| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Problem:
Spacing around inlay hints has the same highlight as the hint itself.
The LSP spec for inlay hints specifically mentions the padding should not be
coloured:
/**
Render padding before the hint.
Note: Padding should use the editor's background color, not the
background color of the hint itself. That means padding can be used
to visually align/separate an inlay hint.
*/
paddingLeft?: boolean;
/**
Render padding after the hint.
Note: Padding should use the editor's background color, not the
background color of the hint itself. That means padding can be used
to visually align/separate an inlay hint.
*/
paddingRight?: boolean;
Solution:
Add the space as separate parts of the virtual text, don't add the space to the
text itself.
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(#24074)
disabling before enabling throws an error otherwise, because bufstate[bufnr]
doesn't exist
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M.enable already clears bufstate[bufnr] and the namespace,
the duplicate callbacks cause an error (indexing bufstate[bufnr] fails)
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Add automatic refresh and a public interface on top of #23736
* add on_reload, on_detach handlers in `enable()` buf_attach, and
LspDetach autocommand in case of manual detach
* unify `__buffers` and `hint_cache_by_buf`
* use callback bufnr in `on_lines` callback, bufstate: remove __index override
* move user-facing functions into vim.lsp.buf, unify enable/disable/toggle
Closes #18086
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Previously, filtering code actions with the "only" option failed
if the code action kind contained special Lua pattern chars such as "-"
(e.g. the ocaml language server supports a "type-annotate" code action).
Solution: use string comparison instead of string.find
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Co-authored-by: Lewis Russell <lewis6991@gmail.com>
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Co-authored-by: Rohit Sukumaran <rohit.sukumaran@kredx.com>
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initial support; public API left for a follow-up PR
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LspProgressUpdate (#23958)
`client.messages` could grow unbounded because the default handler only
added new messages, never removing them.
A user either had to consume the messages by calling
`vim.lsp.util.get_progress_messages` or by manually removing them from
`client.messages.progress`. If they didn't do that, using LSP
effectively leaked memory.
To fix this, this deprecates the `messages` property and instead adds a
`progress` ring buffer that only keeps at most 50 messages. In addition
it deprecates `vim.lsp.util.get_progress_messages` in favour of a new
`vim.lsp.status()` and also promotes the `LspProgressUpdate` user
autocmd to a regular autocmd to allow users to pattern match on the
progress kind.
Also closes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/20327
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feat(lua): add vim.system()
Problem:
Handling system commands in Lua is tedious and error-prone:
- vim.fn.jobstart() is vimscript and comes with all limitations attached to typval.
- vim.loop.spawn is too low level
Solution:
Add vim.system().
Partly inspired by Python's subprocess module
Does not expose any libuv objects.
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The Nvim client does not yet support multiple offset encodings for
clients in the same buffer. Until it does, stick to utf-16 by default.
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PROBLEM:
Whenever any text edits are applied to the buffer, the `marks` part of those
lines will be lost. This is mostly problematic for code formatters that format
the whole buffer like `prettier`, `luafmt`, ...
When doing atomic changes inside a vim doc, vim keeps track of those changes and
can update the positions of marks accordingly, but in this case we have a whole
doc that changed. There's no simple way to update the positions of all marks
from the previous document state to the new document state.
SOLUTION:
* save marks right before `nvim_buf_set_lines` is called inside `apply_text_edits`
* check if any marks were lost after doing `nvim_buf_set_lines`
* restore those marks to the previous positions
TEST CASE:
* have a formatter enabled
* open any file
* create a couple of marks
* indent the whole file to the right
* save the file
Before this change: all marks will be removed.
After this change: they will be preserved.
Fixes #14307
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- `client.dynamic_capabilities` is an object that tracks client register/unregister
- `client.supports_method` will additionally check if a dynamic capability supports the method, taking document filters into account. But only if the client enabled `dynamicRegistration` for the capability
- updated the default client capabilities to include dynamicRegistration for:
- formatting
- rangeFormatting
- hover
- codeAction
- hover
- rename
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Co-authored-by: zeertzjq <zeertzjq@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: famiu <famiuhaque@protonmail.com>
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Some LSP servers (tailwindcss, rome) are known to request registration
for `workspace/didChangeWatchedFiles` even when the corresponding client
capability does not advertise support. This change adds an extra check
in the `client/registerCapability` handler not to start a watch unless
the client capability is set appropriately.
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responses (#23484)
perf(lsp): load buffer contents once when processing semantic token responses
Using _get_line_byte_from_position() for each token's boundaries was a
pretty huge bottleneck, since that function would load individual buffer
lines via nvim_buf_get_lines() (plus a lot of extra overhead). So each
token caused two calls to nvim_buf_get_lines() (once for the start
position, and once for the end position).
For semantic tokens, we only attach to buffers that have already been
loaded, so we can safely just get all the lines for the entire buffer at
once, and lift the rest of the _get_line_byte_from_position()
implementation directly while bypassing the part that loads the buffer
line.
While I was looking at get_lines (used by _get_line_byte_from_position),
I noticed that we were checking for non-file URIs before we even looked
to see if we already had the buffer loaded. Moving the buffer-loaded
check to be the first thing done in get_lines() more than halved the
average time spent transforming the token list into highlight ranges vs
when it was still using _get_line_byte_from_position. I ended up
improving that loop more by not using get_lines, but figured the
performance improvement it provided was worth leaving in.
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5ms (#23375)
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The following functions are deprecated and will be removed in
Nvim v0.11:
- health#report_start()
- health#report_info()
- health#report_ok()
- health#report_warn()
- health#report_error()
- vim.health.report_start()
- vim.health.report_info()
- vim.health.report_ok()
- vim.health.report_warn()
- vim.health.report_error()
Users should instead use these:
- vim.health.start()
- vim.health.info()
- vim.health.ok()
- vim.health.warn()
- vim.health.error()
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* feat(lua): vim.tbl_contains supports general tables and predicates
Problem: `vim.tbl_contains` only works for list-like tables (integer
keys without gaps) and primitive values (in particular, not for nested
tables).
Solution: Rename `vim.tbl_contains` to `vim.list_contains` and add new
`vim.tbl_contains` that works for general tables and optionally allows
`value` to be a predicate function that is checked for every key.
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Now that we have builtin EditorConfig support and a formatting check in
CI, these are not necessary.
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LSP tags are added to the diagnostic as "tags" but referred to as "_tags"
in the diagnostic underline handler
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The LSP spec supports two tags that can be added to diagnostics:
unnecessary and deprecated. Extend vim.diagnostic to be able to handle
these.
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Problem:
LSP docs hover (textDocument/hover) doesn't handle HTML escape seqs in markdown.
Solution:
Convert common HTML escape seqs to a nicer form, to display in the float.
closees #22757
Signed-off-by: Kasama <robertoaall@gmail.com>
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Fixup to #21531.
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Problem:
When LSP client renames a directory, opened buffers in the edfitor are not
renamed or closed. Then `:wall` shows errors.
https://github.com/neovim/neovim/blob/master/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/util.lua#L776
works correctly if you try to rename a single file, but doesn't delete old
buffers with `old_fname` is a dir.
Solution:
Update the logic in runtime/lua/vim/lsp/util.lua:rename()
Fixes #22617
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Problem
Using wrong variable when checking the cursor position is valid or not in
vim.lsp.util.apply_text_edits.
Solution
Use the correct variable.
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#22633
When a client has no workspace_folders, (e.g., copilot), `pairs`
code would crash.
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Fixes https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/22629
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Although using `buffer://` for unsaved file buffers fixes issues with
language servers like eclipse.jdt.ls or ansible-language-server, it
breaks completion and signature help for clangd.
A regression is worse than a fix for something else, so this reverts
commit 896d672736b32a8f4a4fa51844b44f266dcdcc6c.
The spec change is also still in dicussion, see
https://github.com/microsoft/language-server-protocol/pull/1679#discussion_r1130704886
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This commit replaces the usage of math.floor((lo + hi) / 2) with the faster and equivalent bit.rshift(lo + hi, 1) for calculating the midpoint in binary search.
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feat(lsp)!: change semantic token highlighting
Change the default highlights used, and add more highlights per token.
Add an LspTokenUpdate event and a highlight_token function.
:Inspect now shows any highlights applied by token highlighting rules,
default or user-defined.
BREAKING CHANGE: change the default highlight groups used by semantic
token highlighting.
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Fixes:
Error SERVER_REQUEST_HANDLER_ERROR: "...di/dev/neovim/neovim/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/_watchfiles.lua
:200: bad argument #1 to 'ipairs' (table expected, got nil)"
Language servers can be started without root_dir or workspace_folders.
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Sending `didOpen` with a `file` scheme causes problems with some
language servers because they expect the file to exist on disk.
See https://github.com/microsoft/language-server-protocol/pull/1679
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