In some rare cases, we wouldn't pick up .gitignore files in the right
order, causing performance issues for the project search and the file
finder
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR:
- Moves the selection menu to the end with the editor settings menu
- Tidies up labels in the settings menu
- Minor spacing updates
Release Notes:
- Improved organization in the Quick Action Bar
I found this bug while investigating
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13176. When running zed
with `RUST_LOG=worktree=trace`, I realized we were updating all
gitignore statuses on every file change. This was due to a logic error
where we were marking a gitignore as up-to-date on a temporary *clone*
of our snapshot, but not in the `BackgroundScanner` itself.
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug that caused unnecessary computations to happen on every
file-system event.
Fixing the "r" action just involved adapting `normal_replace` to replace
multiple characters.
Fixing the "shift-r" command was less straightforward. The bindings for
`vim::BeforeNormal` in replace mode were being overwritten and several
other steps required for action repetition were not performed. Finally,
the cursor adjustment after re-entering normal mode was duplicated
(`vim::BeforeNormal` was now triggered correctly) so I removed the
special case for replace mode.
Release Notes:
- Fixed vim "r" action to accept a count argument
- Fixed vim "shift-r" action to accept a count argument and allow
repetition
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Adds support for surrounding text in visual/visual-line/visual-block
mode by re-using the `AddSurrounds` operator. There is no default
binding though so the user must follow the instructions to enable it.
Note that the behaviour varies slightly for the visual-line and
visual-block modes. In visual-line mode the surrounds are placed on
separate lines (the vim-surround extension also indents the contents but
I opted not to as that behaviour is less important with the use of code
formatters). In visual-block mode each of the selected regions is
surrounded and the cursor returns to the beginning of the selection
after the action is complete.
Release Notes:
- Added action to surround text in visual mode (no default binding).
Fixes#13122
This is a small change that aims to address frames being dropped when we
get a ton of X11 input events.
What it does, in short, is to first read all X11 input events and then
prioritize the rendering.
In my testing, it causes less frames to be dropped when the system is
under heavy load and lots of input events are being created.
Release Notes:
- N/A
codegen-units determines how many object files are used when building a
single crate. By default it is set to 256 in dev builds and to 16 in
release builds. Higher values can get in the way of optimizations, but
they should help when performing an incremental build (as higher
granularity means that it's less likely we'd have to rebuild the whole
crate). When we were tinkering with Linux builds we found that we're
spreading ourselves too thin at times; large values of codegen-units
were making builds of smaller crates, such as file_finder, redundantly
long, where some CGs were miniscule. This PR significantly reduces the #
of CGs we use in dev builds. This means that an incremental build of a
crate might have to rebuild a bit more, but overall, we should be
spending *less* time in multicrate builds.
As a result of this change, incremental build of gpui (`cargo build;
touch crates/gpui/src/gpui.rs; cargo build`) goes down from 29-32s to
22s on my machine. Same scenario for editor: 13s to 11s. I've ran `cargo
clean` before executing each run
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Thorsten <thorsten@zed.dev>
This reverts commit f69c8ca74e after it
has already been partially reverted in
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/13458.
Why the revert?
The changes in that commit/PR fix one type of problem — dropping of
frames when being blasted with input events — but trades it for another
one that I can't explain yet: when the system is under load, then input
becomes _laggy_ and input events seem to be delayed.
Two examples of how that shows up:
1. When the system is under load* and you hold down the `down` key to
scroll, then lift the finger, the cursor stops sometimes. If you then
produce another input event by jiggling the mouse cursor you'll see more
`down`-key events coming up and the cursor moving down. It feels as if
the event loop is not being woken up even though there are still events.
I suspect it might have something to do with XIM, because if it's
disabled, it seems as if problems become less severe.
2. When the system is under load* and you click-and-drag a selection in
the editor, you can see how the selection is delayed and takes 500ms-1s
to catch up to where the cursor is.
* system under load: start Zed, then in another terminal window create a
release build of Zed, for example.
With the changes reverted, the failure mode looks different: we skip
frames. But that, I think, is the better of two bad options, because
skipping frames means that you see what's happening vs. input events
seemingly still coming in seconds after you stopped using the keyboard.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This fixes#13316 by checking whether there are any local workspace
settings for a given file.
Release Notes:
- Fixed `autosave` settings in project-specific settings file being
ignored. ([#13316](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13316)).
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennet@zed.dev>
This PR needs suggestions, especially from the Zed team. As I mentioned
in a previous issue #13394 , the `vscode-json-languageserver` that Zed
originally relied on has some issues with JSON schema validation on
Windows, and it hasn't been updated for a long time. This PR uses the
more frequently updated `vscode-langservers-extracted`, which resolves
this issue.
Currently, `vscode-langservers-extracted` includes not only the JSON LSP
server but also LSP servers for other languages. I think we might need a
package specifically for the JSON LSP server, such as something like
`vscode-json-langserver-extracted`, or we could consider using the LSP
servers for other languages from this package as well.
And, there are some issues with installing
`vscode-langservers-extracted` on Windows, causing the `postinstall`
script to fail. However, this does not seem to affect any functionality.
Therefore, I think the best solution is for the Zed team to maintain a
package like `vscode-json-langserver-extracted` or something else. This
way, we can update it promptly and address the installation issues on
Windows.
Any suggestions or advices are welcome.
#### JSON vaildation on Winodws
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/14981363/8cd7ff54-28ec-4601-b2e5-183e2fae2051Closes#13394
Release Notes:
- Fixed JSON schema validation issue on Windows.(#13394 )
Buffers carry several pieces of state besides their text: syntax tree,
diagnostics, git diff, and file data. Previously, the buffer maintained
a separate integer version number for each of these four pieces of
state, incrementing it every time that piece of state is updated. This
is used by MultiBuffers to detect when they need to update excerpts.
Previously, for a given buffer, these four version numbers were stored
on the buffer itself, on every snapshot of the buffer, in any
multi-buffer that referenced that buffer, **and** on snapshots of that
multi-buffer. But the only use for the version numbers was reduced down
to a single boolean predicate: whether or not the buffer's state has
changed.
In this PR, I've combined those 4 version numbers into one. I've called
it `non_text_state_update_count` because it tracks all state updates
outside of the text itself. This removes a bunch of unnecessary code,
and reduces the size of buffer snapshots and multi-buffer snapshots.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Previously we've placed cursor on the first line of the first excerpt in
the multibuffer, but alas,
https://x.com/fasterthanlime/status/1804883499809165473 happened (j/k,
this feedback is totally valid) and now we're gonna place it at the end
of the first reference. As a bonus, with the old configuration `editor:
select next` tripped over itself. Now it's possible (& feasible) to do a
"select next" in "find all references"; consecutive referenced ranges
will be selected.
Fixes#13419
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug where "Find all references" editor had cursor placed on
the first line of the first excerpt in the multibuffer instead of having
it on the first reference.
The documentation lists the path to the global tasks config file as
`~/.config/tasks.json`, but it's actually `~/.config/zed/tasks.json`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This was due to a bug in the `MultiBufferSnapshot::excerpts_in_ranges`
method. As part of this, I took the chance to rewrite that logic and
simplify it a bit.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/13073
Note that, contrary to the issue's text, we're still shipping a
statically bundled sqlite3 after this PR. We use enough new features of
sqlite, like `sqlite3_error_offset` and `STRICT`, that our minimum
version (v3.38.0) is higher than is presumably accessible on Ubuntu.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
This fixes#4432 by ensuring that we scan & watch the `.zed` folder,
just like we watch the `.git`, for changes.
Release Notes:
- Settings are now loaded from local `.zed/settings.json` files even if
they are `.gitignore`d.
([#4432](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/4432)).
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennet@zed.dev>
This change ensures that we always render a window according to its
refresh rate, even if there are a lot of X11 events.
We're working around some limitations of `calloop`. In the future, we
think we should revisit how the event loop is implemented on X11, so
that we can ensure proper prioritization of input events vs. rendering.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Antonio <me@as-cii.com>
Files included with the diagnostics command now include the worktree
name, making it more consistent with the way other commands work
(`/active`, `/tabs`, `/file`). Also, the diagnostics command will now
insert nothing when there are no diagnostics.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This makes us treat yaml like other indentation-sensitive languages
(e.g. Python) and not reformat it on pasting and what not.
Fixes#12236Fixes#13338
Release Notes:
- Fixed spurious appliance of auto-formatting to YAML blocks.
This patch maps `Ctrl+Shift+M` to "Open Markdown Preview to the side".
That's what it used to be in Atom:
https://github.com/atom/markdown-preview
Release Notes:
- Added Markdown Preview shortcut for the Atom keymap