The new extension allows filtering of workspace symbool lookup
results by search scope or search kind.
Filtering can be configured in 3 different ways:
- The '#' or '*' markers can be added inline with the symbol lookup
query.
The '#' marker means symbols should be looked up in the current
workspace and any dependencies. If not specified, only current
workspace is considered.
The '*' marker means all kinds of symbols should be looked up
(types, functions, etc). If not specified, only type symbols are
returned.
- Each LSP request can take an optional search_scope or search_kind
argument query parameter.
- Finally there are 2 global config options that can be set for all
requests served by the active RA instance.
Add support for setting the global config options to the VSCode
extension.
The extension does not use the per-request way, but it's useful for
other IDEs.
The latest version of VSCode filters out the inline markers, so
currently the only reasonable way to use the new functionality is
via the global config.
In some situations we reloaded the workspace in the tests after having reported
to be ready. There's two fixes here:
1. Add a version to the VFS config and include that version in progress reports,
so that we don't think we're done prematurely;
2. Delay status transitions until after changes are applied. Otherwise the last
change during loading can potentially trigger a workspace reload, if it contains
interesting changes.
After we started reporting progress when running cargo check during
loading, it is possible to crash the client with two identical progress
tokens.
This points to a deeper issue: we might be running several cargo checks
concurrently, which doesn't make sense.
This commit linearizes all workspace fetches, making sure no updates are
lost.
As an additional touch, it also normalizes progress & result reporting,
to make sure they stand in sync.
Rather than eagerly converting JSON, we losslessly keep it as is, and
change the shape of user-submitted data at the last moment.
This also allows us to remove a bunch of wrong Defaults
Historically, we intentinally violated JSON-RPC spec here by hard
crashing. The idea was to poke both the clients and servers to fix
stuff.
However, this is confusing for server implementors, and falls down in
one important place -- protocol extension are not always backwards
compatible, which causes crashes simply due to version mismatch. We
had once such case with our own extension, and one for semantic
tokens.
So let's be less adventerous and just err on the err side!