Flatten hierarchy of alias analysis metadata (`or.genso.compiler.pass.alias.Info`) so that it is easily accessible from Java and rename it.
# Important Notes
- Rename `org.enso.compiler.alias.Graph.Occurence` to `org.enso.compiler.alias.graph.GraphOccurence` and flatten the hierarchy.
- Rename `org.enso.compiler.pass.alias.Info` to `org.enso.compiler.pass.alias.AliasMetadata` and flatten the hierarchy.
Majority of warnings handling is now done via newly introduced nodes. Moreover, the underlying representation of warnings storage in `WithWarnings` was changed from `Warning[]` to `EnsoHashMap`.
# Important Notes
- Remove `ArrayRope`.
Implement full `ArgumentDefinition` syntax for new-lambda arguments, e.g `\a=1 (b:Integer = 23)-> a + b`; add backend support for new lambdas.
Emit an error when any syntactic operator is used outside of its associated syntax (fixes#10473).
Phase out complex arguments for old-lambdas: It is now a syntax error to specify default arguments for an old-lambda. This capability had no usage in real code; affected tests have been updated to test new lambdas. For now, old lambdas can continue to be used with simple arguments; if default arguments are desired, a new-style lambda can be used.
Working on compiler IR is a daunting task. I have therefore added a new system property `enso.compiler.dumpIr` that will help with that. It dumps the encountered IRs to `ir-dumps` directory in the [GraphViz](www.graphviz.org) format. More info in updated docs.
Note that all the functionality to dump IRs to `dot` files was already implemented. This PR just adds the command line option and updates docs.
# Important Notes
- `--dump-graphs` cmd line option is removed as per [Jaroslav's request](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/pull/10740#pullrequestreview-2216676140).
- To dump graphs, use `-Dgraal.Dump=Truffle:2` system property passed via `JAVA_OPTS` env var.
If you run `env JAVA_OPTS='-Denso.compiler.dumpIr=true' enso --run tmp.enso` where `tmp.enso` is, e.g.:
```
from Standard.Base import all
main = 42
```
You will then have something like:
```
$ ls ir-dumps
Standard.Base.Data.Filter_Condition.dot Standard.Base.Data.Time.dot Standard.Base.System.Advanced.dot Standard.Base.Warning.dot
Standard.Base.Data.Locale.dot Standard.Base.Enso_Cloud.Enso_File.dot Standard.Base.System.File.Advanced.dot tmp.dot
Standard.Base.Data.Numeric.dot Standard.Base.Errors.dot Standard.Base.System.File.dot
Standard.Base.Data.Numeric.Internal.dot Standard.Base.Network.HTTP.Internal.dot Standard.Base.System.File.Generic.dot
Standard.Base.Data.Text.Regex.Internal.dot Standard.Base.Runtime.dot Standard.Base.System.Internal.dot
```
You can then visualize any of these with `dot -Tsvg -O ir-dumps/tmp.dot`.
An example how that could look like is
![image.svg](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/26ab8415-72cf-46da-bc63-f475e9fa628e)
- Close#10622
- Changes `project-manager` and `ensoup` launcher to run the engine/language-server with working directory set to the directory containing currently running project.
- If the working directory is _not_ "the directory containing currently running project", a warning is written to logs. This can happen if the raw `/bin/enso` engine runner is used in a different directory.
- In the Cloud, the `File.new` interprets relative paths as cloud paths relative to the Cloud directory containing the current project. Absolute paths are unaffected.
There is no need to generate unused variables warnings or other linting for IDE and repl users. By default linting is enabled during compilation and for those use-cases it is now disabled via runtime options.
Closes#9883
Plain `Storage failure [AccessDenied].` was rather uninformative when it comes to debugging the underlying problem.
Added more detailed error messages and runners' failures should now sometimes print a detailed message.
References #10662.
Translate syntax warnings and attach to IR when translating operator applications.
We should ensure that all Trees are checked for warnings and every warning is attached to some IR. That would require a bit of refactoring: In TreeToIr, we could define helpers wrapping every IR constructor and accepting a `Tree` parameter. The `Tree` could be used to populate the `IdentifiedLocation` when constructing the IR type, and then to attach all warnings after constructing the IR object.
# Important Notes
- Update JNI dependency.
- Introduces a `cargo bench` runner for parser.
In a sequence of value-level operators, whitespace does not affect relative precedence. Functional operators still follow the space-precedence rules.
The "functional" operators are: `>> << |> |>> <| <<| : .`, application, and any operator containing `<-` or `->`. All other operators are considered value-level operators.
Asymmetric whitespace can still be used to form *operator sections* of value-level operators, e.g. `+2 * 3` is still equivalent to `x -> (x+2) * 3`.
Precedence of application is unchanged, so `f x+y` is still equivalent to `f (x + y)` and `f x+y * z` is still equivalent to `(f (x + y)) * z`.
Any attempt to use spacing to override value-level operator precedence will be caught by the new enso linter. Mixed spacing (for clarity) in value-operator expressions is allowed, as long as it is consistent with the precedences of the operators.
Closes#10366.
# Important Notes
Precedence warnings:
- The parser emits a warning if the whitespace in an expression is inconsistent with its effective precedence.
- A new enso linter can be run with `./run libraries lint`. It parses all `.enso` files in `distribution/lib` and `test`, and reports any errors or warnings. It can also be run on individual files: `cargo run --release --bin check_syntax -- file1 file2...` (the result may be easier to read than the `./run` output).
- The linter is also run as part of `./run lint`, so it is checked in CI.
Additional language change:
- The exponentiation operator (`^`) now has higher precedence than the multiplication class (`*`, `/`, `%`). This change did not affect any current enso files.
Library changes:
- The libraries have been updated. The new warnings were used to identify all affected code; the changes themselves have not been programmatically verified (in many cases their equivalence relies on the commutativity of string concatenation).
Graal Ydoc implementation is currently not being used locally or in the cloud and giving an impression of a slower startup.
Plus it appears that there some issues in the local connection as well.
To limit the impact of it now, let's make it controllable by the same env variable as GUI is.
* initProtocol endpoint returns success when already initialized
* Fix test
* Docs and return error when clientId differs
* fmt
* fix: session management test
* misc: json connection controller
---------
Co-authored-by: Dmitry Bushev <bushevdv@gmail.com>
Issue with Vector nothing to do with this.
The `System.exit 42` component is treated the same way as any other Panic error - it does not interfere with other component evaluation:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/516490b5-755f-453e-8dc9-744437dc51bd)
After removing the `System.exit 42` component, the workflow works as expected. I have also tried opening the project with the component and then removing it.
Enables `engine.TruffleCompilation` in `std-benchmarks`, collects the logs and dumps compilation into to `System.err` when a benchmark is influenced by dynamic compilation.
Single-phase whitespace-aware precedence resolution.
#### Performance
![newplot(4)](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9822b0dc-17c3-4d2d-adf7-eb8b1c240522)
Since this is a major refactor of the core of the parser, I benchmarked it; it's about 3% faster.
# Important Notes
- Move operator-identifier recognition to lexer.
- Move compound-token assembly out of precedence resolver
- This PR only re-arranges code, splitting the **huge** `processModule` function into a few smaller ones.
- I decided to do it, because when I was working with `processModule` on #9812 I was constantly getting lost in this huge method (this **one** method had 570 lines!) - there is too much happening at once there. Now it's been split into smaller methods, each dealing with one thing.
Reducing the number of log events that we spam regular users. Not the last PR in that area, but already a progress.
Also replaced `fileWalk` with a stream approach hoping that maybe it is a bit more stable on Windows.
* Fix context lock removal
Removal of context lock assumed that one still holds a lock on it. This
is no longer the case when using a `withContextLock` block that
correctly manages the resource. This change fixes the
`IllegalMonitorStateException`.
Closes#10354.
* address review
* Add missing file
* Hiding ContextLock internals from other than ReentrantLocking classes
---------
Co-authored-by: Jaroslav Tulach <jaroslav.tulach@enso.org>
* Mitiigate LS DDOS scenario on startup
For a medium-size project with a lot of visualizations, Language Server
will be flooded with visualization requests on startup. Due to an
existing limit for the job execution engine, some of those requests
might have been silently dropped.
This change lifts that limit until a better fix can be invented.
Additionally, a slow startup might lead to a timeout when serving open
file request. This change adds some retries as a fallback
mechanism/progress monitoring.
* add runtime-fat-jar to a list of aggregates
Fix#10503 by creating a benchmark and then speeding it up by making sure usage of `InteropLibrary` reminds in partially evaluated code and isn't hidden behind `@TruffleBoundary`.
Addresses one of two concerns of #5298 - adds support for `--jvm` argument to allow us to switch from _native image_ built Enso binary (as developed by #10126) to regular JVM based Enso execution. This change _doesn't affect production builds_. The _native executable_ continues to be only built by `engine-runner/buildNativeImage` which is tested on CI, but not in the production jobs.
- Remove publishing the constructors.
- Fix any missed use in libs.
- Alter tests to generally use auto-scoped calls.
- `on_incomparable` to `on_problems`.
Building Engine, Context, ApplicationConfig and Ydoc was a adding a rather large delay during the initial startup step as all of those were blocking operations.
Moving all of those to the resource initialization step hopes to amortize some of that cost since it can be done in parallel. Had to add a `ComponentSupervisor` (open for a different name suggestion) to ensure that such delayed components are properly closed on shutdown.
# Important Notes
Adding Ydoc has added a visible delay during startup. I'm hoping that we can amortize some of that with this PR:
![Screenshot from 2024-07-05 11-12-19](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/292128/fd52f749-b2cb-414d-bd2a-847ea867026c)
Now:
![Screenshot from 2024-07-05 11-25-58](https://github.com/enso-org/enso/assets/292128/9e7c96c9-ee47-46c3-9bdb-8f96bbc4a68f)
* Eliminating circe-yaml
This change adds our very-own YAML parser on top of SnakeYAML. Compared
to Circe parser on top of SnakeYAML. The advantage? In some not-so-distant
future we might actually get rid of circe and the related performance
issues.
The logic is similar to what circe does i.e. analyzing SnakeYAML to
build our own structure.
This change is not complete, as there are still some tests failing, but
most common Configs are already parseable.
We _could_ auto-generate some of the code but still some of the logic
would have to be tweaked by hand; the current logic has a number of
special cases, as I found out the hard way.
* wip: more tests passing
* Fix remaining tests in ConfigSpec
* Fixing YAML decoder for editions
Dropping circe as a decoder for Editions revealed some problems. Turns
out the current implementation had even more special cases to deal with.
* nit
* Allow for empty exports
* Mostly complete encodin part
Replaced almost all `toYAML` locations with SnakeYAML equivalent.
The encoding has to use Java collections for which there exists a
built-in support. If we were to use Scala collections we would have to
deal with tagging, at the very least.
* Remove the last remaining Circe's YAML parser
* Bug fix + further loop optimization
* removal of some dependencies
* Remove circe-yaml
Added a custom SnakeYAML Node updater to mimick the JSON -> YAML -> JSON
conversion needed for updating fields. The algorithm recursively follows
the key-path and inserts the desired Node. This is not a performance
oriented code on purpose.
* Fix compilation issues
`circe-core` was marked as `provided` but no one eventually included it
in the final jar, hence `NoClassFoundException`.
* fix licensing
* Removing obsolete circe definitions
* fmt
* nits
* s/SnakeYamlDecoder/YamlDecoder
* fmt
* Partial revert, PM needs JSON decoders/encoders
* style
* incremental compilation gone wrong