This PR adds a first pass at a rustdoc crawler.
We'll be using this to get information about a crate from the rustdoc
artifacts for use in the Assistant.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Richard <richard@zed.dev>
This PR adds a missing LICENSE file to the recently-added `ollama`
crate.
Also added the missing `lints.workspace = true` to the `Cargo.toml`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
We recently reduced the set of ignored labels down to a single label: "ignore top-ranking issues." It makes sense that we don't allow for multiple to be registered in this script now.
Some of the runnables added in #12118 don't work for tests (or code)
that contain spaces. In other words, the runnable for a test like
```js
it('does the thing', () => ...)
```
would end up w/ something like `npx jest does the thing
/path/to/file.spec.js`, but what we really want is `npx jest
--testNamePattern "does the thing" /path/to/file.spec.js`. A similar
thing was happening for the "node execute selection" runnable: selecting
`let foo = 1` would run `node -e let foo = 1`, not `node -e "let foo =
1"`.
In my (somewhat limited?) experience, it's very common for tests like
these to include spaces, and of course a code selection is almost
certain to contain whitespace.
Not covered:
- this just blindly wraps quotes around the symbol/code; in the future
it may make sense to try to figure out *what type of quote* to use. (eg
`it('does the "thing"', () => ...)` is a valid test name, but
`--testNamePattern "does the "thing""` would not work. Note the doubled
quotes.)
- I did not wrap the filenames in quotes to escape those for the shell,
nor did I test if that's actually an issue. In my experience, I've not
seen many (any?) test files that contain spaces in the name, but I
suspect that it would be an issue if a containing dir includes spaces.
(eg `npx jest ... /path/to/My Documents/Code/file.spec.js`
/cc @RemcoSmitsDev
Release Notes:
- Fixed some runnables in Javascript/Typescript
Fix#12884
Release Notes:
- Added runnable tests for TSX files.
---
Runnable tests can be customized via `tsx-test` tag
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR adds support for `org.gnome.desktop.interface`'s `cursor-theme`
setting on Wayland. This should fix cursors not showing up on some GNOME
installs. This PR also adds the wiring to watch the current cursor theme
value.
Thanks to @apricotbucket28 for helping debug the issue.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes#4424.
A few design decisions that may need some rethinking or later PRs:
* Other providers have a check for authentication. I use this
opportunity to fetch the models which doubles as a way of finding out if
the Ollama server is running.
* Ollama has _no_ API for getting the max tokens per model
* Ollama has _no_ API for getting the current token count
https://github.com/ollama/ollama/issues/1716
* Ollama does allow setting the `num_ctx` so I've defaulted this to
4096. It can be overridden in settings.
* Ollama models will be "slow" to start inference because they're
loading the model into memory. It's faster after that. There's no UI
affordance to show that the model is being loaded.
Release Notes:
- Added an Ollama Provider for the assistant. If you have
[Ollama](https://ollama.com/) running locally on your machine, you can
enable it in your settings under:
```jsonc
"assistant": {
"version": "1",
"provider": {
"name": "ollama",
// Recommended setting to allow for model startup
"low_speed_timeout_in_seconds": 30,
}
}
```
Chat like usual
<img width="1840" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/836375/4e0af266-4c4f-4d9e-9d74-1a91f76a12fe">
Interact with any model from the [Ollama
Library](https://ollama.com/library)
<img width="587" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/836375/87433ac6-bf87-4a99-89e1-96a93bf8de8a">
Open up the terminal to download new models via `ollama pull`:
![image](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/836375/af7ec411-76bf-41c7-ba81-64bbaeea98a8)
This PR fixes an instance where the file icon for a project panel entry
would be shown during a rename even when the `project_panel.file_icons`
setting was set to `false`.
Resolves#12905.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where file icons were displayed in the project panel
during a rename even when `project_panel.file_icons` was set to `false`
([#12905](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/12905)).
This PR adds a tag handler for collecting crate items from rustdoc's
HTML output.
This will serve as the foundation for getting more insight into a
crate's contents.
Release Notes:
- N/A
TODO:
- [x] Finish GPUI changes on other operating systems
This is a largely internal change to how we report data to our
diagnostics and telemetry. This PR also includes an update to our blade
backend which allows us to report errors in a more useful way when
failing to initialize blade.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Turns out we still get FocusOut and UnmapNotify events after the window
has been destroyed, which resulted in error messages popping up because
we can't find the window anymore that we want to mark as unfocused.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds support for [linked editing of
ranges](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#textDocument_linkedEditingRange),
which in short means that editing one part of a file can now change
related parts in that same file. Think of automatically renaming
HTML/TSX closing tags when the opening one is changed.
TODO:
- [x] proto changes
- [x] Allow disabling linked editing ranges on a per language basis.
Fixes#4535
Release Notes:
- Added support for linked editing ranges LSP request. Editing opening
tags in HTML/TSX files (with vtsls) performs the same edit on the
closing tag as well (and vice versa). It can be turned off on a language-by-language basis with the following setting:
```
"languages": {
"HTML": {
"linked_edits": true
},
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Bennet <bennet@zed.dev>
I noticed that when I use my mouse wheel, we get a ton of the
`XkbStateNotify` events, but the modifiers don't change, so we add a ton
of useless input events for the window.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Release Notes:
- N/A
## Description
When using rust-lld it's possible to get a `STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION`
error at compile time. I added a bit of information about it in the
build guide for windows to recommend using a different linker when
building `zed`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Marshall Bowers <elliott.codes@gmail.com>
This PR improves the `/fetch` command with better support for URLs that
return JSON content.
JSON response bodies will now be pretty-printed and placed within a
Markdown code block:
<img width="690" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-10 at 3 39 52 PM"
src="https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/assets/1486634/4a7c1cb7-9f5b-4a63-9e8e-5168bf9a6625">
Release Notes:
- Improved the handling of JSON response bodies in the `/fetch` command
in the Assistant.
This PR removes the `color` crate, as it was not used anywhere.
We had added this experimentally, but right now its existence is just a
source of confusion.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adjusts the extension download counts to be displayed using
thousands separators.
Release Notes:
- Adjusted extension download counts to display with thousands
separators (e.g., `1,000,000`).
This PR adds a `/now` command to the Assistant for indicating the
current date and time to the model.
Release Notes:
- Added `/now` command to the Assistant for getting the current date and
time.
Hi, this pull request superseeds the
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/12624
and removes queries for runnables from `outline.scm`. This pull request
has couple things to mention:
- Removed task for running tests with `minitest` as I think it's not
reliable in its state because, AFAIK, the only way to run `minitest`
with the specific line, i.e. `bundle exec rake test
spec/models/some_model.rb:12` is to use it with Rails. The support for
`minitest` is still there and users can add their own task, for
instance, when they use `minitest` in Rails to get support for running
tests:
```json
{
"label": "test $ZED_RELATIVE_FILE:$ZED_ROW",
"command": "./bin/rails",
"args": ["test", "\"$ZED_RELATIVE_FILE:$ZED_ROW\""],
"tags": ["minitest-test"]
}
```
**Question:** Perhaps that should be mentioned in the Ruby extension
documentation?
- Adjusted runnables queries to work without `ZED_SYMBOL`.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This helps with the problem of keyboard input feeling laggy when the
event loop is under load.
What would previously happen is:
- N events from X11 arrive
- N events get forwarded to XIM
- N events are handled in N iterations of the event loop (sadly, yes: we
only seem to be getting back one `ClientMessage` per poll from XCB
connection)
- Each event is pushed into the channel
- N event loop iterations are needed to get the events off the channel
and handle them
With this change, we get rid of the last 2 steps: instead of pushing the
event onto a channel, we store it on the XIM handler itself, and then
work it off synchronously.
Usually one shouldn't block the event loop, but I think in this case -
user input! - it's better to handle the events directly instead of
re-enqueuing them again in a channel, where they can accumulate and need
multiple iterations of the loop to be worked off.
This does *not* fix the problem of input feeling choppy/slower when the
system is under load, but it makes the behavior now feel exactly the
same as when XIM is disabled.
I also think the code is easier to understand since it's more
straightforward.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This change ensures that the event loop prioritizes enqueueing another
render or handling user input over executing runnables.
It's a subtle change as a result of a week of digging into performance
on X11. It's also not perfect: ideally we'd get rid of the intermediate
channel here and had more control over when and how we run runnables vs.
X11 events, but I think short of rewriting how we use an event loop,
this is good cost/benefit change.
To illustrate:
Before this change, it was possible to block the app from rendering for
a long time by just creating a ton of futures that were executed on the
"main" thread (we don't have a "main" thread on Linux, but we have a
single thread in which we run the event loop).
That was relatively easy to reproduce by opening the `zed` repository
and starting `rust-analyzer`: at some point `rust-analyzer` sends us so
many notifications, that are all handled in futures, that the event loop
is busy just working off the runnables, never getting to the events that
X11 sends us or our own timer to re-enqueue another render.
When you put print statements into the code to show when which event was
handled, you'd see something like this **before this change**:
```
[ ... hundreds of runnable.run() ... ]
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
new render tick timer. lag: 56.942049ms
X11 event
new render tick timer. lag: 9.668µs
X11 event
new render tick timer. lag: 9.955µs
X11 event
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
new render tick timer. lag: 12.462µs
X11 event
new render tick timer. lag: 14.868µs
X11 event
new render tick timer. lag: 11.234µs
X11 event
new render tick timer. lag: 11.681µs
X11 event
new render tick timer. lag: 13.926µs
X11 event
```
Note the `lag: 56ms`: that's the difference between when we wanted to
execute the callback that enqueues another render and when it ran.
Longer lags are possible, this is just the first one I grabbed from the
logs.
Now, compare this with the logs **after this change**:
```
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
new render tick timer. lag: 36.051µs
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
X11 event
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
runnable.run()
```
In-between many `runnable.run()` we'll always handle events.
So, in essence, what this change does is to introduce 2 priorities into
the X11 event queue:
- high: X11 events (user events, render events, ...), render tick, XIM
events, ...
- low: all async rust code
I've tested this with a debug build and release build and I think the
app now feels more responsive. It doesn't feel perfect still, especially
in the slow debug builds, but I couldn't observe 10s lockups anymore.
Since it's a pretty small change, I think we should go for it and see
how it behaves.
Thanks to @maan2003 this now also includes the same change to Wayland.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: maan2003 <manmeetmann2003@gmail.com>
This PR is an internal refactor in preparation for remote editing. It
restructures the public interface of `Worktree`, reducing the number of
call sites that assume that a worktree is local or remote.
* The Project no longer calls `worktree.as_local_mut().unwrap()` in code
paths related to basic file operations
* Fewer code paths in the app rely on the worktree's `LocalSnapshot`
* Worktree-related RPC message handling is more fully encapsulated by
the `Worktree` type.
to do:
* [x] file manipulation operations
* [x] sending worktree updates when sharing
for later
* opening buffers
* updating open buffers upon worktree changes
Release Notes:
- N/A