## Summary
- Properly fix the race condition identified in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11039. Instead of running the
version of Ruff we're testing by invoking `cargo run --release` on each
generated source file, we either (1) accept a path to an executable on
the command line or (2) if that's not specified, we run `cargo build
--release` once at the start and then invoke the executable found in
`target/release/ruff` directly.
- Now that the race condition is properly fixed, remove the workaround
for the race condition added in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11039.
- Also allow users to pass in an executable to compare against for the
`--only-new-bugs` argument (previously it was hardcoded to always
compare against the version of Ruff installed into the Python
environment)
- Use `argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter` as the formatter class
rather than `argparse.RawTextHelpFormatter`. This means that long help
texts for the individual arguments will be wrapped to a sensible width.
- On completion of the script, indicate success or failure of the script
overall by raising `SytemExit` with the appropriate exit code.
- Add myself as a codeowner for the script
## Summary
I happened to notice that we box `TypeParams` on `StmtClassDef` but not
on `StmtFunctionDef` and wondered why, since `StmtFunctionDef` is bigger
and sets the size of `Stmt`.
@charliermarsh found that at the time we started boxing type params on
classes, classes were the largest statement type (see #6275), but that's
no longer true.
So boxing type-params also on functions reduces the overall size of
`Stmt`.
## Test Plan
The `<=` size tests are a bit irritating (since their failure doesn't
tell you the actual size), but I manually confirmed that the size is
actually 120 now.
Occasionally you intentionally have iterables of differing lengths. The
rule permits this by explicitly adding `strict=False`, but this was not
documented.
## Summary
The rule does not currently document how to avoid it when having
differing length iterables is intentional. This PR adds that to the rule
documentation.
## Summary
This fixes a bug where the parser would panic when there is a "gap" in
the token source.
What's a gap?
The reason it's `<=` instead of just `==` is because there could be
whitespaces between
the two tokens. For example:
```python
# last token end
# | current token (newline) start
# v v
def foo \n
# ^
# assume there's trailing whitespace here
```
Or, there could tokens that are considered "trivia" and thus aren't
emitted by the token
source. These are comments and non-logical newlines. For example:
```python
# last token end
# v
def foo # comment\n
# ^ current token (newline) start
```
In either of the above cases, there's a "gap" between the end of the
last token and start
of the current token.
## Test Plan
Add test cases and update the snapshots.
## Summary
This PR adds a new `Clause::Case` and uses it to parse the body of a
`case` block. Earlier, it was using `Match` which would give an
incorrect error message like:
```
|
1 | match subject:
2 | case 1:
3 | case 2: ...
| ^^^^ Syntax Error: Expected an indented block after `match` statement
|
```
## Test Plan
Add test case and update the snapshot.
Add pylint rule invalid-hash-returned (PLE0309)
See https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/970 for rules
Test Plan: `cargo test`
TBD: from the description: "Strictly speaking `bool` is a subclass of
`int`, thus returning `True`/`False` is valid. To be consistent with
other rules (e.g.
[PLE0305](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10962)
invalid-index-returned), ruff will raise, compared to pylint which will
not raise."
## Summary
This PR fixes the bug in with items parsing where it would fail to
recognize that the parenthesized expression is part of a large binary
expression.
## Test Plan
Add test cases and verified the snapshots.
## Summary
This PR fixes the bug in parenthesized with items parsing where the `if`
expression would result into a syntax error.
The reason being that once we identify that the ambiguous left
parenthesis belongs to the context expression, the parser converts the
parsed with item into an equivalent expression. Then, the parser
continuous to parse any postfix expressions. Now, attribute, subscript,
and call are taken into account as they're grouped in
`parse_postfix_expression` but `if` expression has it's own parsing
function.
Use `parse_if_expression` once all postfix expressions have been parsed.
Ideally, I think that `if` could be included in postfix expression
parsing as they can be chained as well (`x if True else y if True else
z`).
## Test Plan
Add test cases and verified the snapshots.
## Summary
This PR fixes a bug in the new parser which involves the parser context
w.r.t. for statement. This is specifically around the `in` keyword which
can be present in the target expression and shouldn't be considered to
be part of the `for` statement header. Ideally it should use a context
which is passed between functions, thus using a call stack to set /
unset a specific variant which will be done in a follow-up PR as it
requires some amount of refactor.
## Test Plan
Add test cases and update the snapshots.
(Supersedes #9152, authored by @LaBatata101)
## Summary
This PR replaces the current parser generated from LALRPOP to a
hand-written recursive descent parser.
It also updates the grammar for [PEP
646](https://peps.python.org/pep-0646/) so that the parser outputs the
correct AST. For example, in `data[*x]`, the index expression is now a
tuple with a single starred expression instead of just a starred
expression.
Beyond the performance improvements, the parser is also error resilient
and can provide better error messages. The behavior as seen by any
downstream tools isn't changed. That is, the linter and formatter can
still assume that the parser will _stop_ at the first syntax error. This
will be updated in the following months.
For more details about the change here, refer to the PR corresponding to
the individual commits and the release blog post.
## Test Plan
Write _lots_ and _lots_ of tests for both valid and invalid syntax and
verify the output.
## Acknowledgements
- @MichaReiser for reviewing 100+ parser PRs and continuously providing
guidance throughout the project
- @LaBatata101 for initiating the transition to a hand-written parser in
#9152
- @addisoncrump for implementing the fuzzer which helped
[catch](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10903)
[a](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10910)
[lot](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10966)
[of](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10896)
[bugs](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10877)
---------
Co-authored-by: Victor Hugo Gomes <labatata101@linuxmail.org>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
The following client settings have been introduced to the language
server:
* `lint.preview`
* `format.preview`
* `lint.select`
* `lint.extendSelect`
* `lint.ignore`
* `exclude`
* `lineLength`
`exclude` and `lineLength` apply to both the linter and formatter.
This does not actually use the settings yet, but makes them available
for future use.
## Test Plan
Snapshot tests have been updated.
## Summary
A setup guide has been written for NeoVim under a new
`crates/ruff_server/docs/setup` folder, where future setup guides will
also go. This setup guide was adapted from the [`ruff-lsp`
guide](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-lsp?tab=readme-ov-file#example-neovim).
---------
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
Add pylint rule invalid-length-returned (PLE0303)
See https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/970 for rules
Test Plan: `cargo test`
TBD: from the description: "Strictly speaking `bool` is a subclass of
`int`, thus returning `True`/`False` is valid. To be consistent with
other rules (e.g.
[PLE0305](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10962)
invalid-index-returned), ruff will raise, compared to pylint which will
not raise."
## Summary
If the user is analyzing a script (i.e., we have no module path), it
seems reasonable to use the script name when trying to identify paths to
objects defined _within_ the script.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10960.
## Test Plan
Ran:
```shell
check --isolated --select=B008 \
--config 'lint.flake8-bugbear.extend-immutable-calls=["test.A"]' \
test.py
```
On:
```python
class A: pass
def f(a=A()):
pass
```
## Summary
The server now requests a [workspace diagnostic
refresh](https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#diagnostic_refresh)
when a configuration file gets changed. This means that diagnostics for
all open files will be automatically re-requested by the client on a
config change.
## Test Plan
You can test this by opening several files in VS Code, setting `select`
in your file configuration to `[]`, and observing that the diagnostics
go away once the file is saved (besides any `Pylance` diagnostics).
Restore it to what it was before, and you should see the diagnostics
automatically return once a save happens.
## Summary
I've added support for configuring the `ruff check` output file via the
environment variable `RUFF_OUTPUT_FILE` akin to #1731.
This is super useful when, e.g., generating a [GitLab code quality
report](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/testing/code_quality.html#implement-a-custom-tool)
while running Ruff as a pre-commit hook. Usually, `ruff check` should
print its human-readable output to `stdout`, but when run through
`pre-commit` _in a GitLab CI job_ it should write its output in `gitlab`
format to a file. So, to override these two settings only during CI,
environment variables come handy, and `RUFF_OUTPUT_FORMAT` already
exists but `RUFF_OUTPUT_FILE` has been missing.
A (simplified) GitLab CI job config for this scenario might look like
this:
```yaml
pre-commit:
stage: test
image: python
variables:
RUFF_OUTPUT_FILE: gl-code-quality-report.json
RUFF_OUTPUT_FORMAT: gitlab
before_script:
- pip install pre-commit
script:
- pre-commit run --all-files --show-diff-on-failure
artifacts:
reports:
codequality: gl-code-quality-report.json
```
## Test Plan
I tested it manually.
## Summary
This PR switches more callsites of `SemanticModel::is_builtin` to move
over to the new methods I introduced in #10919, which are more concise
and more accurate. I missed these calls in the first PR.
## Summary
Fixes#10866.
Introduces the `show_err_msg!` macro which will send a message to be
shown as a popup to the client via the `window/showMessage` LSP method.
## Test Plan
Insert various `show_err_msg!` calls in common code paths (for example,
at the beginning of `event_loop`) and confirm that these messages appear
in your editor.
To test that panicking works correctly, add this to the top of the `fn
run` definition in
`crates/ruff_server/src/server/api/requests/execute_command.rs`:
```rust
panic!("This should appear");
```
Then, try running a command like `Ruff: Format document` from the
command palette (`Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+P`). You should see the following
messages appear:
