Also skips indexing files that don't have a suffix that indicates a
known language, and skips when the language doesn't have an outline
grammar.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Agus <agus@zed.dev>
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/38690Closes#37353
### Background
On Windows, paths are normally separated by `\`, unlike mac and linux
where they are separated by `/`. When editing code in a project that
uses a different path style than your local system (e.g. remoting from
Windows to Linux, using WSL, and collaboration between windows and unix
users), the correct separator for a path may differ from the "native"
separator.
Previously, to work around this, Zed converted paths' separators in
numerous places. This was applied to both absolute and relative paths,
leading to incorrect conversions in some cases.
### Solution
Many code paths in Zed use paths that are *relative* to either a
worktree root or a git repository. This PR introduces a dedicated type
for these paths called `RelPath`, which stores the path in the same way
regardless of host platform, and offers `Path`-like manipulation APIs.
RelPath supports *displaying* the path using either separator, so that
we can display paths in a style that is determined at runtime based on
the current project.
The representation of absolute paths is left untouched, for now.
Absolute paths are different from relative paths because (except in
contexts where we know that the path refers to the local filesystem)
they should generally be treated as opaque strings. Currently we use a
mix of types for these paths (std::path::Path, String, SanitizedPath).
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Cole Miller <cole@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Tripp <petertripp@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <me@lukaswirth.dev>
We had a frequent panic when the agent was using our edit file tool. The
root cause was that we were constructing a `BufferDiff` with
`BufferDiff::new`, then calling `set_base_text`, but not waiting for
that asynchronous operation to finish. This means there was a window of
time where the diff's base text was set to the initial value of
`""`--that's not a problem in itself, but it was possible for us to call
`PendingDiff::update` during that window, which calls
`BufferDiff::update_diff`, which calls
`BufferDiffSnapshot::new_with_base_buffer`, which takes two arguments
`base_text` and `base_text_snapshot` that are supposed to represent the
same text. We were getting the first of those arguments from the
`base_text` field of `PendingDiff`, which is set immediately to the
target base text without waiting for `BufferDiff::set_base_text` to run
to completion; and the second from the `BufferDiff` itself, which still
has the empty base text during that window.
As a result of that mismatch, we could end up adding `DeletedHunk` diff
transforms to the multibuffer for the diff card even though the
multibuffer's base text was empty, ultimately leading to a panic very
far away in rendering code.
I've fixed this by adding a new `BufferDiff` constructor for the case
where the buffer contents and the base text are (initially) the same,
like for the diff cards, and so we don't need an async diff calculation.
I also added a debug assertion to catch the basic issue here earlier,
when `BufferDiffSnapshot::new_with_base_buffer` is called with two base
texts that don't match.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad <conrad@zed.dev>
The loading diff animation can be jarring for external agents because
they stream the diff at the same time the tool call is pushed, so it's
only displayed while we're asynchronously calculating the diff. We'll
now only show it for the native agent.
Also, we'll now only update the diff when it changes, which avoids
unnecessarily hiding it for a few frames.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Co-authored-by: Bennet Bo Fenner <bennetbo@gmx.de>
This removes around 900 unnecessary clones, ranging from cloning a few
ints all the way to large data structures and images.
A lot of these were fixed using `cargo clippy --fix --workspace
--all-targets`, however it often breaks other lints and needs to be run
again. This was then followed up with some manual fixing.
I understand this is a large diff, but all the changes are pretty
trivial. Rust is doing some heavy lifting here for us. Once I get it up
to speed with main, I'd appreciate this getting merged rather sooner
than later.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This pull request introduces title generation and history replaying. We
still need to wire up the rest of the history but this gets us very
close. I extracted a lot of this code from `agent2-history` because that
branch was starting to get long-lived and there were lots of changes
since we started.
Release Notes:
- N/A