Add a restart debug session command, which would issue a
[Restart Request][1], if the debugger supports it and a session is
running. It uses the same arguments and requests used to start the
initial session, when recreating it.
It builds upon #5532, making use of the changes to the termination
workflow of a session.
[1]: https://microsoft.github.io/debug-adapter-protocol/specification#Requests_RestartCloses: #5594
Signed-off-by: Filip Dutescu <filip.dutescu@gmail.com>
Check if the stack frames contain the thread id and the frame before
trying to get the frame id. If case any of the two fails to be
found, provide the user with messages to inform them of the issue and
gracefully return.
Closes: #5625
Signed-off-by: Filip Dutescu <filip.dutescu@gmail.com>
Send a `Disconnect` DAP request if the `Terminated` event is received.
According to the specification, if the debugging session was started by
as `launch`, the debuggee should be terminated alongside the session. If
instead the session was started as `attach`, it should not be disposed of.
This default behaviour can be overriden if the `supportTerminateDebuggee`
capability is supported by the adapter, through the `Disconnect` request
`terminateDebuggee` argument, as described in
[the specification][discon-spec].
This also implies saving the starting command for a debug sessions, in
order to decide which behaviour should be used, as well as validating the
capabilities of the adapter, in order to decide what the disconnect should
do.
An additional change made is handling of the `Exited` event, showing a
message if the exit code is different than `0`, for the user to be aware
off the termination failure.
[discon-spec]: https://microsoft.github.io/debug-adapter-protocol/specification#Requests_DisconnectCloses: #4674
Signed-off-by: Filip Dutescu <filip.dutescu@gmail.com>
So far LSP always required that `PositionEncoding.characters` is an
UTF-16 offset. Now that LSP 3.17 is available in `lsp-types` request
the server to send char offsets (UTF-32) or byte offsets (UTF-8)
instead. For compatability with old servers, UTF-16 remains as the
fallback as required by the standard.
Commit 1b89d3e535 introduced a regression
where opening a new file would no longer work, because attempting to
canonicalize its path would lead to a "No such file or directory"
error. Fall back to opening a new file when encountering an error to
fix this case.
A language server might send None as the response to workspace symbols.
We should treat this as the empty Vec rather than the server sending
an error status. This fixes the interaction with gopls which uses
None to mean no matching symbols.
Most language servers limit the number of workspace symbols that
are returned with an empty query even though all symbols are
supposed to be returned, according to the spec (for perfomance
reasons). This patch adds a workspace symbol picker based on a
dynamic picker that allows re-requesting the symbols on every
keypress (i.e. when the picker query text changes). The old behavior
has been completely replaced, and I have only tested with
rust-analyzer so far.
The error messages for a theme that failed to be deserialized (or
otherwise failed to load) were covered up by the context/with_context
calls:
* The log message for a bad theme configured in config.toml would only
say "Failed to deserilaize theme"
* Selecting a bad theme via :theme would show "Theme does not exist"
With these changes, we let the TOML deserializer errors bubble up, so
the error messages can now say the line number of a duplicated
key - and that key's name - when a theme fails to load because of a
duplicated key.
Providing a theme which does not exist to :theme still gives a helpful
error message: "No such file or directory."
* Show (git) diff signs in gutter (#3890)
Avoid string allocation when git diffing
Incrementally diff using changesets
refactor diffs to be provider indepndent and improve git implementation
remove dependency on zlib-ng
switch to asynchronus diffing with similar
Update helix-vcs/Cargo.toml
fix toml formatting
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
fix typo in documentation
use ropey reexpors from helix-core
fix crash when creating new file
remove useless use if io::Cursor
fix spelling mistakes
implement suggested improvement to repository loading
improve git test isolation
remove lefover comments
Co-authored-by: univerz <univerz@fu-solution.com>
fixed spelling mistake
minor cosmetic changes
fix: set self.differ to None if decoding the diff_base fails
fixup formatting
Co-authored-by: Ivan Tham <pickfire@riseup.net>
reload diff_base when file is reloaded from disk
switch to imara-diff
Fixup formatting
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Redraw buffer whenever a diff is updated.
Only store hunks instead of changes for individual lines to easily allow
jumping between them
Update to latest gitoxide version
Change default diff gutter position
Only update gutter after timeout
* update diff gutter synchronously, with a timeout
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
* address review comments and ensure lock is always aquired
* remove configuration for redraw timeout
Co-authored-by: Blaž Hrastnik <blaz@mxxn.io>
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
Language Servers may signal that they do not support a method in
the initialization result (server capabilities). We can check these
when making LSP requests and hint in the status line when a method
is not supported by the server. This can also prevent crashes in
servers which assume that clients do not send requests for methods
which are disabled in the server capabilities.
There is an existing pattern the LSP client module where a method
returns `Option<impl Future<Output = Result<_>>>` with `None` signaling
no support in the server. This change extends this pattern to the rest
of the client functions. And we log an error to the statusline for
manually triggered LSP calls which return `None`.
This fixes an edge case for completing shellwords. With a file
"a b.txt" in the current directory, the sequence `:open a\<tab>`
will result in the prompt containing `:open aa\ b.txt`. This is
because the length of the input which is trimmed when replacing with
completion is calculated on the part of the input which is parsed by
shellwords and then escaped (in a separate operation), which is lossy.
In this case it loses the trailing backslash.
The fix provided here refactors shellwords to track both the _words_
(shellwords with quotes and escapes resolved) and the _parts_ (chunks
of the input which turned into each word, with separating whitespace
removed). When calculating how much of the input to delete when
replacing with the completion item, we now use the length of the last
part.
This also allows us to eliminate the duplicate work done in the
`ends_with_whitespace` check.
* init
* cargo fmt
* optimisation of the scrollbar render both for Menu and Popup. Toggling off scrollbar for Popup<Menu>, since Menu has its own
* rendering scroll track
* removed unnecessary cast
* improve memory allocation
* small correction
If `a\ b.txt` were a local file, `:o a\ <tab>` would fill the prompt
with `:o aa\ b.txt` because the replacement range was calculated using
the shellwords-parsed part. Escaping the part before calculating its
length fixes this edge-case.
This changes the completion items to be rendered with shellword
escaping, so a file `a b.txt` is rendered as `a\ b.txt` which matches
how it should be inputted.
8584b38cfb switched to shellwords for
completion in command-mode. This changes the conditions for choosing
whether to complete the command or use the command's completer.
This change processes the input as shellwords up-front and uses
shellword logic about whitespace to determine whether the command
or argument should be completed.
Most commands that accept an argument show their current value if no
argument is specified. The `:theme` command previously displayed an
error message in the status bar if not provided with an argument:
```
Theme name not provided
```
It now shows the current theme name in the status bar if no argument is
specified.
Signed-off-by: James O. D. Hunt <jamesodhunt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James O. D. Hunt <jamesodhunt@gmail.com>
This complicates the code a little but it often divides by two the number of allocations done by
the functions. LSP labels especially can easily be called dozens of time in a single menu popup,
when listing references for example.
When we do auto formatting, the code that takes the LSP's response and applies
the changes to the document are just getting the currently focused view and
giving that to the function, basically always assuming that the document that
we're applying the change to is in focus, and not in a background view.
This is usually fine for a single view, even if it's a buffer in the
background, because it's still the same view and the selection will get updated
accordingly for when you switch back to it. But it's obviously a problem for
when there are multiple views, because if you don't have the target document in
focus, it will ask the document to update the wrong view, hence the crash.
The problem with this is picking which view to apply any selection change to.
In the absence of any more data points on the views themselves, we simply pick
the first view associated with the document we are saving.
When force quitting, we need to block on the pending writes to ensure
that write commands succeed before exiting, and also to avoid a crash
when all the views are gone before the auto format call returns from
the LS.