Problem:
In autocmd examples, using "args" as the event-object name is vague and
may be confused with a user-command.
Solution:
Use "ev" as the conventional event-object name.
Problem:
Regression from b99cdd0:
Pull diagnostics (from `textDocument/diagnostic`) and push diagnostics
(from `textDocument/publishDiagnostics`) use the same namespace, which
is a problem when using language servers that publish two different sets
of diagnostics on push vs pull, like rust-analyzer (see
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/18709#issuecomment-2551394047).
Solution:
Rename `is_pull` to `pull_id` which accepts a pull namespace instead of
just a boolean.
- Refactor LSP client to use unified provider-based capability lookup for
diagnostics and other features.
- Introduce `_provider_value_get` to abstract capability retrieval,
supporting both static and dynamic registrations.
- Update diagnostic handling and protocol mappings to leverage
provider-centric logic.
Problem:
Some LSP method handlers were making requests without specifying a
bufnr, defaulting to 0 (current). This works in most cases but
fails when client attaches to background buffers, causing
assertions in handlers to fail.
Solution:
Ensure bufnr is passed to Client.request for buffer-local methods.
**Problem:** For unchanged document diagnostic reports, the `resultId`
is ignored completely, even though it should still be saved for the
request (in fact, the spec marks it as mandatory for unchanged reports,
so it should be extra important).
**Solution:** Always store the `resultId`.
This commit allows users to jump to the location specified in a
diagnostic's `relatedInformation`, using `gf` from within the
`open_float` window. The cursor need only be on line that displays the
related info.
Problem:
`vim.diagnostic.set()` doesn't actually accept a list of
`vim.Diagnostic` as internally `vim.diagnostic.set()` normalizes the
diagnostics and this normalization is assumed throughout the module.
Solution:
- Add a new type `vim.Diagnostic.Set` which is the input to `vim.diagnostic.set()`
- `col` is now an optional field and defaults to `0` to be consistent
with `vim.diagnostic.match()`.
- Change `table.insert(t, x)` to `table[#table + 1] = x` for improved
type checking.
**Problem:** For multiline diagnostics, the end column was improperly
calculated by checking the byte index of the character position on the
*start* line.
**Solution:** Calculate the byte index for end_col using the *end* line.
Problem:
Users of the Roslyn (C#) LSP have encountered significant delays when
retrieving pull diagnostics in large documents while using Neovim. For
instance, diagnostics in a 2000-line .cs file can take over 20 seconds
to display after edits in Neovim, whereas in VS Code, diagnostics for
the same file are displayed almost instantly.
As [mparq noted](https://github.com/seblj/roslyn.nvim/issues/93#issuecomment-2508940330)
in https://github.com/seblj/roslyn.nvim/issues/93, VS Code leverages
additional parameters specified in the [LSP documentation for
textDocument/diagnostic](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#documentDiagnosticParams),
specifically:
- previousResultId
- identifier
Solution:
When requesting diagnostics, Neovim should include the
`previousResultId` and `identifier` parameters as part of the request.
These parameters enable the server to utilize caching and return
incremental results.
Support for maintaining state is already present in the
[textDocument/semanticTokens implementation](8f84167c30/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/semantic_tokens.lua (L289)).
A similar mechanism can be implemented in `textDocument/diagnostic` handler.
Problem:
LSP spec uses the term "position encoding" where we say "offset encoding".
Solution:
- Rename it everywhere except `vim.lsp.Client.offset_encoding` (which would be breaking).
- Mention "position encoding" in the documentation for `vim.lsp.Client.offset_encoding`.
- Partition the handlers in vim.lsp.handlers as:
- client to server response handlers (RCS)
- server to client request handlers (RSC)
- server to client notification handlers (NSC)
Note use string indexes instead of protocol.methods for improved
typing in LuaLS (tip: use hover on RCS, RSC or NSC).
* deprecate old signatures
* move to new str_byteindex/str_utfindex signature
* use single-underscore name (double-underscore is reserved for Lua itself)
`buf.code_action` always included diagnostics on a given line from all
clients. Servers should only receive diagnostics they published, and in
the exact same format they sent it.
Should fix https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/29500
- Added `@inlinedoc` so single use Lua types can be inlined into the
functions docs. E.g.
```lua
--- @class myopts
--- @inlinedoc
---
--- Documentation for some field
--- @field somefield integer
--- @param opts myOpts
function foo(opts)
end
```
Will be rendered as
```
foo(opts)
Parameters:
- {opts} (table) Object with the fields:
- somefield (integer) Documentation
for some field
```
- Marked many classes with with `@nodoc` or `(private)`.
We can eventually introduce these when we want to.
Problem:
The documentation flow (`gen_vimdoc.py`) has several issues:
- it's not very versatile
- depends on doxygen
- doesn't work well with Lua code as it requires an awkward filter script to convert it into pseudo-C.
- The intermediate XML files and filters makes it too much like a rube goldberg machine.
Solution:
Re-implement the flow using Lua, LPEG and treesitter.
- `gen_vimdoc.py` is now replaced with `gen_vimdoc.lua` and replicates a portion of the logic.
- `lua2dox.lua` is gone!
- No more XML files.
- Doxygen is now longer used and instead we now use:
- LPEG for comment parsing (see `scripts/luacats_grammar.lua` and `scripts/cdoc_grammar.lua`).
- LPEG for C parsing (see `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua`)
- Lua patterns for Lua parsing (see `scripts/luacats_parser.lua`).
- Treesitter for Markdown parsing (see `scripts/text_utils.lua`).
- The generated `runtime/doc/*.mpack` files have been removed.
- `scripts/gen_eval_files.lua` now instead uses `scripts/cdoc_parser.lua` directly.
- Text wrapping is implemented in `scripts/text_utils.lua` and appears to produce more consistent results (the main contributer to the diff of this change).
Problem:
`vim.lsp.diagnostic.on_diagnostic` accepts an undocumented severity_limit
option which is widely used.
Solution:
Deprecate it in favour of `{min = severity}` used in `vim.diagnostic`.
Since this is undocumented, the schedule for removal is accelerated to
0.11.