## Summary
Garbage collect ASTs once we are done checking a given file. Queries
with a cross-file dependency on the AST will reparse the file on demand.
This reduces ty's peak memory usage by ~20-30%.
The primary change of this PR is adding a `node_index` field to every
AST node, that is assigned by the parser. `ParsedModule` can use this to
create a flat index of AST nodes any time the file is parsed (or
reparsed). This allows `AstNodeRef` to simply index into the current
instance of the `ParsedModule`, instead of storing a pointer directly.
The indices are somewhat hackily (using an atomic integer) assigned by
the `parsed_module` query instead of by the parser directly. Assigning
the indices in source-order in the (recursive) parser turns out to be
difficult, and collecting the nodes during semantic indexing is
impossible as `SemanticIndex` does not hold onto a specific
`ParsedModuleRef`, which the pointers in the flat AST are tied to. This
means that we have to do an extra AST traversal to assign and collect
the nodes into a flat index, but the small performance impact (~3% on
cold runs) seems worth it for the memory savings.
Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/214.
## Summary
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/214 will require a couple
invasive changes that I would like to get merged even before garbage
collection is fully implemented (to avoid rebasing):
- `ParsedModule` can no longer be dereferenced directly. Instead you
need to load a `ParsedModuleRef` to access the AST, which requires a
reference to the salsa database (as it may require re-parsing the AST if
it was collected).
- `AstNodeRef` can only be dereferenced with the `node` method, which
takes a reference to the `ParsedModuleRef`. This allows us to encode the
fact that ASTs do not live as long as the database and may be collected
as soon a given instance of a `ParsedModuleRef` is dropped. There are a
number of places where we currently merge the `'db` and `'ast`
lifetimes, so this requires giving some types/functions two separate
lifetime parameters.
## Summary
This PR unifies the ruff `Message` enum variants for syntax errors and
rule violations into a single `Message` struct consisting of a shared
`db::Diagnostic` and some additional, optional fields used for some rule
violations.
This version of `Message` is nearly a drop-in replacement for
`ruff_diagnostics::Diagnostic`, which is the next step I have in mind
for the refactor.
I think this is also a useful checkpoint because we could possibly add
some of these optional fields to the new `Diagnostic` type. I think
we've previously discussed wanting support for `Fix`es, but the other
fields seem less relevant, so we may just need to preserve the `Message`
wrapper for a bit longer.
## Test plan
Existing tests
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
This does a deeper removal of the `lint:` prefix by removing the
`DiagnosticId::as_str` method and replacing it with `as_concise_str`. We
remove the associated error type and simplify the `Display` impl for
`DiagnosticId` as well.
This turned out to catch a `lint:` that was still in the diagnostic
output: the part that says why a lint is enabled.
We just set the ID on the `Message` and it just does what we want in
this case. I think I didn't do this originally because I was trying to
preserve the existing rendering? I'm not sure. I might have just missed
this method.
In a subsequent commit, we're going to start using `annotate-snippets`'s
functionality for diagnostic IDs in the rendering. As part of doing
that, I wanted to remove this special casing of an empty message. I did
that independently to see what, if anything, would change. (The changes
look fine to me. They'll be tweaked again in the next commit along with
a bunch of others.)
## Summary
This PR is a first step toward integration of the new `Diagnostic` type
into ruff. There are two main changes:
- A new `UnifiedFile` enum wrapping `File` for red-knot and a
`SourceFile` for ruff
- ruff's `Message::SyntaxError` variant is now a `Diagnostic` instead of
a `SyntaxErrorMessage`
The second of these changes was mostly just a proof of concept for the
first, and it went pretty smoothly. Converting `DiagnosticMessage`s will
be most of the work in replacing `Message` entirely.
## Test Plan
Existing tests, which show no changes.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
This is done in what appears to be the same way as Ruff: we get the CWD,
strip the prefix from the path if possible, and use that. If stripping
the prefix fails, then we print the full path as-is.
Fixes#17233
Summary
--
This PR extends semantic syntax error detection to red-knot. The main
changes here are:
1. Adding `SemanticSyntaxChecker` and `Vec<SemanticSyntaxError>` fields
to the `SemanticIndexBuilder`
2. Calling `SemanticSyntaxChecker::visit_stmt` and `visit_expr` in the
`SemanticIndexBuilder`'s `visit_stmt` and `visit_expr` methods
3. Implementing `SemanticSyntaxContext` for `SemanticIndexBuilder`
4. Adding new mdtests to test the context implementation and show
diagnostics
(3) is definitely the trickiest and required (I think) a minor addition
to the `SemanticIndexBuilder`. I tried to look around for existing code
performing the necessary checks, but I definitely could have missed
something or misused the existing code even when I found it.
There's still one TODO around `global` statement handling. I don't think
there's an existing way to look this up, but I'm happy to work on that
here or in a separate PR. This currently only affects detection of one
error (`LoadBeforeGlobalDeclaration` or
[PLE0118](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/load-before-global-declaration/)
in ruff), so it's not too big of a problem even if we leave the TODO.
Test Plan
--
New mdtests, as well as new errors for existing mdtests
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR extends version-related syntax error detection to red-knot. The
main changes here are:
1. Passing `ParseOptions` specifying a `PythonVersion` to parser calls
2. Adding a `python_version` method to the `Db` trait to make this
possible
3. Converting `UnsupportedSyntaxError`s to `Diagnostic`s
4. Updating existing mdtests to avoid unrelated syntax errors
My initial draft of (1) and (2) in #16090 instead tried passing a
`PythonVersion` down to every parser call, but @MichaReiser suggested
the `Db` approach instead
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16090#discussion_r1969198407),
and I think it turned out much nicer.
All of the new `python_version` methods look like this:
```rust
fn python_version(&self) -> ruff_python_ast::PythonVersion {
Program::get(self).python_version(self)
}
```
with the exception of the `TestDb` in `ruff_db`, which hard-codes
`PythonVersion::latest()`.
## Test Plan
Existing mdtests, plus a new mdtest to see at least one of the new
diagnostics.
This commit shuffles the reporting API around a little bit such that a
range is required, up front, when reporting a lint diagnostic. This in
turn enables us to make suppression checking eager.
In order to avoid callers needing to provide the range twice, we create
a primary annotation *without* a message inside the `Diagnostic`
encapsulated by the guard. We do this instead of requiring the message
up front because we're concerned about API complexity and the effort
involved in creating the message.
In order to provide a means of attaching a message to the primary
annotation, we expose a convenience API on `LintDiagnosticGuard` for
setting the message. This isn't generally possible for a `Diagnostic`,
but since a `LintDiagnosticGuard` knows how the `Diagnostic` was
constructed, we can offer this API correctly.
It strikes me that it might be easy to forget to attach a primary
annotation message, btu I think this the "least" bad failure mode. And
in particular, it should be somewhat obvious that it's missing once one
adds a snapshot test for how the diagnostic renders.
Otherwise, this API gives us the ability to eagerly check whether a
diagnostic should be reported with nearly minimal information. It also
shouldn't have any footguns since it guarantees that the primary
annotation is tied to the file in the typing context. And it keeps
things pretty simple: callers only need to provide what is actually
strictly necessary to make a diagnostic.
This will enable us to provide an API on `LintDiagnosticGuard` for
setting the primary annotation message. It will require an `unwrap()`,
but due to how `LintDiagnosticGuard` will build a `Diagnostic`, this
`unwrap()` will be guaranteed to succeed. (And it won't bubble out to
every user of `LintDiagnosticGuard`.)
This expands the set of types accepted for diagnostic messages. Instead
of only `std::fmt::Display` impls, we now *also* accept a concrete
`DiagnosticMessage`.
This will be useful to avoid unnecessary copies of every single
diagnostic message created via `InferContext::report_lint`. (I'll call
out how this helps in a subsequent commit.)
I added this accessor because tests want it, but we can also use it in
other places internally. It's a little nicer because it does the
`as_deref()` for you.
This finally completes the deletion of all old diagnostic types.
We do this by migrating the second (and last) use of secondary
diagnostic messages: to highlight the return type of a function
definition when its return value is inconsistent with the type.
Like the last diagnostic, we do actually change the message here a bit.
We don't need a sub-diagnostic here, and we can instead just add a
secondary annotation to highlight the return type.
In the new diagnostic data model, we really should have a main
diagnostic message *and* a primary span (with an optional message
attached to it) for every diagnostic.
In this commit, I try to make this true for the "revealed type"
diagnostic. Instead of the annotation saying both "revealed type is"
and also the revealed type itself, the annotation is now just the
revealed type and the main diagnostic message is "Revealed type."
I expect this may be controversial. I'm open to doing something
different. I tried to avoid redundancy, but maybe this is a special case
where we want the redundancy. I'm honestly not sure. I do *like* how it
looks with this commit, but I'm not working with Red Knot's type
checking daily, so my opinion doesn't count for much.
This did also require some tweaking to concise diagnostic formatting in
order to preserve the essential information.
This commit doesn't update every relevant snapshot. Just a few. I split
the rest out into the next commit.
I initially split the lifetime out into three distinct lifetimes on
near-instinct because I moved the struct into the public API. But
because they are all shared borrows, and because there are no other APIs
on `DisplayDiagnostic` to access individual fields (and probably never
will be), it's probably fine to just specify one lifetime. Because of
subtyping, the one lifetime will be the shorter of the three.
There's also the point that `ruff_db` isn't _really_ a public API, since
it isn't a library that others depend on. So my instinct is probably a
bit off there.
It was already using this approach internally, so this is "just" a
matter of rejiggering the public API of `Diagnostic`.
We were previously writing directly to a `std::io::Write` since it was
thought that this worked better with the linear typing fakery. Namely,
it increased confidence that the diagnostic rendering was actually
written somewhere useful, instead of just being converted to a string
that could potentially get lost.
For reasons discussed in #17130, the linear type fakery was removed.
And so there is less of a reason to require a `std::io::Write`
implementation for diagnostic rendering. Indeed, this would sometimes
result in `unwrap()` calls when one wants to convert to a `String`.