the definition of the various Zed paths out of `util`
and into a new `paths` crate.
`util` is for generic utils, while these paths are Zed-specific. For
instance, `gpui` depends on `util`, and it shouldn't have knowledge of
these paths, since they are only used by Zed.
Release Notes:
- N/A
I previously put this logic directly into `project.rs`, but it doesn't
feel good to pollute that code with telemetry logic, so I've moved it
over to `telemetry.rs`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This fixes `project_tests::rescan_and_remote_updates` .
That test was actually correctly failing, revealing two bugs on Linux.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where file renames were not detected on Linux.
- Fixed performance problems caused by excessive file system events on
Linux.
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
This PR disables the
`project::project_tests::test_rescan_and_remote_updates` test on Linux,
as we've been seeing it fail quite consistently in CI.
We can re-enable it once we've had a chance to investigate and fix.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Fixes#12920
VTSLS does not mark snippet completions as such in the initial
completion response - not until we resolve them; however, we do not
touch initial contents of completion during resolution, which led to us
not treating a snippet as such.
Release Notes:
- Fixed snippet completions sometimes being treated as plain text
completions when using VTSLS
Note:
- We have disabled all tests that rely on Postgres in the Linux CI. We
only really need to test these once, and as macOS is our team's primary
platform, we'll only enable them on macOS for local reproduction.
- We have disabled all tests that rely on the font metrics. We
standardized on Zed Mono in many fonts, but our CoreText Text System and
Cosmic Text System proved to be very different in effect. We should
revisit if we decide to standardize our text system across platforms
(e.g. using Harfbuzz everywhere)
- Extended the condition timeout significantly. Our CI machines are slow
enough that this is causing spurious errors in random tests.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
TODO:
- [x] Finish GPUI changes on other operating systems
This is a largely internal change to how we report data to our
diagnostics and telemetry. This PR also includes an update to our blade
backend which allows us to report errors in a more useful way when
failing to initialize blade.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
This PR adds support for [linked editing of
ranges](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#textDocument_linkedEditingRange),
which in short means that editing one part of a file can now change
related parts in that same file. Think of automatically renaming
HTML/TSX closing tags when the opening one is changed.
TODO:
- [x] proto changes
- [x] Allow disabling linked editing ranges on a per language basis.
Fixes#4535
Release Notes:
- Added support for linked editing ranges LSP request. Editing opening
tags in HTML/TSX files (with vtsls) performs the same edit on the
closing tag as well (and vice versa). It can be turned off on a language-by-language basis with the following setting:
```
"languages": {
"HTML": {
"linked_edits": true
},
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennet@zed.dev>
This PR is an internal refactor in preparation for remote editing. It
restructures the public interface of `Worktree`, reducing the number of
call sites that assume that a worktree is local or remote.
* The Project no longer calls `worktree.as_local_mut().unwrap()` in code
paths related to basic file operations
* Fewer code paths in the app rely on the worktree's `LocalSnapshot`
* Worktree-related RPC message handling is more fully encapsulated by
the `Worktree` type.
to do:
* [x] file manipulation operations
* [x] sending worktree updates when sharing
for later
* opening buffers
* updating open buffers upon worktree changes
Release Notes:
- N/A
Release Notes:
- Added support for looking up the `rust-analyzer` binary in `$PATH`. This allows using such tools as `asdf` and nix to configure per-folder rust installations. To enable this behavior, use the `path_lookup` key when configuring the `rust-analyzer` `binary`: `{"lsp": {"rust-analyzer": {"binary": {"path_lookup": true }}}}`.
The `worktree` crate mainly provides an in-memory model of a directory
and its git repositories. But because it was originally extracted from
the Project crate, it also contained lingering bits of code that were
outside of that area:
* it had a little bit of logic related to buffers (though most buffer
management lives in `project`)
* it had a *little* bit of logic for storing diagnostics (though the
vast majority of LSP and diagnostic logic lives in `project`)
* it had a little bit of logic for sending RPC message (though the
*receiving* logic for those RPC messages lived in `project`)
In this PR, I've moved those concerns entirely to the project crate
(where they were already dealt with for the most part), so that the
worktree crate can be more focused on its main job, and have fewer
dependencies.
Worktree no longer depends on `client` or `lsp`. It still depends on
`language`, but only because of `impl language::File for
worktree::File`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10890
* removes `unwrap()` that caused panics for text elements with no text,
remaining after edit state is cleared but project entries are not
updated, having the fake, "new entry"
* improves discoverability of the FS errors during file/directory
creation: now those are shown as workspace notifications
* stops printing anyhow backtraces in workspace notifications, printing
the more readable chain of contexts instead
* better indicates when new entries are created as excluded ones
Release Notes:
- Improve excluded entry creation workflow in the project panel
([10890](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10890))
Previously, each git `Repository` object was held inside of a mutex.
This was needed because libgit2's Repository object is (as one would
expect) not thread safe. But now, the two longest-running git operations
that Zed performs, (`status` and `blame`) do not use libgit2 - they
invoke the `git` executable. For these operations, it's not necessary to
hold a lock on the repository.
In this PR, I've moved our mutex usage so that it only wraps the libgit2
calls, not our `git` subprocess spawns. The main user-facing impact of
this is that the UI is much more responsive when initially opening a
project with a very large git repository (e.g. `chromium`, `webkit`,
`linux`).
Release Notes:
- Improved Zed's responsiveness when initially opening a project
containing a very large git repository.
- Confirming a completion now runs the command immediately
- Hitting `enter` on a line with a command now runs it
- The output of commands gets folded away and replaced with a custom
placeholder
- Eliminated ambient context
<img width="1588" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/482957/b1927a45-52d6-4634-acc9-2ee539c1d89a">
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan Sobo <nathan@zed.dev>
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9575
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4294
### Problem
When a large git repository's `.git` folder changes (due to a `git
commit`, `git reset` etc), Zed needs to recompute the git status for
every file in that git repository. Part of computing the git status is
the *unstaged* part - the comparison between the content of the file and
the version in the git index. In a large git repository like `chromium`
or `linux`, this is inherently pretty slow.
Previously, we performed this git status all at once, and held a lock on
our `BackgroundScanner`'s state for the entire time. On my laptop, in
the `linux` repo, this would often take around 13 seconds.
When opening a file, Zed always refreshes the metadata for that file in
its in-memory snapshot of worktree. This is normally very fast, but if
another task is holding a lock on the `BackgroundScanner`, it blocks.
### Solution
I've restructured how Zed handles Git statuses, so that when a git
repository is updated, we recompute files' git statuses in fixed-sized
batches. In between these batches, the `BackgroundScanner` is free to
perform other work, so that file operations coming from the main thread
will still be responsive.
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug that caused long delays in opening files right after
performing a commit in very large git repositories.
This PR adds initial support for defining slash commands for the
Assistant from extensions.
Slash commands are defined in an extension's `extension.toml`:
```toml
[slash_commands.gleam-project]
description = "Returns information about the current Gleam project."
requires_argument = false
```
and then executed via the `run_slash_command` method on the `Extension`
trait:
```rs
impl Extension for GleamExtension {
// ...
fn run_slash_command(
&self,
command: SlashCommand,
_argument: Option<String>,
worktree: &zed::Worktree,
) -> Result<Option<String>, String> {
match command.name.as_str() {
"gleam-project" => Ok(Some("Yayyy".to_string())),
command => Err(format!("unknown slash command: \"{command}\"")),
}
}
}
```
Release Notes:
- N/A
Release Notes:
- Added ZED_RELATIVE_FILE (path to current file relative to worktree
root) and ZED_DIRNAME (path to the directory containing current file)
task variables.
This PR changes the interface of ContextProvider, allowing it to inspect
*all* variables set so far during the process of building
`TaskVariables`. This makes it possible to capture e.g. an identifier in
tree-sitter query, process it and then export it as a task variable.
Notably, the list of variables includes captures prefixed with leading
underscore; they are removed after all calls to `build_context`, but it
makes it possible to capture something and then conditionally preserve
it (and perhaps modify it).
Release Notes:
- N/A
This fixes#4529 by allowing unsaved buffers to be formatted with
prettier.
Steps to do that:
1. Create a new buffer
2. Set language for the buffer (e.g.: `language selector: toggle` and
JSON)
3. In settings, set prettier parser for language (can't be inferred,
since we don't have filename) and allow formatting with prettier:
```json
{
"languages": {
"JSON": {
"prettier": {
"allowed": true,
"parser": "json"
}
}
}
}
```
4. Use `editor: format`
Release Notes:
- Added ability to format unsaved buffers with Prettier. Requirement is
to set a Prettier parser in the user settings. Example for JSON: `{
"languages": { "JSON": { "prettier": { "allowed": true, "parser": "json"
} } } }` ([#4529](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4529)).
Demo:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/d24e490b-2e2c-4a5d-95a8-fc8675523780
This fixes#10224 by handling `client/unregisterCapability` requests
that have a `workspace/didChangeWatchedFiles` method.
While debugging the issue, I found out that `gopls` seems to block
indefinitely when there's no reply to the `client/unregisterCapability`
request. Even an empty response would fix the issue.
Seems like gopls 15.x and later seem to handle nested subfolders well,
but do not handle unanswered requests.
Instead of replying with an empty response, I decided to change how we
handle file watching and keep a list of all registered paths so that we
can then unregister paths and recreate the glob patterns.
Release Notes:
- Fixed `gopls` not working correctly when the `go.mod` file was in a
subfolder and not the root folder of the project opened in Zed.
([#10224](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10224)).
Fixes#5267
TODO:
- [x] Publish our fork of vscode-langservers-extracted on GH and wire
that through as a language server of choice for HTML extension.
- [x] Figure out how to prevent edits made by remote participants from
moving the cursor of a host.
Release Notes:
- Added support for autoclosing of HTML tags in local projects.
This fixes#10532 by properly making use of `itemDefaults.data` when
that is sent along next to completion `items`.
With this line here we tell the language server that we support `data`
in `itemDefaults`, but we actually never checked for it and never used
it:
a0d7ec9f8e/crates/lsp/src/lsp.rs (L653)
In the case of `tailwindcss-language-server` that means that most of the
items it returns (more than 10k items!) were missing the `data`
attribute, since the language server thought it can send it along in the
`itemDefaults` (because we advertised our capability to use it.)
When we then did a `completionItem/resolve`, we would not send a `data`
attribute along, which lead to an error on the
`tailwindcss-language-server` side and thus no documentation.
This PR also adds support for the other `itemDefaults` that could be
sent along and that we say we support:
a0d7ec9f8e/crates/lsp/src/lsp.rs (L650-L653)
`editRange` we handle separately, so this PR only adds the other 3.
Release Notes:
- Fixed documentation not showing up for completion items coming from
`tailwindcss-language-server`.
([#10532](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10532)).
Demo:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/bc5ea0b3-7d83-499f-a908-b0d2a1db8a41
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/11517
* Removes forced prettier parser name for languages, making `auto`
command to run prettier on every file by default.
* Moves prettier configs away from plugin language declarations into
language settings
Release Notes:
- N/A
![image](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/24362066/bc7cc3d3-d9fc-4be6-b9b6-e3d8edf5b533)
Release Notes:
- Improved tasks modal by highlighting a distinction between a task
template and concrete task instance and surfacing available keybindings
more prominently. Task templates are now always available in the modal,
even if there's already a history entry with the same label.
- Changed default key binding for "picker::UseSelectedQuery" to `opt-e`.
I ran into this when trying to get #11550 working: the VCS menu would
open repositories on its owned, based on paths, instead of going through
the worktree on which we already store the git repositories.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Adds a supermaven provider for completions. There are various other
refactors amidst this branch, primarily to make copilot no longer a
dependency of project as well as show LSP Logs for global LSPs like
copilot properly.
This feature is not enabled by default. We're going to seek to refine it
in the coming weeks.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Co-authored-by: Nathan Sobo <nathan@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Max Brunsfeld <maxbrunsfeld@gmail.com>
As an attempt to do things better when showing diff hunks, store diff
base as Rope, not String, to have cheaper clones when the diff base text
is reused, e.g. creating another buffer with the diff base text for hunk
diff expanding.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-Authored-By: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
In a fit of ill-advisedness I called these things remote projects;
forgetting that remote project is also what we call collaboratively
shared projects.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
This allows function call (i.e. snippet) completion with
`typescript-language-server`. So far that didn't work, because
`typescript-language-server` doesn't respond with `insertText` when
getting the completions, but only when then sending
`completionItem/resolve` requests. See:
https://github.com/hrsh7th/nvim-cmp/issues/646#issuecomment-992765479
What this PR does is to support text edits in the response to
`completionItem/resolve`, which means updating the completion item.
It then enables this feature by default for
`typescript-language-server`.
TODOs:
- [x] Make this work over collab
- [x] Test that this doesn't break existing language server support
- [x] Refactor duplicated code
Release Notes:
- Added support for function call completion when using
`typescript-language-server`. This will result in parameters being
added, which can then be changed and navigated with `<tab>`. For this to
work with `typescript-language-server`, the documentation for a given
completion item needs to be resolved, meaning that if one types very
quickly and accepts completion before `typescript-language-server` could
respond with the documentation, no full function completion is used.
Demo:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/c23ebe12-5902-4b50-888c-d9b8cd32965d
Part of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4523
Added two new actions with the default keybindings
```
"cmd-'": "editor::ToggleHunkDiff",
"cmd-\"": "editor::ExpandAllHunkDiffs",
```
that allow to browse git hunk diffs in Zed:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/2690773/9a8a7d10-ed06-4960-b4ee-fe28fc5c4768
The hunks are dynamic and alter on user folds and modifications, or
toggle hidden, if the modifications were not adjacent to the expanded
hunk.
Release Notes:
- Added `editor::ToggleHunkDiff` (`cmd-'`) and
`editor::ExpandAllHunkDiffs` (`cmd-"`) actions to browse git hunk diffs
in Zed
I think the previous code was missing a `return` in there because it
always overwrote the `completion.documentation` field, even if the
`text.is_empty()` is true.
Release Notes:
- N/A
TODO:
- [x] Don't immediately seg fault
- [x] Implement for directories
- [x] Add cmd-delete to remove files
- [ ] ~~Add setting for trash vs. delete~~ You can just use keybindings
to change the behavior.
fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/7228
fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/5094
Release Notes:
- Added a new `project_panel::Trash` action and changed the default
behavior for `backspace` and `delete` in the project panel to send a
file to the systems trash, instead of permanently deleting it
([#7228](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/7228),
[#5094](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/5094)). The
original behavior can be restored by adding the following section to
your keybindings:
```json5
[
// ...Other keybindings...
{
"context": "ProjectPanel",
"bindings": {
"backspace": "project_panel::Delete",
"delete": "project_panel::Delete",
}
}
]
Still TODO:
* Disable the new save-as for local projects
* Wire up sending the new path to the remote server
Release Notes:
- Added the ability to "Save-as" in remote projects
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan <nathan@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
For a long time, we've had problems where diagnostics can end up showing
up inconsistently in different views. This PR is my attempt to prevent
that, and to simplify the system in the process. There are some UX
changes.
Diagnostic behaviors that have *not* changed:
* In-buffer diagnostics update immediately when LSPs send diagnostics
updates.
* The diagnostic counts in the status bar indicator also update
immediately.
Diagnostic behaviors that this PR changes:
* [x] The tab title for the project diagnostics view now simply shows
the same counts as the status bar indicator - the project's current
totals. Previously, this tab title showed something slightly different -
the numbers of diagnostics *currently shown* in the diagnostics view's
excerpts. But it was pretty confusing that you could sometimes see two
different diagnostic counts.
* [x] The project diagnostics view **never** updates its excerpts while
the user might be in the middle of typing it that view, unless the user
expressed an intent for the excerpts to update (by e.g. saving the
buffer). This was the behavior we originally implemented, but has
changed a few times since then, in attempts to fix other issues. I've
restored that invariant.
Times when the excerpts will update:
* diagnostics are updated while the diagnostics view is not focused
* the user changes focus away from the diagnostics view
* the language server sends a `work done progress end` message for its
disk-based diagnostics token (i.e. cargo check finishes)
* the user saves a buffer associated with a language server, and then a
debounce timer expires
* [x] The project diagnostics view indicates when its diagnostics are
stale. States:
* when diagnostics have been updated while the diagnostics view was
focused:
* the indicator shows a 'refresh' icon
* clicking the indicator updates the excerpts
* when diagnostics have been updated, but a file has been saved, so that
the diagnostics will soon update, the indicator is disabled
With these UX changes, the only 'complex' part of the our diagnostics
presentation is the Project Diagnostics view's excerpt management,
because it needs to implement the deferred updates in order to avoid
disrupting the user while they may be typing. I want to take some steps
to reduce the potential for bugs in this view.
* [x] Reduce the amount of state that the view uses, and simplify its
implementation
* [x] Add a randomized test that checks the invariant that a mutated
diagnostics view matches a freshly computed diagnostics view
## Release Notes
- Reworked the project diagnostics view:
- Fixed an issue where the project diagnostics view could update its
excerpts while you were typing in it.
- Fixed bugs where the project diagnostics view could show the wrong
excerpts.
- Changed the diagnostics view to always update its excerpts eagerly
when not focused.
- Added an indicator to the project diagnostics view's toolbar, showing
when diagnostics have been changed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Richard Feldman <oss@rtfeldman.com>
This PR adds the ability for the Tailwind language server
(`tailwindcss-language-server`) to be controlled by the
`language_servers` setting.
Now in your settings you can indicate that the Tailwind language server
should be used for a given language, even if that language does not have
the Tailwind language server registered for it already:
```json
{
"languages": {
"My Language": {
"language_servers": ["tailwindcss-language-server", "..."]
}
}
}
```
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR fixes the way we select the primary language server for use with
formatting.
Previously we were just taking the first one in the list, but this could
be the wrong one in cases where a language server was provided by an
extension in conjunction with a built-in language server (e.g.,
Tailwind).
We now use the `primary_language_server_for_buffer` method to more
accurately identify the primary one.
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10902.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where the wrong language server could be used for
formatting.
This PR adds a new log message indicating which language servers will be
started for a given language.
The aim is to make debugging the usage of the new `language_servers`
setting (#10911) easier.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds a new `language_servers` setting underneath the language
settings.
This setting controls which of the available language servers for a
given language will run.
The `language_servers` setting is an array of strings. Each item in the
array must be either:
- A language server ID (e.g., `"rust-analyzer"`,
`"typescript-language-server"`, `"eslint"`, etc.) denoting a language
server that should be enabled.
- A language server ID prefixed with a `!` (e.g., `"!rust-analyzer"`,
`"!typescript-language-server"`, `"!eslint"`, etc.) denoting a language
server that should be disabled.
- A `"..."` placeholder, which will be replaced by the remaining
available language servers that haven't already been mentioned in the
array.
For example, to enable the Biome language server in place of the default
TypeScript language server, you would add the following to your
settings:
```json
{
"languages": {
"TypeScript": {
"language_servers": ["biome", "!typescript-language-server", "..."]
}
}
}
```
More details can be found in #10906.
Release Notes:
- Added `language_servers` setting to language settings for customizing
which language server(s) run for a given language.
Release Notes:
- Made remote projects per-user instead of per-channel. If you'd like to
be part of the remote development alpha, please email hi@zed.dev.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bennet Bo Fenner <53836821+bennetbo@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
Co-authored-by: Nate Butler <1714999+iamnbutler@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Nate Butler <iamnbutler@gmail.com>
Part of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/5141
* adds "run selection" and "run file" tasks for bash and Python.
* replaces newlines with `\n` symbols in the human-readable task labels
* properly escapes task command arguments when spawning the task in
terminal
Caveats:
* bash tasks will always use user's default shell to spawn the
selections, but they should rather respect the shebang line even if it's
not selected
* Python tasks will always use `python3` to spawn its tasks now, as
there's no proper mechanism in Zed to deal with different Python
executables
Release Notes:
- Added tasks for bash and Python to execute selections and open files
in terminal
This adds so-called "inline git blame" to the editor that, when turned
on, shows `git blame` information about the current line inline:
![screenshot-2024-04-15-11 29
35@2x](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/21cef7be-3283-4556-a9f0-cc349c4e1d75)
When the inline information is hovered, a new tooltip appears that
contains more information on the current commit:
![screenshot-2024-04-15-11 28
24@2x](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/ee128460-f6a2-48c2-a70d-e03ff90a737f)
The commit message in this tooltip is rendered as Markdown, is
scrollable and clickable.
The tooltip is now also the tooltip used in the gutter:
![screenshot-2024-04-15-11 28
51@2x](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/42be3d63-91d0-4936-8183-570e024beabe)
## Settings
1. The inline git blame information can be turned on and off via
settings:
```json
{
"git": {
"inline_blame": {
"enabled": true
}
}
}
```
2. Optionally, a delay can be configured. When a delay is set, the
inline blame information will only show up `x milliseconds` after a
cursor movement:
```json
{
"git": {
"inline_blame": {
"enabled": true,
"delay_ms": 600
}
}
}
```
3. It can also be turned on/off for the current buffer with `editor:
toggle git blame inline`.
## To be done in follow-up PRs
- [ ] Add link to pull request in tooltip
- [ ] Add avatars of users if possible
## Release notes
Release Notes:
- Added inline `git blame` information the editor. It can be turned on
in the settings with `{"git": { "inline_blame": "on" } }` for every
buffer or, temporarily for the current buffer, with `editor: toggle git
blame inline`.
This introduces semantic indexing in Zed based on chunking text from
files in the developer's workspace and creating vector embeddings using
an embedding model. As part of this, we've created an embeddings
provider trait that allows us to work with OpenAI, a local Ollama model,
or a Zed hosted embedding.
The semantic index is built by breaking down text for known
(programming) languages into manageable chunks that are smaller than the
max token size. Each chunk is then fed to a language model to create a
high dimensional vector which is then normalized to a unit vector to
allow fast comparison with other vectors with a simple dot product.
Alongside the vector, we store the path of the file and the range within
the document where the vector was sourced from.
Zed will soon grok contextual similarity across different text snippets,
allowing for natural language search beyond keyword matching. This is
being put together both for human-based search as well as providing
results to Large Language Models to allow them to refine how they help
developers.
Remaining todo:
* [x] Change `provider` to `model` within the zed hosted embeddings
database (as its currently a combo of the provider and the model in one
name)
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan Sobo <nathan@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Antonio <antonio@zed.dev>
This reverts commit caed275fbf.
NOTE: this should not be merged until #9668 is on stable and the
`ZedVersion#can_collaborate` is updated to exclude all clients without
that change.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
<img width="1035" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-11 at 13 13 44"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/13402668/cd0e96a0-41c6-4757-8840-97d15a75c511">
Release Notes:
- Added a notification to show possible `git blame` errors if it fails to run.
Caveats:
- ~git blame now executes in foreground
executor (required since the Fut is !Send)~
TODOs:
- After a failed toggle, the app thinks the blame
is shown. This means toggling again will do nothing
instead of retrying. (Caused by editor.show_git_blame
being set to true before the git blame is generated)
- ~(Maybe) Trim error?~ Done
---------
Co-authored-by: Thorsten Ball <mrnugget@gmail.com>
New list (used tasks are above the separator line, sorted by the usage
recency), then all language tasks, then project-local and global tasks
are listed.
Note that there are two test tasks (for `test_name_1` and `test_name_2`
functions) that are created from the same task template:
<img width="563" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-10 at 01 00 46"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/2690773/7455a82f-2af2-47bf-99bd-d9c5a36e64ab">
Tasks are deduplicated by labels, with the used tasks left in case of
the conflict with the new tasks from the template:
<img width="555" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-10 at 01 01 06"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/2690773/8f5a249e-abec-46ef-a991-08c6d0348648">
Regular recent tasks can be now removed too:
<img width="565" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-10 at 01 00 55"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/2690773/0976b8fe-b5d7-4d2a-953d-1d8b1f216192">
When the caret is in the place where no function symbol could be
retrieved, no cargo tests for function are listed in tasks:
<img width="556" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/2690773/df30feba-fe27-4645-8be9-02afc70f02da">
Part of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10132
Reworks the task code to simplify it and enable proper task labels.
* removes `trait Task`, renames `Definition` into `TaskTemplate` and use
that instead of `Arc<dyn Task>` everywhere
* implement more generic `TaskId` generation that depends on the
`TaskContext` and `TaskTemplate`
* remove `TaskId` out of the template and only create it after
"resolving" the template into the `ResolvedTask`: this way, task
templates, task state (`TaskContext`) and task "result" (resolved state)
are clearly separated and are not mixed
* implement the logic for filtering out non-related language tasks and
tasks that have non-resolved Zed task variables
* rework Zed template-vs-resolved-task display in modal: now all reruns
and recently used tasks are resolved tasks with "fixed" context (unless
configured otherwise in the task json) that are always shown, and Zed
can add on top tasks with different context that are derived from the
same template as the used, resolved tasks
* sort the tasks list better, showing more specific and least recently
used tasks higher
* shows a separator between used and unused tasks, allow removing the
used tasks same as the oneshot ones
* remote the Oneshot task source as redundant: all oneshot tasks are now
stored in the inventory's history
* when reusing the tasks as query in the modal, paste the expanded task
label now, show trimmed resolved label in the modal
* adjusts Rust and Elixir task labels to be more descriptive and closer
to bash scripts
Release Notes:
- Improved task modal ordering, run and deletion capabilities
This PR renames `language::Buffer::new` to `language::Buffer::local` and
simplifies its interface. Instead of taking a replica id (which should
always be 0 for the local case) and a `BufferId`, which was awkward and
verbose to construct, it simply takes text and a `cx`.
It uses the `cx` to derive a `BufferId` from the `EntityId` associated
with the `cx`, which should always be positive based on the following
analysis...
We convert the entity id to a u64 using this method on `EntityId`, which
is defined by macros in the `slotmap` crate:
```rust
pub fn as_ffi(self) -> u64 {
(u64::from(self.version.get()) << 32) | u64::from(self.idx)
}
```
If you look at the type of `version` in `KeyData`, it is non-zero:
```rust
#[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord, Hash)]
pub struct KeyData {
idx: u32,
version: NonZeroU32,
}
```
This commit also adds `Context::reserve_model` and
`Context::insert_model` to determine a model's entity ID before it is
created, which we need in order to assign a `BufferId` in the background
when loading a buffer asynchronously.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
This fixes a bug in https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/9818,
where the status was not removed if the request failed. It also adds
replication of these new status messages to guests when collaborating.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where the status of failed LSP actions was left in the
status bar
---------
Co-authored-by: Marshall <marshall@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
This PR adds the ability for extensions to provide certain language
settings via the language `config.toml`.
These settings are then merged in with the rest of the settings when the
language is loaded from the extension.
The language settings that are available are:
- `tab_size`
- `hard_tabs`
- `soft_wrap`
Additionally, for bundled languages we moved these settings out of the
`settings/default.json` and into their respective `config.toml`s .
For languages currently provided by extensions, we are leaving the
values in the `settings/default.json` temporarily until all released
versions of Zed are able to load these settings from the extension.
---
Along the way we ended up refactoring the `Settings::load` method
slightly, introducing a new `SettingsSources` struct to better convey
where the settings are being loaded from.
This makes it easier to load settings from specific locations/sets of
locations in an explicit way.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Max Brunsfeld <maxbrunsfeld@gmail.com>
This PR makes Zed respect the language server's capabilities when
calling the `GetReferences` command (used in "Find All References",
etc.).
This fixes a crash that could occur when using Zed with Gleam v1.0.
Release Notes:
- Made "Find All References" respect the language server's capabilities.
This fixes some instances where certain language servers would stop
working after receiving a "Find All References" request.
---------
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
This fixes#10177 by sending along the correct diagnostics when querying
the language server for diagnostics for a given cursor location.
Turns out that `gopls` takes the `range`, `source`, `message` of the
diagnostics sent along to check whether it has any code actions for the
given location.
Release Notes:
- Fixed "quickfix" code actions that were based on diagnostics not
showing up in Go files.
([#10177](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/10177)).
Co-authored-by: Conrad <conrad@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Marshall <marshall@zed.dev>
Fixes#4380
Parts im still unsure about:
- [x] where exactly I should call `on_lsp_start`/`on_lsp_end`
- [x] how to handle things better than `let is_references =
TypeId::of::<R>() == TypeId::of::<GetReferences>();`, which feels very
janky
- [x] I want to have the message be something like `"Finding references
to [...]"` instead of just `textDocument/references`, but I'm not sure
how to retrieve the name of the symbol that's being queried
- [ ] I think the bulk of the runtime is occupied by `let result =
language_server.request::<R::LspRequest>(lsp_params).await;`, but since
`ModelContext` isn't passed into it, I'm not sure how to update progress
from within that function
- [x] A good way to disambiguate between multiple calls to the same lsp
function; im currently using the function name itself as the unique
identifier for that request, which could create issues if multiple
`textDocument/references` requests are sent in parallel
Any help with these would be deeply appreciated!
Release Notes:
- Adds a status indicator for LSP actions
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
This PR adds the ability for extensions to implement
`language_server_workspace_configuration` to provide workspace
configuration to the language server.
We've used the Dart extension as a motivating example for this, pulling
it out into an extension in the process.
Release Notes:
- Removed built-in support for Dart, in favor of making it available as
an extension. The Dart extension will be suggested for download when you
open a `.dart` file.
---------
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Max Brunsfeld <maxbrunsfeld@gmail.com>
This fixes#9786 by using an invocation of `/usr/bin/env` that's
supported by macOS 12.
As it turns out, on macOS 12 (and maybe 13?) `/usr/bin/env` doesn't
support the `-0` flag. In our case it would silently fail, since we
`exit 0` in our shell invocation and because the program we run and
whose exit code we check is the `$SHELL` and not `/usr/bin/env`.
What this change does is to drop the `-0` and instead split the
environment on `\n`. This works even if an environment variable contains
a newline character because that would then be escaped.
Release Notes:
- Fixed Zed not picking up shell environments correctly when running on
macOS 12. ([#9786](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9786)).
Co-authored-by: Dave Smith <davesmithsemail@gmail.com>
This PR adds `label_for_symbol` to the extension API.
As a motivating example, we implemented `label_for_symbol` for the
Haskell extension.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
This PR adds the ability for extensions to implement
`label_for_completion` to customize completions coming back from the
language server.
We've used the Gleam extension as a motivating example, adding
`label_for_completion` support to it.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Max <max@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Max Brunsfeld <maxbrunsfeld@gmail.com>
Introduce `VariableName` enum to simplify Zed task templating
management: now all the variables can be looked up statically and can be
checked/modified in a centralized way: e.g. `ZED_` prefix is now added
for all such custom vars.
Release Notes:
- N/A
When no formatter for a language is specified, Zed has the default
behaviour:
1. Attempt to format the buffer with `prettier`
2. If that doesn't work, use the language server.
The problem was that if `prettier` failed to format a buffer due to
legitimate syntax errors, we simply did a fallback to the language
server, which would then format over the syntax errors.
With JavaScript/React/TypeScript projects this could lead to a situation
where
1. Syntax error was introduced
2. Prettier fails
3. Zed ignores the error
4. typescript-language-server formats the buffer despite syntax errors
This would lead to some very weird formatting issues.
What this PR does is to fix the issue by handling `prettier` errors and
results in two user facing changes:
1. When no formatter is set (or set to `auto`) and if we attempted to
start a prettier instance to format, we will now display that error and
*not* fall back to language server formatting.
2. If the formatter is explicitly set to `prettier`, we will now show
errors if we failed to spawn prettier or failed to format with it.
This means that we now might show *more* errors than previously, but I
think that's better than not showing anything to the user at all.
And, of course, it also fixes the issue of invalid syntax being
formatted by the language server even though `prettier` failed with an
error.
Release Notes:
- Improved error handling when formatting buffers with `prettier`.
Previously `prettier` errors would be logged but ignored. Now `prettier`
errors are shown in the UI, just like language server errors when
formatting. And if no formatter is specified (or set to `"auto"`) and
Zed attempts to use `prettier` for formatting, then `prettier` errors
are no longer skipped. That fixes the issue of `prettier` not formatting
invalid syntax, but its error being skipped, leading to
`typescript-language-server` or another language server formatting
invalid syntax.
Once we enable extensions to customize the labels of completions and
symbols, this new structure will allow this to be done with a single
WASM call, instead of one WASM call per completion / symbol.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Marshall <marshall@zed.dev>
This fixes#8992 and solves a problem that ESLint/Prettier/... users
have been running into:
They want to format _only_ with ESLint, which is *not* a primary
language server (so `formatter: language server` does not help) and it
is not a formatter.
What they want to use is what they get when they have configured
something like this:
```json
{
"languages": {
"JavaScript": {
"code_actions_on_format": {
"source.fixAll.eslint": true
}
}
}
}
```
BUT they don't want to run the formatter.
So what this PR does is to add a new formatter type: `code_actions`.
With that, users can only use code actions to format:
```json
{
"languages": {
"JavaScript": {
"formatter": {
"code_actions": {
"source.fixAll.eslint": true
}
}
}
}
}
```
This means that when formatting (via `editor: format` or on-save) only
the code actions that are specified are being executed, no formatter.
Release Notes:
- Added a new `formatter`/`format_on_save` option: `code_actions`. When
configured, this uses language server code actions to format a buffer.
This can be used if one wants to, for example, format a buffer with
ESLint and *not* run prettier or another formatter afterwards. Example
configuration: `{"languages": {"JavaScript": {"formatter":
{"code_actions": {"source.fixAll.eslint": true}}}}}`
([#8992](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/8992)).
---------
Co-authored-by: JH Chabran <jh@chabran.fr>
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
Previously this code would run the changed commend, take its output,
remove the `marker` from the front and then split on `0` byte.
Problem was that `echo` adds a newline, which we did *NOT* skip. So
whatever `env` printed as the first environment variable would have a
`\n` in front of it.
Instead of setting, say, `HOME`, Zed would set `\nHOME`.
This change fixes the issue by switching to `printf '%s' marker`, which
is more portable than using `echo -n`.
This is related to https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9786 but
I'm not sure yet whether that fixes it.
Release Notes:
- Fixed Zed sometimes missing environment variables from shell in case
they were the first environment variable listed by `/usr/bin/env`.
Partially implements #9717, persistence between restarts is currently
missing, but I would like to get feedback on the implementation first.
Previously the search history was not saved across different project
searches. As the `SearchHistory` is now maintained inside of the
project, it can be persisted across different project searches.
I also removed the behavior that a new query replaces the previous
search query, if it contains the text of the previous query.
I believe this was only intended to make buffer search work, therefore I
disabled this behavior but only for the project search.
Currently when you navigated through the queries the tab title changed
even if the search was not started, which doesn't make sense to me.
Current behavior:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/53836821/1c365702-e93c-4cab-a1eb-0af3fef95476
With this PR the tab header will actually keep the search name until you
start another search again.
---
Showcase:
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/53836821/c0d6e496-915f-44bc-be16-12d7c3cda2d7
Release Notes:
- Added support for persisting project search history across a session
- Fixed tab header of project search changing when cycling through
search history, even when there is no search submitted
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4730
![image](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/2690773/d3c5317f-8120-45b5-b57c-c0fb5d8c066d)
To the left is a symlink, to the right — the real file.
The issue was due to the fact, that symlinks files contain the file path
to the real file, and git (properly) treats that symlink file contents
as diff base, returning in `load_index_text` (via `let content =
repo.find_blob(oid)?.content().to_owned();`) the contents of that
symlink file — the path.
The fix checks for FS metadata before fetching the git diff base, and
skips it entirely for symlinks: Zed opens the symlink file contents
instead, fully obscuring the git symlink diff hunks.
Interesting, that VSCode behaves as Zed before the fix; while the fix
makes Zed behave like Intellij* IDEs now.
Release Notes:
- Fixed git diff hunks appearing in the symlinked files
([4730](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4730))
@SomeoneToIgnore This code should 100% work for future Zed users, but
for current Zed users, Zed's internal list of recents may not be synced
w/ macOS' Recent Documents at first. If needed this can be fixed by
calling `cx.refresh_recent_documents` on startup, but that feels a bit
unnecessary.
Release Notes:
- Fixes behavior of Recent Documents list on macOS
This adds a new action to the editor: `editor: toggle git blame`. When
used it turns on a sidebar containing `git blame` information for the
currently open buffer.
The git blame information is updated when the buffer changes. It handles
additions, deletions, modifications, changes to the underlying git data
(new commits, changed commits, ...), file saves. It also handles folding
and wrapping lines correctly.
When the user hovers over a commit, a tooltip displays information for
the commit that introduced the line. If the repository has a remote with
the name `origin` configured, then clicking on a blame entry opens the
permalink to the commit on the code host.
Users can right-click on a blame entry to get a context menu which
allows them to copy the SHA of the commit.
The feature also works on shared projects, e.g. when collaborating a
peer can request `git blame` data.
As of this PR, Zed now comes bundled with a `git` binary so that users
don't have to have `git` installed locally to use this feature.
### Screenshots
![screenshot-2024-03-28-13 57
43@2x](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/ee8ec55d-3b5e-4d63-a85a-852da914f5ba)
![screenshot-2024-03-28-14 01
23@2x](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/2ba8efd7-e887-4076-a87a-587a732b9e9a)
![screenshot-2024-03-28-14 01
32@2x](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1185253/496f4a06-b189-4881-b427-2289ae6e6075)
### TODOs
- [x] Bundling `git` binary
### Release Notes
Release Notes:
- Added `editor: toggle git blame` command that toggles a sidebar with
git blame information for the current buffer.
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio <antonio@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Piotr <piotr@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
This pull request introduces a new `InlineCompletionProvider` trait,
which enables making `Editor` copilot-agnostic and lets us push all the
copilot functionality into the `copilot_ui` module. Long-term, I would
like to merge `copilot` and `copilot_ui`, but right now `project`
depends on `copilot`, which makes this impossible.
The reason for adding this new trait is so that we can experiment with
other inline completion providers and swap them at runtime using config
settings.
Please, note also that we renamed some of the existing copilot actions
to be more agnostic (see release notes below). We still kept the old
actions bound for backwards-compatibility, but we should probably remove
them at some later version.
Also, as a drive-by, we added new methods to the `Global` trait that let
you read or mutate a global directly, e.g.:
```rs
MyGlobal::update(cx, |global, cx| {
});
```
Release Notes:
- Renamed the `copilot::Suggest` action to
`editor::ShowInlineCompletion`
- Renamed the `copilot::NextSuggestion` action to
`editor::NextInlineCompletion`
- Renamed the `copilot::PreviousSuggestion` action to
`editor::PreviousInlineCompletion`
- Renamed the `editor::AcceptPartialCopilotSuggestion` action to
`editor::AcceptPartialInlineCompletion`
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan <nathan@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Kyle <kylek@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Kyle Kelley <rgbkrk@gmail.com>
We're doing it. Svelte support is moving into an extension. This PR
fixes some issues that came up along the way.
Notes
* extensions need to be able to retrieve the path the `node` binary
installed by Zed
* previously we were silently swallowing any errors that occurred while
loading a grammar
* npm commands ran by extensions weren't run in the right directory
* Tree-sitter's WASM stdlib didn't support a C function (`strncmp`)
needed by the Svelte parser's external scanner
* the way that LSP installation status was reported was unnecessarily
complex
Release Notes:
- Removed built-in support for the Svelte and Gleam languages, because
full support for those languages is now available via extensions. These
extensions will be suggested for download when you open a `.svelte` or
`.gleam` file.
---------
Co-authored-by: Marshall <marshall@zed.dev>
This PR also introduces built-in tasks for Rust and Elixir. Note that
this is not a precedent for future PRs to include tasks for more
languages; we simply want to find the rough edges with tasks & language
integrations before proceeding to task contexts provided by extensions.
As is, we'll load tasks for all loaded languages, so in order to get
Elixir tasks, you have to open an Elixir buffer first. I think it sort
of makes sense (though it's not ideal), as in the future where
extensions do provide their own tasks.json, we'd like to limit the # of
tasks surfaced to the user to make them as relevant to the project at
hand as possible.
Release Notes:
- Added built-in tasks for Rust and Elixir files.
Release Notes:
- Work around #8334 by only activating venv in the terminal not in tasks
(see #8440 for a proper solution)
- To use venv modify your tasks in the following way:
```json
{
"label": "Python main.py",
"command": "sh",
"args": ["-c", "source .venv/bin/activate && python3 main.py"]
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <kirill@zed.dev>
Most notably, this should do away with completions overriding the whole
word around completion trigger text. Fixes: #4816
Release Notes:
- Fixed code completions overriding text around the cursor.
Our goal is to extract Svelte support into an extension, since we've
seen problems with the Tree-sitter Svelte parser crashing due to bugs in
the external scanner. In order to do this, we need a couple more
capabilities in LSP extensions:
* [x] `initialization_options` - programmatically controlling the JSON
initialization params sent to the language server
* [x] `prettier_plugins` - statically specifying a list of prettier
plugins that apply for a given language.
* [x] `npm_install_package`
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Marshall <marshall@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
We can convert shell, npm and gulp tasks to a Zed format. Additionally, we convert a subset of task variables that VsCode supports.
Release notes:
- Zed can now load tasks in Visual Studio Code task format
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <piotr@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
This fixes #[#9135](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9135)
by introducing file/results limit to project search.
It does this by changing how project search works in multiple ways.
User-facing changes:
- Number files that are being searched is now limited to 5000
- Number of search results in all files is now limited to 10000
- If a limit is reached, search is stopped and a message is displayed
to the user
Under the hood, we also reworked `Project::search_local`:
- Code has been refactored so that the concurrency-logic is easier to
distinguish from the search logic.
- We now limit the number of concurrent `open_buffer` operations, since
that is being done on the main thread and can lead to beachballs when
finding a lot of results.
Note for reviewer:
@SomeoneToIgnore since you know this code, can you take a look at this?
The changes might look bigger than they are in certain places because I
only extracted code into functions, but the middle part — the sorting of
file paths — has changed in order to avoid too many tasks opening
buffers at the same time and making app unresponsive.
What's also curious is that I think there was a bug in that we searched
ignored entries _twice_: once in `search_snapshots` and then later in
the dedicated `search_ignored_entry` function. I changed the `entries()`
call in `search_snapshots` so that it's always `false`, but that caused
tests to fail (see `test_search_in_gitignored_dirs`). @bennetbo and I
think that there's some state in the Project that made the tests pass
before, because the last of the 3 assertions in that test only passes
when the other two queries run. So we changed the test to be more
stateless and included the possible fix in `search_snapshots`.
Release Notes:
- Fixed project-wide search leading to unresponsive application when
searching in ignored files, by limiting the number of files that are
searched (to 5000) and the number of overall search results to 10000.
Additional performance improvements have also been made in order to
offload more work onto a background thread.
([#9135](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/9135)).
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <antonio@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennetbo@gmx.de>
This is the beginning of setting up a flexible way to open items beyond
the text buffer -- think notebooks, images, GeoJSON, etc. The primary
requirement to allow opening an arbitrary file is `try_open` on the
`project::Item` trait. Now we can make new `Item`s for other types with
their own ways to render.
Under the hood, `register_project_item` uses this new opening scheme. It
supports a dynamic array of opener functions, that will handle specific
item types. By default, a `Buffer` should be able to be able to open any
file that another opener did not.
A key detail here is that the order of registration matters. The last
item has primacy. Here's an example:
```rust
workspace::register_project_item::<Editor>(cx);
workspace::register_project_item::<Notebook>(cx);
workspace::register_project_item::<ImageViewer>(cx);
```
When a project item (file) is attempted to be opened, it's first tried
with the `ImageViewer`, followed by the `Notebook`, then the `Editor`.
The tests are set up in a way that should make it _hopefully_ easy to
learn how to write a new opener. First to go after should probably be
image files.
Release Notes:
N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla@zed.dev>
Three changes: two of which are changing `while let` construct to `if
let` as they unconditionally broke and one of which was removing a loop
in the `start_default_prettier` as it unconditionally broke in the
control flow for match installation task: the diff for this is larger
than needed as removing the loop changed a lot of indentation for
`rustfmt`.
This avoids the problem of a search being kicked off involuntarily and
potentially using a large amount of CPU when toggling on the `Search
Ignored Files` option.
What would happen is that someone would turn the option on, we'd kick
off a search, and go through all of the files in, say, `node_modules`.
Even if no query was given.
This avoids that.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an empty search being kicked off involuntarily if no query was
typed in yet but an option was toggled.