## Summary
Follow-up to #11902
This PR simplifies the `LinterResult` struct by avoiding the generic and
not store the `ParseError`.
This is possible because the callers already have access to the
`ParseError` via the `Parsed` output. This also means that we can
simplify the return type of `check_path` and avoid the generic `T` on
`LinterResult`.
## Test Plan
`cargo insta test`
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11587.
## Test Plan
- Added a lint error to `test_server.py` in `vscode-ruff`.
- Validated that, prior to this change, diagnostics appeared in the
file.
- Validated that, with this change, no diagnostics were shown.
- Validated that, with this change, no diagnostics were fixed on-save.
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10858.
`ruff server` now supports `*.ipynb` (aka Jupyter Notebook) files.
Extensive internal changes have been made to facilitate this, which I've
done some work to contextualize with documentation and an pre-review
that highlights notable sections of the code.
`*.ipynb` cells should behave similarly to `*.py` documents, with one
major exception. The format command `ruff.applyFormat` will only apply
to the currently selected notebook cell - if you want to format an
entire notebook document, use `Format Notebook` from the VS Code context
menu.
## Test Plan
The VS Code extension does not yet have Jupyter Notebook support
enabled, so you'll first need to enable it manually. To do this,
checkout the `pre-release` branch and modify `src/common/server.ts` as
follows:
Before:

After:

I recommend testing this PR with large, complicated notebook files. I
used notebook files from [this popular
repository](https://github.com/jakevdp/PythonDataScienceHandbook/tree/master/notebooks)
in my preliminary testing.
The main thing to test is ensuring that notebook cells behave the same
as Python documents, besides the aforementioned issue with
`ruff.applyFormat`. You should also test adding and deleting cells (in
particular, deleting all the code cells and ensure that doesn't break
anything), changing the kind of a cell (i.e. from markup -> code or vice
versa), and creating a new notebook file from scratch. Finally, you
should also test that source actions work as expected (and across the
entire notebook).
Note: `ruff.applyAutofix` and `ruff.applyOrganizeImports` are currently
broken for notebook files, and I suspect it has something to do with
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11248. Once this is fixed, I
will update the test plan accordingly.
---------
Co-authored-by: nolan <nolan.king90@gmail.com>
## Summary
Fixes#11185Fixes#11214
Document path and package information is now forwarded to the Ruff
linter, which allows `per-file-ignores` to correctly match against the
file name. This also fixes an issue where the import sorting rule didn't
distinguish between third-party and first-party packages since we didn't
pass in the package root.
## Test Plan
`per-file-ignores` should ignore files as expected. One quick way to
check is by adding this to your `pyproject.toml`:
```toml
[tool.ruff.lint.per-file-ignores]
"__init__.py" = ["ALL"]
```
Then, confirm that no diagnostics appear when you add code to an
`__init__.py` file (besides syntax errors).
The import sorting fix can be verified by failing to reproduce the
original issue - an `I001` diagnostic should not appear in
`other_module.py`.
## Summary
Fixes#11114.
As part of the `onClose` handler, we publish an empty array of
diagnostics for the document being closed, similar to
[`ruff-lsp`](187d7790be/ruff_lsp/server.py (L459-L464)).
This prevent phantom diagnostics from lingering after a document is
closed. We'll only do this if the client doesn't support pull
diagnostics, because otherwise clearing diagnostics is their
responsibility.
## Test Plan
Diagnostics should no longer appear for a document in the Problems tab
after the document is closed.
## Summary
This is a follow-up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10984 that
implements configuration resolution for editor configuration. By 'editor
configuration', I'm referring to the client settings that correspond to
Ruff configuration/options, like `preview`, `select`, and so on. These
will be combined with 'project configuration' (configuration taken from
project files such as `pyproject.toml`) to generate the final linter and
formatter settings used by `RuffSettings`. Editor configuration takes
priority over project configuration.
In a follow-up pull request, I'll implement a new client setting that
allows project configuration to override editor configuration, as per
[this issue](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-vscode/issues/425).
## Review guide
The first commit, e38966d8843becc7234fa7d46009c16af4ba41e9, is just
doing re-arrangement so that we can pass the right things to
`RuffSettings::resolve`. The actual resolution logic is in the second
commit, 0eec9ee75c10e5ec423bd9f5ce1764f4d7a5ad86. It might help to look
at these comments individually since the diff is rather messy.
## Test Plan
For the settings to show up in VS Code, you'll need to checkout this
branch: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-vscode/pull/456.
To test that the resolution for a specific setting works as expected,
run through the following scenarios, setting it in project and editor
configuration as needed:
| Set in project configuration? | Set in editor configuration? |
Expected Outcome |
|-------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| No | No | The editor should behave as if the setting was set to its
default value. |
| Yes | No | The editor should behave as if the setting was set to the
value in project configuration. |
| No | Yes | The editor should behave as if the setting was set to the
value in editor configuration. |
| Yes | Yes (but distinctive from project configuration) | The editor
should behave as if the setting was set to the value in editor
configuration. |
An exception to this is `extendSelect`, which does not have an analog in
TOML configuration. Instead, you should verify that `extendSelect`
amends the `select` setting. If `select` is set in both editor and
project configuration, `extendSelect` will only append to the `select`
value in editor configuration, so make sure to un-set it there if you're
testing `extendSelect` with `select` in project configuration.
## Summary
Fixes#11059
Several major editors don't support [pull
diagnostics](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#textDocument_pullDiagnostics),
a method of sending diagnostics to the client that was introduced in
version `0.3.17` of the specification. Until now, `ruff server` has only
used pull diagnostics, which resulted in diagnostics not being available
on Neovim and Helix, which don't support pull diagnostics yet (though
Neovim `10.0` will have support for this).
`ruff server` will now utilize the older method of sending diagnostics,
known as 'publish diagnostics', when pull diagnostics aren't supported
by the client. This involves re-linting a document every time it is
opened or modified, and then sending the diagnostics generated from that
lint to the client via the `textDocument/publishDiagnostics`
notification.
## Test Plan
The easiest way to test that this PR works is to check if diagnostics
show up on Neovim `<=0.9`.