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helix/helix-event/src/lib.rs

204 lines
8.9 KiB
Rust

//! `helix-event` contains systems that allow (often async) communication between
//! different editor components without strongly coupling them. Specifically
//! it allows defining synchronous hooks that run when certain editor events
//! occur.
//!
//! The core of the event system are hook callbacks and the [`Event`] trait. A
//! hook is essentially just a closure `Fn(event: &mut impl Event) -> Result<()>`
//! that gets called every time an appropriate event is dispatched. The implementation
//! details of the [`Event`] trait are considered private. The [`events`] macro is
//! provided which automatically declares event types. Similarly the `register_hook`
//! macro should be used to (safely) declare event hooks.
//!
//! Hooks run synchronously which can be advantageous since they can modify the
//! current editor state right away (for example to immediately hide the completion
//! popup). However, they can not contain their own state without locking since
//! they only receive immutable references. For handler that want to track state, do
//! expensive background computations or debouncing an [`AsyncHook`] is preferable.
//! Async hooks are based around a channels that receive events specific to
//! that `AsyncHook` (usually an enum). These events can be sent by synchronous
//! hooks. Due to some limitations around tokio channels the [`send_blocking`]
//! function exported in this crate should be used instead of the builtin
//! `blocking_send`.
//!
//! In addition to the core event system, this crate contains some message queues
//! that allow transfer of data back to the main event loop from async hooks and
//! hooks that may not have access to all application data (for example in helix-view).
//! This include the ability to control rendering ([`lock_frame`], [`request_redraw`]) and
//! display status messages ([`status`]).
//!
//! Hooks declared in helix-term can furthermore dispatch synchronous jobs to be run on the
//! main loop (including access to the compositor). Ideally that queue will be moved
//! to helix-view in the future if we manage to detach the compositor from its rendering backend.
use anyhow::Result;
pub use cancel::{cancelable_future, cancelation, CancelRx, CancelTx};
pub use debounce::{send_blocking, AsyncHook};
pub use redraw::{lock_frame, redraw_requested, request_redraw, start_frame, RenderLockGuard};
pub use registry::Event;
mod cancel;
mod debounce;
mod hook;
mod redraw;
mod registry;
#[doc(hidden)]
pub mod runtime;
pub mod status;
#[cfg(test)]
mod test;
pub fn register_event<E: Event + 'static>() {
registry::with_mut(|registry| registry.register_event::<E>())
}
/// Registers a hook that will be called when an event of type `E` is dispatched.
/// This function should usually not be used directly, use the [`register_hook`]
/// macro instead.
///
///
/// # Safety
///
/// `hook` must be totally generic over all lifetime parameters of `E`. For
/// example if `E` was a known type `Foo<'a, 'b>`, then the correct trait bound
/// would be `F: for<'a, 'b, 'c> Fn(&'a mut Foo<'b, 'c>)`, but there is no way to
/// express that kind of constraint for a generic type with the Rust type system
/// as of this writing.
pub unsafe fn register_hook_raw<E: Event>(
hook: impl Fn(&mut E) -> Result<()> + 'static + Send + Sync,
) {
registry::with_mut(|registry| registry.register_hook(hook))
}
/// Register a hook solely by event name
pub fn register_dynamic_hook(
hook: impl Fn() -> Result<()> + 'static + Send + Sync,
id: &str,
) -> Result<()> {
registry::with_mut(|reg| reg.register_dynamic_hook(hook, id))
}
pub fn dispatch(e: impl Event) {
registry::with(|registry| registry.dispatch(e));
}
/// Macro to declare events
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ``` no-compile
/// events! {
/// FileWrite(&Path)
/// ViewScrolled{ view: View, new_pos: ViewOffset }
/// DocumentChanged<'a> { old_doc: &'a Rope, doc: &'a mut Document, changes: &'a ChangeSet }
/// }
///
/// fn init() {
/// register_event::<FileWrite>();
/// register_event::<ViewScrolled>();
/// register_event::<DocumentChanged>();
/// }
///
/// fn save(path: &Path, content: &str){
/// std::fs::write(path, content);
/// dispatch(FileWrite(path));
/// }
/// ```
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! events {
($name: ident<$($lt: lifetime),*> { $($data:ident : $data_ty:ty),* } $($rem:tt)*) => {
pub struct $name<$($lt),*> { $(pub $data: $data_ty),* }
unsafe impl<$($lt),*> $crate::Event for $name<$($lt),*> {
const ID: &'static str = stringify!($name);
const LIFETIMES: usize = $crate::events!(@sum $(1, $lt),*);
type Static = $crate::events!(@replace_lt $name, $('static, $lt),*);
}
$crate::events!{ $($rem)* }
};
($name: ident { $($data:ident : $data_ty:ty),* } $($rem:tt)*) => {
pub struct $name { $(pub $data: $data_ty),* }
unsafe impl $crate::Event for $name {
const ID: &'static str = stringify!($name);
const LIFETIMES: usize = 0;
type Static = Self;
}
$crate::events!{ $($rem)* }
};
() => {};
(@replace_lt $name: ident, $($lt1: lifetime, $lt2: lifetime),* ) => {$name<$($lt1),*>};
(@sum $($val: expr, $lt1: lifetime),* ) => {0 $(+ $val)*};
}
/// Safely register statically typed event hooks
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! register_hook {
// Safety: this is safe because we fully control the type of the event here and
// ensure all lifetime arguments are fully generic and the correct number of lifetime arguments
// is present
(move |$event:ident: &mut $event_ty: ident<$($lt: lifetime),*>| $body: expr) => {
let val = move |$event: &mut $event_ty<$($lt),*>| $body;
unsafe {
// Lifetimes are a bit of a pain. We want to allow events being
// non-static. Lifetimes don't actually exist at runtime so its
// fine to essentially transmute the lifetimes as long as we can
// prove soundness. The hook must therefore accept any combination
// of lifetimes. In other words fn(&'_ mut Event<'_, '_>) is ok
// but examples like fn(&'_ mut Event<'_, 'static>) or fn<'a>(&'a
// mut Event<'a, 'a>) are not. To make this safe we use a macro to
// forbid the user from specifying lifetimes manually (all lifetimes
// specified are always function generics and passed to the event so
// lifetimes can't be used multiple times and using 'static causes a
// syntax error).
//
// There is one soundness hole tough: Type Aliases allow
// "accidentally" creating these problems. For example:
//
// type Event2 = Event<'static>.
// type Event2<'a> = Event<'a, a>.
//
// These cases can be caught by counting the number of lifetimes
// parameters at the parameter declaration site and then at the hook
// declaration site. By asserting the number of lifetime parameters
// are equal we can catch all bad type aliases under one assumption:
// There are no unused lifetime parameters. Introducing a static
// would reduce the number of arguments of the alias by one in the
// above example Event2 has zero lifetime arguments while the original
// event has one lifetime argument. Similar logic applies to using
// a lifetime argument multiple times. The ASSERT below performs a
// a compile time assertion to ensure exactly this property.
//
// With unused lifetime arguments it is still one way to cause unsound code:
//
// type Event2<'a, 'b> = Event<'a, 'a>;
//
// However, this case will always emit a compiler warning/cause CI
// failures so a user would have to introduce #[allow(unused)] which
// is easily caught in review (and a very theoretical case anyway).
// If we want to be pedantic we can simply compile helix with
// forbid(unused). All of this is just a safety net to prevent
// very theoretical misuse. This won't come up in real code (and is
// easily caught in review).
#[allow(unused)]
const ASSERT: () = {
if <$event_ty as $crate::Event>::LIFETIMES != 0 + $crate::events!(@sum $(1, $lt),*){
panic!("invalid type alias");
}
};
$crate::register_hook_raw::<$crate::events!(@replace_lt $event_ty, $('static, $lt),*)>(val);
}
};
(move |$event:ident: &mut $event_ty: ident| $body: expr) => {
let val = move |$event: &mut $event_ty| $body;
unsafe {
#[allow(unused)]
const ASSERT: () = {
if <$event_ty as $crate::Event>::LIFETIMES != 0{
panic!("invalid type alias");
}
};
$crate::register_hook_raw::<$event_ty>(val);
}
};
}