This is already done when selecting a subtest; by wrapping the test name
with `^{}$` the runnable will avoid selecting additional tests with the
same prefix.
Without this fix, selecting the runnable for `TestExample` will also run
`TestExample2`.
Release Notes:
- Fixed Golang tasks spawning tests starting with the current function name and not using the exact match.
This PR updates the `extension` crate's tests to use a dedicated test
extension for its tests instead of the real Gleam extension.
As the Gleam extension continues to evolve, it makes it less suitable to
use as a test fixture:
1. For a while now, the test has failed locally due to me having `gleam`
on my $PATH, which causes the extension's `get_language_server_command`
to go down a separate codepath.
2. With the addition of the `indexed_docs_providers` the test was
hanging indefinitely.
While these problems are likely solvable, it seems reasonable to have a
dedicated extension to use as a test fixture. That way we can do
whatever we need to exercise our test criteria.
The `test-extension` is a fork of the Gleam extension with some
additional functionality removed.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Here is an image of my now getting assistance responses!
![2024-07-03_08-45-37_swappy](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/20910163/904adc51-cb40-4622-878e-f679e0212426)
I ended up adding a function to handle the use case of not serializing
the tool_calls response if it is either null or empty to keep the
functionality of the existing implementation (not deserializing if vec
is empty). I'm sorta a noob, so happy to make changes if this isn't done
correctly, although it does work and it does pass tests!
Thanks a bunch to [amtoaer](https://github.com/amtoaer) for pointing me
in the direction on how to fix it.
Release Notes:
- Fixed some responses being dropped from OpenAI-compatible providers
([#13741](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13741)).
This changes the implementation of the X11 client to use `mio`, as a
polling mechanism, and a custom run loop instead of `calloop` and its
callback-based approach.
We're doing this for one big reason: more control over how we handle
events.
With `calloop` we don't have any control over which events are processed
when and how long they're processes for. For example: we could be
blasted with 150 input events from X11 and miss a frame while processing
them, but instead of then drawing a new frame, calloop could decide to
work off the runnables that were generated from application-level code,
which would then again cause us to be behind.
We kinda worked around some of that in
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/12839 but the problem still
persists.
So what we're doing here is to use `mio` as a polling-mechanism. `mio`
notifies us if there are X11 on the XCB connection socket to be
processed. We also use its timeout mechanism to make sure that we don't
wait for events when we should render frames.
On top of `mio` we now have a custom run loop that allows us to decide
how much time to spend on what — input events, rendering windows, XDG
events, runnables — and in what order we work things off.
This custom run loop is consciously "dumb": we render all windows at the
highest frame rate right now, because we want to keep things predictable
for now while we test this approach more. We can then always switch to
more granular timings. But considering that our loop runs and checks for
windows to be redrawn whenever there's an event, this is more an
optimization than a requirement.
One reason for why we're doing this for X11 but not for Wayland is due
to how peculiar X11's event handling is: it's asynchronous and by
default X11 generates synthetic events when a key is held down. That can
lead to us being flooded with input events if someone keeps a key
pressed.
So another optimization that's in here is inspired by [GLFW's X11 input
handling](b35641f4a3/src/x11_window.c (L1321-L1349)):
based on a heuristic we detect whether a `KeyRelease` event was
auto-generated and if so, we drop it. That essentially halves the amount
of events we have to process when someone keeps a key pressed.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Conrad <conrad@zed.dev>
This PR renames `ExtensionDocsIndexer` to `ExtensionIndexedDocsProvider`
to better align with the name of the trait it implements.
Release Notes:
- N/A
On Intel, Metal will pick a discrete GPU by default when available,
resulting in higher power consumption and heat output. Prefer
non‐removable low‐power devices to correct this.
On Apple Silicon, there is only ever one GPU, so there is no functional
change.
I didn’t do intensive benchmarking of this or anything, but Zed still
seems responsive and it stops my MacBook Pro acting as a combination
space heater–jet engine.
Thanks to @denlukia for showing that this is easy to fix; I’ve marked
you as a co‐author, I hope that’s okay.
Closes: #5124
Release Notes:
- Improved power consumption on Intel Macs by preferring integrated GPUs
over the discrete GPUs.
([#5124](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/5124)).
Co-authored-by: Denis Lukianenko <denlyk1@gmail.com>
The problem with #13459 was the bump to a newer JSON LS version, which
requires explicitly opting into validation.
Release Notes:
- Fixed JSON validation being disabled by default (Preview only)
Continuing from #13597, this PR refactors platform controls to extract a
generic set of platform controls that can be used for any platform that
does not define it's own/we don't use the system ones.
In the future, these controls will likely be used as a fallback on
windows as well when the windows icon font isn't available.
Release Notes:
- Added updated window controls on Linux
This PR does some organization in the workspace's `Cargo.toml`.
Namely, ensuring the dependency lists of internal and external
dependencies remain separate.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR begins the process of making the backing infrastructure for the
`/rustdoc` command more generic such that it can be applied to
additional documentation providers.
In this PR we:
- Rename the `rustdoc` crate to `indexed_docs` as a more general-purpose
name
- Start moving rustdoc-specific functionality into
`indexed_docs::providers::rustdoc`
- Add an `IndexedDocsRegistry` to hold multiple `IndexedDocsStore`s (one
per provider)
We haven't yet removed the rustdoc-specific bits in the `DocsIndexer`.
That will follow soon.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This implements the functionality (paired with @as-cii), but we weren't
sure what the clearest name would be for the action. It's essentially
the inverse of "quote selection" - but what's the opposite of quoting
the selection?
One idea:
* Rename "quote selection" to "Insert **into** assistant"
* Name this "Insert **from** assistant"
Release Notes:
- Added action to insert from assistant into editor (default keybinding:
`cmd-<` on macOS, `ctrl-<` on Linux)
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennet@zed.dev>
This PR updates the `html_to_markdown` crate with the necessary changes
to publish it to crates.io.
Publishing it makes it available for use within extensions when
implementing functionality for the Assistant.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds a new `fetch` function to the `zed_extension_api` to allow
fetching a URL through the Wasm host.
Currently we only support GET requests and return the response body as a
string.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR reverts the changes from #13709, now that we've published a new
version of the Zig extension with them.
This reverts commit 464a4439f7.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR temporarily rolls back the changes in #12173 so that we can
publish a new version of the Zig extension.
There was a problem stemming from #12614 that caused v0.1.2 of the Zig
extension to get re-published with unreleased `zed_extension_api`
changes.
Once we publish v0.1.3 we'll be able to revert this change.
Release Notes:
- N/A
* properly fetch outlines from channel notes and other project-less
external files
* show better messages when for no contents
* make file entries collapsible (hiding all excerpts and outlines
beneath), keep the initial panel state unfolded up to file level
Release Notes:
- Slightly improved project panel ergonomics
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 is just tests to verify [the fix for PageUp/PageDown in the
completions list](6e1b99b039) that was
previously added works properly. @SomeoneToIgnore Please check when you
have a moment. Thanks
Release Notes:
- N/A
As a drive-by of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/13654, I've
noticed that the editor felt sluggish after I've undone the changes made
by the replacement. It turns out that we are repeatedly checking whether
there are any edits to estabilish dirty/conflict state of a buffer, even
though this operation is pure; this PR stores away the result of a
computation and refers to it before rerunning it.
Release Notes:
- Improve editor's performance with large undo histories
Previously replace_all amounted to what could be achieved by repeatedly
mashing "Replace" button, which had a bunch of overhead related to
buffer state syncing. This commit gets rid of the automated button
mashing, processing all of the replacements in one go.
Fixes#13455
Release Notes:
- Improved performance of "replace all" in buffer search and project
search
Took me a while to figure out that I can't run
cargo run -p gpui --example animation
and that it has to run in the `gpui` crate.
So I thought I'd fix this.
Release Notes:
- N/A