This refactors the snippet logic to be largely unaware of the rest of
the document. The completion application logic is moved into
generate_transaction_from_snippet which is extended to support
dynamically computing replacement text.
When accepting a snippet completion we automatically delete the
placeholders for now as doing so manual is quite cumbersome. In the
future we should keep these as a mark + virtual text that is
automatically removed once the cursor moves there.
* feat(ui): deprecated completions
Mark deprecated completions using strike-through
(CROSSED_OUT modifier). The deprection information
is taken either from the `deprecated` field of the
completion item or from the completion tags.
The field seems to be the older way of passing
the deprecated information and it was already
marked as deprecated for Symbol. In completion
item the field is still valid but it seems that
the LSP is moving in the general direction of using
tags for this kind of information and as such
relying on tags as well seems reasonable and
future-proof.
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.
* properly handle LSP position encoding
* add debug assertion to Transaction::change
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Michael Davis <mcarsondavis@gmail.com>
The JSONRPC spec says:
> If present, parameters for the rpc call MUST be provided as a
> Structured value
https://www.jsonrpc.org/specification#parameter_structures
(Where a "Structured value" is elsewhere defined as either a map or
array.)
This change skips the serialization of the `params` field for JSONRPC
method calls and notifications if the `params` field is the `None`
variant. This fixes compatibility with LSP servers which adhere closely
to that part of the spec: `ocamllsp` in the wild.
Completion edits - either basic `insert_text` strings or structured
`text_edit`s - are assumed by the LSP spec to apply to the current
cursor (or at least the trigger point). We can use the range (if any)
and text given by the Language Server to create a transaction that
changes all ranges in the current selection though, allowing auto-
complete to affect multiple cursors.
This prevents a freeze while shutting down when using `efm-langserver`.
`efm-langserver` exits immediately after seeing a shutdown request,
without responding to the request. We block awaiting the reply to the
shutdown request which will never come, so we time out.
This change responds to any pending requests with `Err` saying that the
stream has been closed.
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 change handles a language server exiting. This was a UX sore-spot:
if a language server crashed, Helix did not recognize the exit and
continued to send requests to it. All requests would timeout since they
would not receive responses. This would also hold-up Helix closing
itself down since it would try to gracefully shutdown the server which
is implemented in the LSP spec as a request.
We could attempt to automatically restart the language server on crash.
I left this for future work since that change will need to be slightly
complicated: it will need to cover the case of a language server
repeatedly crashing.
d7d0d5ffb7 resolves completion items on
the idle-timeout event. The `Completion::resolve_completion_item`
function blocks on the LSP request though, which blocks the compositor
and in turn blocks the event loop. So until the language server returns
the resolved completion item, Helix is unable to respond to keypresses
or other LSP messages.
This is typically ok since the resolution request is fast but for some
language servers this can be problematic, and ideally we shouldn't be
blocking like this anyways.
When receiving a `completionItem/resolve` request, the Volar server
sends a `workspace/configuration` request to Helix and blocks itself
on the response, leading to a deadlock. Eventually the resolve request
times out within Helix but Helix is locked up and unresponsive in that
window.
This change resolves the completion item without blocking the
compositor.
* Split helix_core::find_root and helix_loader::find_local_config_dirs
The documentation of find_root described the following priority for
detecting a project root:
- Top-most folder containing a root marker in current git repository
- Git repository root if no marker detected
- Top-most folder containing a root marker if not git repository detected
- Current working directory as fallback
The commit contained in https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/pull/1249
extracted and changed the implementation of find_root in find_root_impl,
actually reversing its result order (since that is the order that made
sense for the local configuration merge, from innermost to outermost
ancestors).
Since the two uses of find_root_impl have different requirements (and
it's not a matter of reversing the order of results since, e.g., the top
repository dir should be used by find_root only if there's not marker in
other dirs), this PR splits the two implementations in two different
specialized functions.
In doing so, find_root_impl is removed and the implementation is moved
back in find_root, moving it closer to the documented behaviour thus
making it easier to verify it's actually correct
* helix-core: remove Option from find_root return type
It always returns some result, so Option is not needed
* Change default formatter for any language
* Fix clippy error
* Close stdin for Stdio formatters
* Better indentation and pattern matching
* Return Result<Option<...>> for fn format instead of Option
* Remove unwrap for stdin
* Handle FormatterErrors instead of Result<Option<...>>
* Use Transaction instead of LspFormatting
* Use Transaction directly in Document::format
* Perform stdin type formatting asynchronously
* Rename formatter.type values to kebab-case
* Debug format for displaying io::ErrorKind (msrv fix)
* Solve conflict?
* Use only stdio type formatters
* Remove FormatterType enum
* Remove old comment
* Check if the formatter exited correctly
* Add formatter configuration to the book
* Avoid allocations when writing to stdin and formatting errors
* Remove unused import
Co-authored-by: Gokul Soumya <gokulps15@gmail.com>
* Add lsp signature help
* Do not move signature help popup on multiple triggers
* Highlight current parameter in signature help
* Auto close signature help
* Position signature help above to not block completion
* Update signature help on backspace/insert mode delete
* Add lsp.auto-signature-help config option
* Add serde default annotation for LspConfig
* Show LSP inactive message only if signature help is invoked manually
* Do not assume valid signature help response from LSP
Malformed LSP responses are common, and these should not crash the
editor.
* Check signature help capability before sending request
* Reuse Open enum for PositionBias in popup
* Close signature popup and exit insert mode on escape
* Add config to control signature help docs display
* Use new Margin api in signature help
* Invoke signature help on changing to insert mode
We should not depend on jsonrpc-core anymore:
* The project just announced it's no longer actively maintained[^1],
preferring their new implementation in `jsonrpsee`.
* The types are too strict: we would benefit from removing some
`#[serde(deny_unknown_fields)]` annotations to allow language
servers that disrespect the spec[^2].
* We don't use much of the project. Just the types out of core.
These are easy to embed directly into the `helix-lsp` crate.
[^1]: https://github.com/paritytech/jsonrpc/pull/674
[^2]: https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/issues/2786
* allows passing extra formatting options to LSPs
- adds optional field 'format' to [[language]] sections in 'languages.toml'
- passes specified options the LSPs via FormattingOptions
* cleaner conversion of formatting properties
* move formatting options inside lsp::Client
* cleans up formatting properties merge
A language server may push a response which doesn't belong to any
request. With this change, we discard the response rather than
crashing.
In the case of #2474, the language server sends an error message
with a null request ID which should not ever exist in the
`pending_requests` HashMap.
closes#2474
This made sense initially when the implementation was still new (so we
got user reports more frequently), but a parsing error now generally
signifies a language server isn't properly implementing the spec.
Instead of panicing we can discard the malformed diagnostic. This
`.parse()` fails commonly when a non-conformant language server gives
a diagnostic with a location that breaks the spec:
{ "character": 0, "line": -1 }
can currently be returned by ElixirLS and the python LS. Other
messages in this block are discarded but this one feels special enough
to log.
* Send active diagnostics to LSP when requesting code actions.
This allows for e.g. clangd to properly send the quickfix code actions
corresponding to those diagnostics as options.
The LSP spec v3.16.0 introduced an opaque `data` member that would allow
the server to persist arbitrary data between the diagnostic and the code
actions request, but this is not supported yet by this commit.
* Reuse existing range_to_lsp_range functionality
We correctly filter out the language server inside Document to ignore it
if the capabilities are missing, so this way it'll simply ignore the
errored out LSP rather than panicking.