Changing the frequency at which we update worktrees highlighted a
problem in the randomized tests that was causing clients to receive
a definition to a worktree *before* observing the registration of
the worktree itself. This was most likely caused by #1224 because
the scenario that pull request enabled was the following:
- Guest requests a definition pointing to a non-existant worktree
- Server forwards the request to the host
- Host sends an `UpdateProject` message
- Host sends a response to the definition request
- Server observes the `UpdateProject` message and tries to acquire
the store
- Given that we're waiting, the server goes ahead to process the
response for the definition request, responding *before*
`UpdateProject` is forwarded
- Server finally forwards `UpdateProject` to the guest
This commit ensures that, after forwarding a project request and getting a
response, we acquire a lock to the store again to ensure the project still
exists. This has the effect of ordering the forwarded request *after* any
message that was received prior to the response and for which we are still
waiting to acquire a lock to the store.
With the new version of rust-analyzer, we were seeing stray `WorkDoneProgress::End`
messages that create an imbalance in the `pending_diagnostic_updates` that never
resolves. This was causing the diagnostic status bar item to never update because
we wouldn't emit `DiskBasedDiagnosticsStarted` nor `DiskBasedDiagnosticsFinished`.
This commit fixes the above situation by only acknowledging progress report for tokens
that have explicitly been created via the `WorkDoneProgressCreate` request, as stated
by the protocol.
In addition to that, we are replacing the `pending_diagnostic_updates: isize` with
a `has_pending_diagnostic_updates: bool`. We added it at some point to prevent a similar
issue where we would observe begin/end reports in a seemingly random order, which would cause
us to permanently display a `checking...` message in the status bar. I believe this commit
fixes that as well because the `isize` was just a less general solution for the same
underlying issue. As the protocol states: "the token provided in the create request should
only be used once (e.g. only one begin, many report and one end notification should be sent
to it)."