Backports #24550.
Adjusts test to expect that didChangeWatchedFiles is *not* registered if
client `capabilities` is nil (as it's not enabled by default for v0.9).
fix(codelens): add buffer and line checks before displaying codelens
(cherry picked from commit 928dc33053)
Co-authored-by: Rohit Sukumaran <rohit.sukumaran@kredx.com>
fix(lsp): don't register didChangeWatchedFiles when capability not set
Some LSP servers (tailwindcss, rome) are known to request registration
for `workspace/didChangeWatchedFiles` even when the corresponding client
capability does not advertise support. This change adds an extra check
in the `client/registerCapability` handler not to start a watch unless
the client capability is set appropriately.
(cherry picked from commit 78510add5b)
Co-authored-by: Jon Huhn <huhnjon@gmail.com>
fix(lsp): fix relative patterns for `workspace/didChangeWatchedFiles`
(cherry picked from commit 10f102a3a3)
Co-authored-by: Jon Huhn <huhnjon@gmail.com>
perf(lsp): load buffer contents once when processing semantic token responses
Using _get_line_byte_from_position() for each token's boundaries was a
pretty huge bottleneck, since that function would load individual buffer
lines via nvim_buf_get_lines() (plus a lot of extra overhead). So each
token caused two calls to nvim_buf_get_lines() (once for the start
position, and once for the end position).
For semantic tokens, we only attach to buffers that have already been
loaded, so we can safely just get all the lines for the entire buffer at
once, and lift the rest of the _get_line_byte_from_position()
implementation directly while bypassing the part that loads the buffer
line.
While I was looking at get_lines (used by _get_line_byte_from_position),
I noticed that we were checking for non-file URIs before we even looked
to see if we already had the buffer loaded. Moving the buffer-loaded
check to be the first thing done in get_lines() more than halved the
average time spent transforming the token list into highlight ranges vs
when it was still using _get_line_byte_from_position. I ended up
improving that loop more by not using get_lines, but figured the
performance improvement it provided was worth leaving in.
(cherry picked from commit dc38eafab5)
Co-authored-by: John Drouhard <john@drouhard.dev>
perf(lsp): process semantic tokens response in a coroutine that yields every 5ms
(cherry picked from commit 46cd1d957c)
Co-authored-by: John Drouhard <john@drouhard.dev>
Problem:
LSP docs hover (textDocument/hover) doesn't handle HTML escape seqs in markdown.
Solution:
Convert common HTML escape seqs to a nicer form, to display in the float.
closees #22757
Signed-off-by: Kasama <robertoaall@gmail.com>
Problem:
When LSP client renames a directory, opened buffers in the edfitor are not
renamed or closed. Then `:wall` shows errors.
https://github.com/neovim/neovim/blob/master/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/util.lua#L776
works correctly if you try to rename a single file, but doesn't delete old
buffers with `old_fname` is a dir.
Solution:
Update the logic in runtime/lua/vim/lsp/util.lua:rename()
Fixes#22617
Although using `buffer://` for unsaved file buffers fixes issues with
language servers like eclipse.jdt.ls or ansible-language-server, it
breaks completion and signature help for clangd.
A regression is worse than a fix for something else, so this reverts
commit 896d672736.
The spec change is also still in dicussion, see
https://github.com/microsoft/language-server-protocol/pull/1679#discussion_r1130704886
This commit replaces the usage of math.floor((lo + hi) / 2) with the faster and equivalent bit.rshift(lo + hi, 1) for calculating the midpoint in binary search.
feat(lsp)!: change semantic token highlighting
Change the default highlights used, and add more highlights per token.
Add an LspTokenUpdate event and a highlight_token function.
:Inspect now shows any highlights applied by token highlighting rules,
default or user-defined.
BREAKING CHANGE: change the default highlight groups used by semantic
token highlighting.
Fixes:
Error SERVER_REQUEST_HANDLER_ERROR: "...di/dev/neovim/neovim/runtime/lua/vim/lsp/_watchfiles.lua
:200: bad argument #1 to 'ipairs' (table expected, got nil)"
Language servers can be started without root_dir or workspace_folders.
redraw! redraws the entire screen instead of just the windows with
the buffer which were actually changed.
I considered trying to calculating the range for the delta
but it looks tricky. Could a follow-up.
`vim.lsp.buf.format()` silently did nothing if no servers supported
`textDocument/rangeFormatting` when formatting with a range.
Issue found by `@hwrd:matrix.org` in the Matrix chat.
According to the specification `workspace/applyEdit` must be called with
`ApplyWorkspaceEditParams`.
So far the client just returned, which could lead to a misleading error
on the server side because `workspace/applyEdit` must respond with a
`ApplyWorkspaceEditResult`.
This adds an assertion to clarify that the server is violating the
specification.
See https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/21925
This small changes just ensures that if you're using `convert_input_to_markdown_lines`
without `contents` you don't get a warning (when using something like neodev) that
there is an expected second param, since it can be nil.
Small, but I was getting warnings about my usage of
`vim.lsp.buf_notify(bufnr, method, {example = example})` since the docs
say that `params` must be a string, however this can really be anything
when it's passed to `rpc.notify` since we just end up calling
`vim.json.encode(payload)` on it. This fixes the docs in those two
places and regenerates them.
Problem:
No easy way to position a LSP hover window relative to mouse.
Solution:
Introduce another option to the `relative` key in `nvim_open_win()`.
With this PR it should be possible to override the handler and do something
similar to this https://github.com/neovim/neovim/pull/19481#issuecomment-1193248674
to have hover information displayed from the mouse.
Test case:
```lua
local util = require('vim.lsp.util')
local function make_position_param(window, offset_encoding)
window = window or 0
local buf = vim.api.nvim_win_get_buf(window)
local row, col
local mouse = vim.fn.getmousepos()
row = mouse.line
col = mouse.column
offset_encoding = offset_encoding or util._get_offset_encoding(buf)
row = row - 1
local line = vim.api.nvim_buf_get_lines(buf, row, row + 1, true)[1]
if not line then
return { line = 0, character = 0 }
end
if #line < col then
return { line = 0, character = 0 }
end
col = util._str_utfindex_enc(line, col, offset_encoding)
return { line = row, character = col }
end
local make_params = function(window, offset_encoding)
window = window or 0
local buf = vim.api.nvim_win_get_buf(window)
offset_encoding = offset_encoding or util._get_offset_encoding(buf)
return {
textDocument = util.make_text_document_params(buf),
position = make_position_param(window, offset_encoding),
}
end
local hover_timer = nil
vim.o.mousemoveevent = true
vim.keymap.set({ '', 'i' }, '<MouseMove>', function()
if hover_timer then
hover_timer:close()
end
hover_timer = vim.defer_fn(function()
hover_timer = nil
local params = make_params()
vim.lsp.buf_request(
0,
'textDocument/hover',
params,
vim.lsp.with(vim.lsp.handlers.hover, {
silent = true,
focusable = false,
relative = 'mouse',
})
)
end, 500)
return '<MouseMove>'
end, { expr = true })
```
For users using vim.lsp.start it can be useful to get an
overview of active client that is less verbose than a full `:lua
=vim.lsp.get_active_clients()`
Currently once you retrieve the lenses you're pretty much stuck with
them as saving new lenses is additive.
Adding a dedicated method to reset lenses allows users to toggle lenses
on/off which can be useful for language servers where they are noisy or
expensive and you only want to see them temporary.
Fixes#21543
This should provide a better user experience when appending or prepending text to a word that has a semantic token extmark. More often than not, the appended/prepended text to the word will end up becoming part of the token anyway, so just use that extmark as the user types.
Apply semantic token modifiers as separate extmarks with corresponding
highlight groups (e.g., `@readonly`). This is a low-effort PR to enable
the most common use cases (applying, e.g., italics or backgrounds on top
of type highlights; language-specific fallbacks like `@global.lua` are
also available). This can be replaced by more complicated selector-style
themes later on.
Instead of testing for every possible modifier type, only test bits up
to the highest set in the token array. Saves many bit ops and
comparisons when there are no modifiers or when the highest set bit is a
lower bit than the highest possible in the legend on average.
Can be further simplified when non-luaJIT gets the full bit module (see #21222)