In order to investigate `engine/language-server` project, I need to be able to open its sources in IGV and NetBeans.
# Important Notes
By adding same Java source (this time `package-info.java`) and compiling with our Frgaal compiler the necessary `.enso-sources*` files are generated for `engine/language-server` and then the `enso4igv` plugin can open them and properly understand their compile settings.
![Logical View of language-server project](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/26887752/215472696-ec9801f3-4692-4bdb-be92-c4d2ab552e60.png)
In addition to that this PR enhances the _"logical view"_ presentation of the project by including all source roots found under `src/*/*`.
https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/3764 introduced static wrappers for instance methods. Except it had a limitation to only be allowed for types with at least a single constructor.
That excluded builtin types as well which, by default, don't have them. This limitation is problematic for Array/Vector consolidation and makes builtin types somehow second-citizens.
This change lifts the limitation for builtin types only. Note that we do want to share the implementation of the generated builtin methods. At the same time due to the additional argument we have to adjust the starting index of the arguments.
This change avoids messing with the existing dispatch logic, to avoid unnecessary complexity.
As a result it is now possible to call builtin types' instance methods, statically:
```
arr = Array.new_1 42
Array.length arr
```
That would previously lead to missing method exception in runtime.
# Important Notes
The only exception is `Nothing`. Primarily because it requires `Nothing` to have a proper eigentype (`Nothing.type`) which would messed up a lot of existing logic for no obvious benefit (no more calling of `foo=Nothing` in parameters being one example).
For graying out the nodes, the engine need to send IDE a set of values that will be computed before executing the program (and the IDE colors them gray). In general, it is tricky to do because we cannot know for sure which exactly nodes will be computed without running the program. But we can estimate based on the invalidated values, which nodes are expected to be executed during the next run, and send them to the IDE. This logic is simpler than the previous approach, and turned out working pretty well in practice.
[Peek-gray-out.webm](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/357683/215092755-0010e41d-a2cf-447a-900e-4619408effa0.webm)
In the event when the action of the underlying actor crashes really bad, the result of the future will be `Failure`. All such results will be then wrapped in `Status.Failure` via `pipeTo` (unlike `Success` which just forwards the response).
In some cases we don't handle `Status.Failure` messages, meaning we are rather left in the dark to the reason of the failure with a non-informative message `Received unknown message: class akka.actor.Status$Failure`.
I'm keeping this change small on purpose to keep this change self-contained. I think there are more cases but it needs careful investigation into how messages are being sent.
# Important Notes
This PR does not attempt to fix the underlying problem of the ticket, yet. We should however have a better overview where/why things go wrong.
Enso unit tests were running without `-ea` check enabled and as such various invariant checks in Truffle code were not executed. Let's turn the `-ea` flag on and fix all the code misbehaves.
LS needs to notify runtime that modules' sources need to be reloaded from FS, once its own buffer has been reloaded as well.
# Important Notes
Discovered during integration of https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/4050.
The test illustrates the problem if we don't reload module's sources - the sources essentially become stale even though they have changed.
- Updated `Text.starts_with`, `Text.ends_with` and `Text.contains` to new simpler API.
- Added a `Case_Sensitivity.Default` and adjusted `Table.distinct` to use it by default.
- Fixed a bug with `Data.fetch` on an HTTP error.
- Improved SQLite Case Sensitivity control in distinct to use collations.
When the function is visualized with the `default_preprocessor` method, it returns a dataflow error that shows up in the logs as
```
Cannot encode class org.enso.interpreter.runtime.error.DataflowError to byte array.
```
PR handles dataflow errors in the preprocessor and fallbacks the `to_display_text` value. As a bonus, we get a function visualization.
This PR implements HTML generation from documentation IR for all suggestion database entries and replaces the old documentation panel with a newer one.
Additional adjustments to the looks of the documentation would be applied separately in a future PR. This PR focuses on the fastest possible delivery of a usable documentation panel. We want to test it in real-world use cases and gather feedback for future improvements.
Documentation demo scene with mocked data:
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/213436313-88753ed8-346f-423e-956e-7db39f5dc266.mp4
Component browser with actual engine-provided data:
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6566674/213436375-d0ec074b-f7a6-4deb-a7de-3adee999cc86.mp4
# Important Notes
- Fixed language protocol data structures.
- Scrolling to the selected method is also implemented here.
- Also, the selected item is highlighted with yellow.
- Only some pieces of information we have are displayed. For example, we don't display return types for methods or types of arguments.
- A bunch of code related to previous implementation is removed, but probably not all of it.
Implements [#183453466](https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183453466).
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1428930/203870063-dd9c3941-ce79-4ce9-a772-a2014e900b20.mp4
# Important Notes
* the best laziness is used for `Text` type, which makes use of its internal representation to send data
* any type will first compute its default string representation and then send the content of that lazy to the IDE
* special handling of files and their content will be implemented in the future
* size of the displayed text can be updated dynamically based on best effort information: if the backend does not yet know the full width/height of the text, it can update the IDE at any time and this will be handled gracefully by updating the scrollbar position and sizes.
- add: `GeneralAnnotation` IR node for `@name expression` annotations
- update: compilation pipeline to process the annotation expressions
- update: rewrite `OverloadsResolution` compiler pass so that it keeps the order of module definitions
- add: `Meta.get_annotation` builtin function that returns the result of annotation expression
- misc: improvements (private methods, lazy arguments, build.sbt cleanup)
This PR fixes the Component Browser opening when pressing enter while editing either the Project Name or the text in the Code Editor. This is achieved by using our focus management system to check whether something is focused. The Component Browser only appears if nothing else is focused.
Introduces unboxed (and arity-specialized) storage schemes for Atoms. It results in improvements both in memory consumption and runtime.
Memory wise: instead of using an array, we now use object fields. We also enable unboxing. This cuts a good few pointers in an unboxed object. E.g. a quadruple of integers is now 64 bytes (4x8 bytes for long fields + 16 bytes for layout and constructor pointers + 16 bytes for a class header). It used to be 168 bytes (4x24 bytes for boxed Longs + 16 bytes for array header + 32 bytes for array contents + 8 bytes for constructor ptr + 16 bytes for class header), so we're saving 104 bytes a piece. In the least impressive scenarios (all-boxed fields) we're saving 8 bytes per object (saving 16 bytes for array header, using 8 bytes for the new layout field). In the most-benchmarked case (list of longs), we save 32 bytes per cons-cell.
Time wise:
All list-summing benchmarks observe a ~2x speedup. List generation benchmarks get ~25x speedups, probably both due to less GC activity and better allocation characteristics (only allocating one object per Cons, rather than Cons + Object[] for fields). The "map-reverse" family gets a neat 10x speedup (part of the work is reading, which is 2x faster, the other is allocating, which is now 25x faster, we end up with 10x when combined).
This PR adds new sections to the component browser section navigator bar. The sections are based on the namespaces from which libraries are imported. Selecting a namespace section from the navigator bar highlights the modules from that namespace. Selecting a module from a different namespace switches the navigator bar indicator to the correct namespace category. The currently selected namespace is also shown as the root of the breadcrumbs.
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/117099775/212144719-2470a99d-8d8c-47ca-ab50-5bac65468090.mp4
For a new project where only the `Standard` namespace exists the only visible change is the breadcrumbs. Adding for example additional modules in the project `src` folder will create them in the `local` namespace, this namespace will show up as a separate navigator section.
This is a followup to https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/4046#pullrequestreview-1248164069.
- Compiler job cancelation is now handled - the cache entry will be cleared or the job will be resumed if there is still demand.
- The compilation awaiting process has been rewritten to not use polling. The "read cache" job is now only used to dispatch known valid reads. It is always completed within a single run cycle.
- Changed shader struct to use `ImString` for storing code, so it can be cheaply cloned. This is now common, as we are cloning it from cache.
`@` should not be legal to use as a binary operator. I accepted it in the parser because it occurred in the .enso sources, but it was actually used to create a syntax error to test error recovery.
See: https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/184054024
Rename the CLI option to set the WASM log level; applied some suggested simplifications, to `LogLevel` and to the type it was based on.
# Important Notes
This addresses review of #4017.
While doing regular node manipulation in editior, noticed a number of situations when
```
java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException: None
at java.base/java.lang.Character.offsetByCodePoints(Character.java:8699)
at java.base/java.lang.String.offsetByCodePoints(String.java:820)
at org.enso.text.buffer.CodePointView$Ops$.drop(CodePointView.scala:98)
at org.enso.text.buffer.CodePointView$Ops$.drop(CodePointView.scala:57)
at org.enso.text.buffer.Node.drop(Tree.scala:218)
at org.enso.text.buffer.Rope.dropWith(Rope.scala:86)
at org.enso.text.buffer.CodePointView.drop(CodePointView.scala:30)
at org.enso.text.editing.RopeTextEditor$.cutOutTail(RopeTextEditor.scala:42)
...
```
would be thrown. Further text edits would simply be rejected requiring a complete restart. I doubt we should propagate
`IndexOutOfBoundsException`. Instead it is safer to just apply the edit to the end of the rope.
* Hash codes prototype
* Remove Any.hash_code
* Improve caching of hashcode in atoms
* [WIP] Add Hash_Map type
* Implement Any.hash_code builtin for primitives and vectors
* Add some values to ValuesGenerator
* Fix example docs on Time_Zone.new
* [WIP] QuickFix for HashCodeTest before PR #3956 is merged
* Fix hash code contract in HashCodeTest
* Add times and dates values to HashCodeTest
* Fix docs
* Remove hashCodeForMetaInterop specialization
* Introduce snapshoting of HashMapBuilder
* Add unit tests for EnsoHashMap
* Remove duplicate test in Map_Spec.enso
* Hash_Map.to_vector caches result
* Hash_Map_Spec is a copy of Map_Spec
* Implement some methods in Hash_Map
* Add equalsHashMaps specialization to EqualsAnyNode
* get and insert operations are able to work with polyglot values
* Implement rest of Hash_Map API
* Add test that inserts elements with keys with same hash code
* EnsoHashMap.toDisplayString use builder storage directly
* Add separate specialization for host objects in EqualsAnyNode
* Fix specialization for host objects in EqualsAnyNode
* Add polyglot hash map tests
* EconomicMap keeps reference to EqualsNode and HashCodeNode.
Rather than passing these nodes to `get` and `insert` methods.
* HashMapTest run in polyglot context
* Fix containsKey index handling in snapshots
* Remove snapshots field from EnsoHashMapBuilder
* Prepare polyglot hash map handling.
- Hash_Map builtin methods are separate nodes
* Some bug fixes
* Remove ForeignMapWrapper.
We would have to wrap foreign maps in assignments for this to be efficient.
* Improve performance of Hash_Map.get_builtin
Also, if_nothing parameter is suspended
* Remove to_flat_vector.
Interop API requires nested vector (our previous to_vector implementation). Seems that I have misunderstood the docs the first time I read it.
- to_vector does not sort the vector by keys by default
* Fix polyglot hash maps method dispatch
* Add tests that effectively test hash code implementation.
Via hash map that behaves like a hash set.
* Remove Hashcode_Spec
* Add some polyglot tests
* Add Text.== tests for NFD normalization
* Fix NFD normalization bug in Text.java
* Improve performance of EqualsAnyNode.equalsTexts specialization
* Properly compute hash code for Atom and cache it
* Fix Text specialization in HashCodeAnyNode
* Add Hash_Map_Spec as part of all tests
* Remove HashMapTest.java
Providing all the infrastructure for all the needed Truffle nodes is no longer manageable.
* Remove rest of identityHashCode message implementations
* Replace old Map with Hash_Map
* Add some docs
* Add TruffleBoundaries
* Formatting
* Fix some tests to accept unsorted vector from Map.to_vector
* Delete Map.first and Map.last methods
* Add specialization for big integer hash
* Introduce proper HashCodeTest and EqualsTest.
- Use jUnit theories.
- Call nodes directly
* Fix some specializations for primitives in HashCodeAnyNode
* Fix host object specialization
* Remove Any.hash_code
* Fix import in Map.enso
* Update changelog
* Reformat
* Add truffle boundary to BigInteger.hashCode
* Fix performance of HashCodeTest - initialize DataPoints just once
* Fix MetaIsATest
* Fix ValuesGenerator.textual - Java's char is not Text
* Fix indent in Map_Spec.enso
* Add maps to datapoints in HashCodeTest
* Add specialization for maps in HashCodeAnyNode
* Add multiLevelAtoms to ValuesGenerator
* Provide a workaround for non-linear key inserts
* Fix specializations for double and BigInteger
* Cosmetics
* Add truffle boundaries
* Add allowInlining=true to some truffle boundaries.
Increases performance a lot.
* Increase the size of vectors, and warmup time for Vector.Distinct benchmark
* Various small performance fixes.
* Fix Geo_Spec tests to accept unsorted Map.to_vector
* Implement Map.remove
* FIx Visualization tests to accept unsorted Map.to_vector
* Treat java.util.Properties as Map
* Add truffle boundaries
* Invoke polyglot methods on java.util.Properties
* Ignore python tests if python lang is missing
Added a separate pass, `FullyQualifiedNames`, that partially resolves fully qualified names. The pass only resolves the library part of the name and replaces it with a reference to the `Main` module.
There are 2 scenarios that could be potentially:
1) the code uses a fully qualified name to a component that has been
parsed/compiled
2) the code uses a fully qualified name to a component that has **not** be
imported
For the former case, it is sufficient to just check `PackageRepository` for the presence of the library name.
In the latter we have to ensure that the library has been already parsed and all its imports are resolved. That would require the reference to `Compiler` in the `FullyQualifiedNames` pass, which could then trigger a full compilation for missing library. Since it has some undesired consequences (tracking of dependencies becomes rather complex) we decided to exclude that scenario until it is really needed.
# Important Notes
With this change, one can use a fully qualified name directly.
e.g.
```
import Standard.Base
main =
Standard.Base.IO.println "Hello world!"
```
Unsetting literal sources during the `text/fileClose` operation would also unlink sources from the actual file. That would be never set back during the reopening of the file, resulting in an NPE during application of changes at a later point.
# Important Notes
Revealed during https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/4050 which was the first(?) to do close/open of the file.
The exception showing up in GUI and preventing further actions is now gone.
The fix consists of two parts:
1. All the "review-apply" and "store temporary md" actions in the searcher controller are now guarded by an ignored transaction.
2. Because some of the temporary state may reach the UR frames assigned to other actions, added a bunch of code for removing all temporary expressions from the code and use it after restoring a frame. We may consider using it after project load as well.
### Important Notes
Added a useful method "log_err" to ResultOps (so every Result will have those).
- Add `get` to Table.
- Correct `Count Nothing` examples.
- Add `join` to File.
- Add `File_Format.all` listing all installed formats.
- Add some more ALIAS entries.
Fixes https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/184073099
# Important Notes
- Since now the only operator on columns for division, `/`, returns floats, it may be worth creating an additional `div` operator exposing integer division. But that will be done as a separate task aligning column operator APIs.
Remove hardcoded mixpanel token and move it to the config class. This will allow for injection cloud's id and distinguish Enso Ide project from Enso Cloud in mixpanel.
The new `TreeToIr` conversion class inherited usage of `UnhandledEntity` to signal parser errors from the previous `AstToIr` Scala based convertor. Over the time we were improving error recovery - however only _step by step_. This pull request exterminates _all the panics_ for once and forever!
# Important Notes
Unlike Scala, Java has concept of [checked exceptions](http://wiki.apidesign.org/wiki/Checked_exception) - an exception that has to be caught. This PR introduces new checked `SyntaxException` and throws it instead of unchecked `UnhandledEntity`. Because the exception is checked, each method either needs to declare it in its signature or catch it and handle it. No exception can escape or disappear. The main conversion method `TreeToIr.translateModule` doesn't propagate the `SyntaxException`. That provably demonstrates - _all panic states_ are handled and reported as _syntax errors_ in the `IR`.
Logging: Replace tracing with an efficient logging implementation, with 0-runtime cost for disabled log levels. (https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/183755412)
Profiling: Support submitting `profiler` events to the User Timing Web API, so that measurements can be viewed directly in the browser. (https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/184003550)
# Important Notes
Logging interface:
- The macros (`warn!`, etc.) now take standard `format_args!` arguments (the tracing implementations accepted a broader syntax).
- Compile-time log levels can now be set through the CLI, like so:
`./run ide start --log-level=trace --uncollapsed-log-level=info`
Profiling:
- The hotkey Ctrl+Alt+Shift+P submits all `profiler` events logged since the application was loaded to the Web API, so that they can then be viewed with the browser's developer tools. Note that standard tools are not able to represent async task lifetimes or metadata; this is a convenient interface to a subset of `profiler` data.
- As an alternative interface, a runtime flag enables continuous measurement submission. In the browser it can be set through a URL parameter, like http://localhost:8080/?emit_user_timing_measurements=true. Note that this mode significantly impacts performance.
Fixes an error when the logger processes NPE:
```
[internal-logger-error] One of the printers failed to write a message: java.lang.NullPointerException
```