Problem:
str_byteindex_enc could return an error if the index was longer than the
lline length. This was handled in each of the calls to it individually
Solution:
* Fix the call at the source level so that if the index is higher than
the line length, line length is returned as per LSP specification
* Remove pcalls on str_byteindex_enc calls. No longer needed now that
str_byteindex_enc has a bounds check.
Updated the `rpc.connect` function to support connecting to LSP servers
using hostnames, not just IP addresses. This change includes updates to
the documentation and additional test cases to verify the new
functionality.
- Modified `connect` function to resolve hostnames.
- Updated documentation to reflect the change.
- Added test case for connecting using hostname.
Added a TCP echo server utility function to the LSP test suite. This
server echoes the first message it receives and is used in tests to
verify LSP server connections via both IP address and hostname.
Refactored existing tests to use the new utility function.
Problem:
Tests have lots of exec_lua calls which input blocks of code
provided as unformatted strings.
Solution:
Teach exec_lua how to handle functions.
Reverts https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/29212 and adds a few
additional test cases
From the spec
> All text edits ranges refer to positions in the document they are
> computed on. They therefore move a document from state S1 to S2 without
> describing any intermediate state. Text edits ranges must never overlap,
> that means no part of the original document must be manipulated by more
> than one edit. However, it is possible that multiple edits have the same
> start position: multiple inserts, or any number of inserts followed by a
> single remove or replace edit. If multiple inserts have the same
> position, the order in the array defines the order in which the inserted
> strings appear in the resulting text.
The previous fix seems wrong. The important part:
> If multiple inserts have the same position, the order in the array
> defines the order in which the inserted strings appear in the
> resulting text.
Emphasis on _appear in the resulting text_
Which means that in:
local edits1 = {
make_edit(0, 3, 0, 3, { 'World' }),
make_edit(0, 3, 0, 3, { 'Hello' }),
}
`World` must appear before `Hello` in the final text. That means the old
logic was correct, and the fix was wrong.
This patch replaces fswatch with inotifywait from inotify-toools:
https://github.com/inotify-tools/inotify-tools
fswatch takes ~1min to set up recursively for the Samba source code
directory. inotifywait needs less than a second to do the same thing.
https://github.com/emcrisostomo/fswatch/issues/321
Also it fswatch seems to be unmaintained in the meantime.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Schneider <asn@cryptomilk.org>
This reduces the number of nil checks around buf_versions usage
Test changes were lifted from 5c33815
Co-authored-by: Mathias Fussenegger <f.mathias@zignar.net>
Problem:
Text edits with the same position (both line and character) were being
reverse sorted prior to being applied which differs from the lsp spec
Solution:
Change the sort order for just the same position edits
* Revert "fix(lsp): account for changedtick version gap on modified reset (#29170)"
This reverts commit 2e6d295f79.
* Revert "refactor(lsp): replace util.buf_versions with changedtick (#28943)"
This reverts commit 5c33815448.
`lsp.util.buf_versions` was already derived from changedtick (`on_lines`
from `buf_attach` synced the version)
As far as I can tell there is no need to keep track of the state in a
separate table.
Problem:
The file watcher backends for Linux have too many limitations and
doesn't work reliably.
Solution:
disable didChangeWatchedFiles on Linux
Ref: #27807, #28058, #23291, #26520
Specifically, functions that are run in the context of the test runner
are put in module `test/testutil.lua` while the functions that are run
in the context of the test session are put in
`test/functional/testnvim.lua`.
Closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/27004.
Problem:
We need to establish a pattern for `enable()`.
Solution:
- First `enable()` parameter is always `enable:boolean`.
- Update `vim.diagnostic.enable()`
- Update `vim.lsp.inlay_hint.enable()`.
- It was not released yet, so no deprecation is needed. But to help
HEAD users, it will show an informative error.
- vim.deprecate():
- Improve message when the "removal version" is a *current or older* version.
`exec_lua` makes code slighly harder to read, so it's beneficial to
remove it in cases where it's possible or convenient.
Not all `exec_lua` calls should be removed even if the test passes as it
changes the semantics of the test even if it happens to pass.
From https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/28155#discussion_r1548185779:
"Note for tests like this, which fundamentally are about conversion, you
end up changing what conversion you are testing. Even if the result
happens to be same (as they often are, as we like the rules to be
consistent if possible), you are now testing the RPC conversion rules
instead of the vim script to in-process lua conversion rules."
From https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/28155#discussion_r1548190152:
"A test like this specifies that the cursor is valid immediately and not
after a separate cycle of normal (or an other input-processing) mode."
Problem:
As mentioned in #23002 on_setup and on_init are run concurrently.
However, in basic_finish tests on_setup must attach the client before
on_init finishes. The other basic_finish test isn't flaky because it
makes an RPC request in on_init.
Solution:
Don't use on_setup in basic_finish tests.
Problem:
`vim.lsp.util.rename()` deletes the buffers that are affected by
renaming. This has undesireable side effects. For example, when renaming
a directory, all buffers under that directory are deleted and windows
displaying those buffers are closed. Also, buffer options may change
after renaming.
Solution:
Rename the buffers with :saveas.
An alternative approach is to record all the relevant states and restore
it after renaming, but that seems to be more complex. In fact, the older
version was attempting to restore the states but only partially and
incorrectly.
Problem:
vim._watch.watchdirs has terrible performance.
Solution:
- On linux use fswatch as a watcher backend if available.
- Add File watcher section to health:vim.lsp. Warn if watchfunc is
libuv-poll.
Previously rename would unconditionally read the to-be-renamed file from the
disk and write it to the disk. This is redundant in some cases
If the file is not already loaded, it's not attached to lsp client, so nvim
doesn't need to care about this file.
If the file is loaded but has no change, it doesn't need to be written.