* Potentially resolves#11619 (nondeterministic hashmap order across
different architectures) in F401 by replacing a hashmap with
nondeterministic traversal order with an ordered mapping.
I'm not sure how to test this with our CI/CD. I don't have an s390x
machine at home. Should I try it in Qemu?
## Summary
In an `__init__.py` file, it's not uncommon to lack a logical indent
(since it may just contain imports). In such cases, we were always
falling back to four-space indent. This PR adds detection for indents
within import groups.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11606.
## Summary
This PR aims to close#10095 by adding an option
`init-allow-undef-export` to the `pyflakes` settings. This option is
currently set to `true` such that behavior is kept identical.
But setting this option to `false` will lead to `F822` warnings to be
shown in all files, **including** `__init__.py` files.
As I've mentioned on #10095, I think `init-allow-undef-export=false`
would be the more user-friendly default option, as it creates fewer
surprises. @charliermarsh what do you think about making that the
default?
With this option in place, it's a single line fix for people that rely
on the old behavior.
And thinking longer term, for future major releases, one could probably
consider deprecating the option and eventually having people just `noqa`
these warnings if they are not wanted.
## Test Plan
I've added a `test_init_f822_enabled` test which repeats the test that
is done in the `init` test but this time with
`init-allow-undef-export=false` and the snap file correctly shows that
ruff will then trigger the otherwise suppressed F822 warning.
closes#10095
## Summary
Removed stray space in sample code snippet that is against ruff's own
default formatting rules.
This documentation appears on
https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/unused-import/
## Test Plan
This is a trivially obvious change, verifiable with `ruff format
--check`
## 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
- Implements `Y066` from `flake8-pyi` as `PYI066`
- Fixes `PYI006` not being raised for `elif` clauses. This would have
conflicted with PYI006's implementation, so decided to do it in the same
PR.
## Test Plan
`cargo test` / `cargo insta review`
* Add a module type, `ModuleTypeId`
* Add an attribute lookup method `get_member` for `Type`
* Only implemented for `ModuleTypeId` and `ClassTypeId`
* [x] Should this be a trait?
*Answer: no*
* [x] Uses `unwrap`, but we should remove that. Maybe add a new variant
to `QueryError`?
*Answer: Return `Option<Type>` as is done elsewhere*
* Add `infer_definition_type` case for `Import`
* Add `infer_expr_type` case for `Attribute`
* Add a test to exercise these
* [x] remove all NOTE/FIXME/TODO after discussing with reviewers
## Summary
This PR ensures that if a variable is bound via `global`, and then the
`global` is read, the originating variable is also marked as read. It's
not perfect, in that it won't detect _rebindings_, like:
```python
from app import redis_connection
def func():
global redis_connection
redis_connection = 1
redis_connection()
```
So, above, `redis_connection` is still marked as unused.
But it does avoid flagging `redis_connection` as unused in:
```python
from app import redis_connection
def func():
global redis_connection
redis_connection()
```
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11518.
## Summary
Follow up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11521
Removes the extra added complexity for catch all match cases. This
matches the implementation of plain `else` statements.
## Test Plan
Added new test cases.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR fixes the bug to avoid flattening the global-only settings for
the new server.
This was added in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11497, possibly
to correctly de-serialize an empty value (`{}`). But, this lead to a bug
where the configuration under the `settings` key was not being read for
global-only variant.
By using #[serde(default)], we ensure that the settings field in the
`GlobalOnly` variant is optional and that an empty JSON object `{}` is
correctly deserialized into `GlobalOnly` with a default `ClientSettings`
instance.
fixes: #11507
## Test Plan
Update the snapshot and existing test case. Also, verify the following
settings in Neovim:
1. Nothing
```lua
ruff = {
cmd = {
'/Users/dhruv/work/astral/ruff/target/debug/ruff',
'server',
'--preview',
},
}
```
2. Empty dictionary
```lua
ruff = {
cmd = {
'/Users/dhruv/work/astral/ruff/target/debug/ruff',
'server',
'--preview',
},
init_options = vim.empty_dict(),
}
```
3. Empty `settings`
```lua
ruff = {
cmd = {
'/Users/dhruv/work/astral/ruff/target/debug/ruff',
'server',
'--preview',
},
init_options = {
settings = vim.empty_dict(),
},
}
```
4. With some configuration:
```lua
ruff = {
cmd = {
'/Users/dhruv/work/astral/ruff/target/debug/ruff',
'server',
'--preview',
},
init_options = {
settings = {
configuration = '/tmp/ruff-repro/pyproject.toml',
},
},
}
```
## Summary
This PR brings back the functionality to remove empty strings when
converting to an f-string in `UP032`.
For context, https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/8712 added this
functionality to remove _trailing_ empty strings but it got removed in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/8697 possibly unexpectedly so.
There's one difference which is that this PR will remove _any_ empty
strings and not just trailing ones. For example,
```diff
--- /Users/dhruv/playground/ruff/src/UP032.py
+++ /Users/dhruv/playground/ruff/src/UP032.py
@@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
(
- "{a}"
- ""
- "{b}"
- ""
-).format(a=1, b=1)
+ f"{1}"
+ f"{1}"
+)
```
## Test Plan
Run `cargo insta test` and update the snapshots.
## Summary
This PR updates the sequence sorting (`RUF022` and `RUF023`) to avoid
using the owned data from the string token. Instead, we will directly
use the reference to the data on the AST. This does introduce a lot of
lifetimes but that's required.
The main motivation for this is to allow removing the `lex_starts_at`
usage easily.
### Alternatives
1. Extract the raw string content (stripping the prefix and quotes)
using the `Locator` and use that for comparison
2. Build up an
[`IndexVec`](3e30962077/crates/ruff_index/src/vec.rs)
and use the newtype index in place of the string value itself. This also
does require lifetimes so we might as well just use the method in this
PR.
## Test Plan
`cargo insta test` and no ecosystem changes
## Summary
Fixes#11506.
`RuffSettingsIndex::new` now searches for configuration files in parent
directories.
## Test Plan
I confirmed that the original test case described in the issue worked as
expected.
## Summary
Concurrent GitLab runners clone projects into separate directories, e.g.
`{builds_dir}/$RUNNER_TOKEN_KEY/$CONCURRENT_ID/$NAMESPACE/$PROJECT_NAME`.
Since the fingerprint uses the full path to the file, the fingerprints
calculated by Ruff are different depending on which concurrent runner it
executes on, so often an MR will appear to remove all existing issues
and add them with new fingerprints.
I've adjusted the fingerprint function to use the project relative path,
which fixes this. Unfortunately this will have a breaking change for any
current users of this output - the fingerprints will change and appear
in GitLab as all linting messages having been fixed and then created.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run`
Running `ruff check --output-format gitlab` in a git repo, moving the
repo and running again, verifying no diffs between the outputs
## Summary
Fixes#11534.
`DocumentQuery::source_type` now returns `PySourceType::Stub` when the
document is a `.pyi` file.
## Test Plan
I confirmed that stub-specific rule violations appeared with a build
from this PR (they were not visible from a `main` build).
<img width="1066" alt="Screenshot 2024-05-24 at 2 15 38 PM"
src="https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/cd519b7e-21e4-41c8-bc30-43eb6d4d438e">
Hi!
I left out some of the functions in the migration rule which became
removed in NumPy 2.0:
- `np.alltrue`
- `np.anytrue`
- `np.cumproduct`
- `np.product`
Addressing: https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues/26493
## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Current doc says `sys.version[0]` will select the first digit of a major
version number (correct) then as an example says
> e.g., `"3.10"` would evaluate to `"1"`
(would actually evaluate to `"3"`). Changed the example version to a
two-digit number to make the problem more clear.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
ran the following:
- `cargo run -p ruff -- check
crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_2020/YTT301.py
--no-cache`
- `cargo insta review`
- `cargo test`
which all passed.
## Summary
Rule `logging-warn` (`G010`) prescribes a change from `warn` to
`warning` and has a corresponding autofix, but the autofix is mistakenly
titled ```"Convert to `warn`"``` instead of ```"Convert to `warning`"```
(the latter is what the autofix actually does). Seems to be a plain
typo.
## Summary
Fixes#11516
`ruff server` was sending both regular source actions and notebook
source actions back when passed an empty action filter. This PR makes a
few small changes so that notebook source actions are not sent when
regular source actions are sent, which means that an empty filter will
only return regular source actions.
## Test Plan
I confirmed that duplicate code actions no longer appeared in Neovim,
using a configuration similar to the one from the original issue.
<img width="509" alt="Screenshot 2024-05-23 at 11 48 48 PM"
src="https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/9a5d6907-dd41-48bd-b015-8a344c5e0b3f">
## Summary
It turns out that `singledispatch` does end up evaluating all arguments,
even though only the first is used to dispatch.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11520.
## Summary
Addresses #8451 by implementing rule 116 to add an unsafe fix when sleep
is used with a >24 hour interval to instead consider sleeping forever.
This rule is added as async instead as I my understanding was that these
trio rules would be moved to async anyway.
There are a couple of TODOs, which address further extending the rule by
adding support for lookups and evaluations, and also supporting `anyio`.
## Summary
This PR updates the `FA102` rule logic to use the `Importer` which is
available on the `Checker`.
The main motivation is that this would make updating the `Importer` to
use the `Tokens` struct which will be required to remove the
`lex_starts_at` usage in `Insertion::start_of_block` method.
## Test Plan
`cargo insta test`
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11236.
This PR fixes several issues, most of which relate to non-VS Code
editors (Helix and Neovim).
1. Global-only initialization options are now correctly deserialized
from Neovim and Helix
2. Empty diagnostics are now published correctly for Neovim and Helix.
3. A workspace folder is created at the current working directory if the
initialization parameters send an empty list of workspace folders.
4. The server now gracefully handles opening files outside of any known
workspace, and will use global fallback settings taken from client
editor settings and a user settings TOML, if it exists.
## Test Plan
I've tested to confirm that each issue has been fixed.
* Global-only initialization options are now correctly deserialized from
Neovim and Helix + the server gracefully handles opening files outside
of any known workspace
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/4f33477f-20c8-4e50-8214-6608b1a1ea6b
* Empty diagnostics are now published correctly for Neovim and Helix
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/c93f56a0-f75d-466f-9f40-d77f99cf0637
* A workspace folder is created at the current working directory if the
initialization parameters send an empty list of workspace folders.
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/b4b2e818-4b0d-40ce-961d-5831478cc726
## Summary
Similar to #11414, this PR extends `UP037` to flag quoted annotations
that are located in positions that won't be evaluated at runtime.
For example, the quotes on `Tuple` are unnecessary in:
```python
from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
if TYPE_CHECKING:
from typing import Tuple
def foo():
x: "Tuple[int, int]" = (0, 0)
foo()
```
## Summary
Recent changes made in the [Jupyter Notebook feature
PR](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11206) caused automatic
configuration reloading to stop working. This was because we would check
for paths to reload using the changed path, when we should have been
using the parent path of the changed path (to get the directory it was
changed in).
Additionally, this PR fixes an issue where `ruff.toml` and `.ruff.toml`
files were not being automatically reloaded.
Finally, this PR improves configuration reloading by actively publishing
diagnostics for notebook documents (which won't be affected by the
workspace refresh since they don't use pull diagnostics). It will also
publish diagnostics for text documents if pull diagnostics aren't
supported.
## Test Plan
To test this, open an existing configuration file in a codebase, and
make modifications that will affect one or more open Python / Jupyter
Notebook files. You should observe that the diagnostics for both kinds
of files update automatically when the file changes are saved.
Here's a test video showing what a successful test should look like:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/7172b598-d6de-4965-b33c-6cb8b911ef6c
## Summary
Previously, `ruff.applyFormat`, seen in VS Code as the command `Ruff:
Format Document`, would only format the currently active notebook cell
inside a notebook document. This PR makes `ruff.applyFormat` format the
entire notebook document at once, operating on each code cell in order.
## Test Plan
1. Open a notebook document that has multiple unformatted code cells.
2. Run `Ruff: Format Document` through the Command Palette
(`Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+P` by default)
3. Observe that all code cells in the notebook have been formatted.
## Summary
This PR moves the `has_comments` function from `Indexer` to
`CommentRanges`. The main motivation is that the `CommentRanges` will
now be built by the parser which is shared between the linter and the
formatter. Thus, the `CommentRanges` will be removed from the `Indexer`.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
Matching Pylint, we now omit the `try` body itself from branch counting.
Each `except` counts as a branch, as does the `else` and the `finally`.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11205.
## 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>
The wording 'negative comparison' is a rather vague description of the
'is not' operation and does not describe what the 'not in' operation
does (potentially copied from 'is not'). This was replaced with more
precise language to describe the operators taken from the official
python docs[1].
Both rules didn't have a strong reasoning besides 'it's bad, use the
other'. The origin of these rules seems to be PEP8[2] which prefers 'is
not' over 'not ... is' for readability. This is now reflected in the
description.
[1]:
https://docs.python.org/3/reference/expressions.html#membership-test-operations
[2]: https://peps.python.org/pep-0008/#programming-recommendations
## Summary
If an annotation won't be evaluated at runtime, we don't need to flag
`from __future__ import annotations` as required. This applies both to
quoted annotations and annotations outside of runtime-evaluated
positions, like:
```python
def main() -> None:
a_list: list[str] | None = []
a_list.append("hello")
```
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11397.
## Summary
* Update documentation for F401 following recent PRs
* #11168
* #11314
* Deprecate `ignore_init_module_imports`
* Add a deprecation pragma to the option and a "warn user once" message
when the option is used.
* Restore the old behavior for stable (non-preview) mode:
* When `ignore_init_module_imports` is set to `true` (default) there are
no `__init_.py` fixes (but we get nice fix titles!).
* When `ignore_init_module_imports` is set to `false` there are unsafe
`__init__.py` fixes to remove unused imports.
* When preview mode is enabled, it overrides
`ignore_init_module_imports`.
* Fixed a bug in fix titles where `import foo as bar` would recommend
reexporting `bar as bar`. It now says to reexport `foo as foo`. (In this
case we don't issue a fix, fwiw; it was just a fix title bug.)
## Test plan
Added new fixture tests that reuse the existing fixtures for
`__init__.py` files. Each of the three situations listed above has
fixture tests. The F401 "stable" tests cover:
> * When `ignore_init_module_imports` is set to `true` (default) there
are no `__init_.py` fixes (but we get nice fix titles!).
The F401 "deprecated option" tests cover:
> * When `ignore_init_module_imports` is set to `false` there are unsafe
`__init__.py` fixes to remove unused imports.
These complement existing "preview" tests that show the new behavior
which recommends fixes in `__init__.py` according to whether the import
is 1st party and other circumstances (for more on that behavior see:
#11314).
## Summary
This is a follow-up PR to #11445 update the `E27` rules to consider soft
keywords as well.
## Test Plan
Add test cases consisting of soft keywords and update the snapshot.
## Summary
We weren't treating the escaped newline as a valid condition to trigger
the safer fix (add an extra backslash before each invalid escape
sequence).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11461.
## Summary
This PR updates the `TokenKind::is_keyword` check to include soft
keywords. To account for this change, it adds a new
`is_non_soft_keyword` method.
The usage in logical line rules were updated to use the
`is_non_soft_keyword` method but it'll be updated to use `is_keyword` in
a follow-up PR (#11446).
While, the parser usages were kept as is. And because of that, the
snapshots for two test cases were updated in a better direction.
## Test Plan
`cargo insta test`
## Summary
We already have handling for "references that get quoted within our
quoted references", but we were assuming a specific ordering in the way
edits were generated.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11449.
This is useful for extracting the defaults in order to construct
equivalent configs by external scripts. This is my first non-hello-world
rust code, comments and suggested tests appreciated.
## Summary
We already have `ruff linter --output-format json`, this provides `ruff
config x --output-format json` as well. I plan to use this to construct
an equivalent config snippet to include in some managed repos, so when
we update their version of ruff and it adds new lints, they get a PR
that includes the commented-out new lints.
Note that the no-args form of `ruff config` ignores output-format
currently, but probably should obey it (although array-of-strings
doesn't seem that useful, looking for input on format).
## Test Plan
I could use a hand coming up with a typical way to write automated tests
for this.
```sh-session
(.venv) [timhatch:ruff ]$ ./target/debug/ruff config lint.select
A list of rule codes or prefixes to enable. Prefixes can specify exact
rules (like `F841`), entire categories (like `F`), or anything in
between.
When breaking ties between enabled and disabled rules (via `select` and
`ignore`, respectively), more specific prefixes override less
specific prefixes.
Default value: ["E4", "E7", "E9", "F"]
Type: list[RuleSelector]
Example usage:
``toml
# On top of the defaults (`E4`, E7`, `E9`, and `F`), enable flake8-bugbear (`B`) and flake8-quotes (`Q`).
select = ["E4", "E7", "E9", "F", "B", "Q"]
``
(.venv) [timhatch:ruff ]$ ./target/debug/ruff config lint.select --output-format json
{
"Field": {
"doc": "A list of rule codes or prefixes to enable. Prefixes can specify exact\nrules (like `F841`), entire categories (like `F`), or anything in\nbetween.\n\nWhen breaking ties between enabled and disabled rules (via `select` and\n`ignore`, respectively), more specific prefixes override less\nspecific prefixes.",
"default": "[\"E4\", \"E7\", \"E9\", \"F\"]",
"value_type": "list[RuleSelector]",
"scope": null,
"example": "# On top of the defaults (`E4`, E7`, `E9`, and `F`), enable flake8-bugbear (`B`) and flake8-quotes (`Q`).\nselect = [\"E4\", \"E7\", \"E9\", \"F\", \"B\", \"Q\"]",
"deprecated": null
}
}
```
## Summary
As discussed in issue #11408, PLR0912 has a broader definition of
"branches" than I expected. This updates the documentation to include
this definition.
I also updated the example to include several different types of
branches, while still maintaining dictionary lookup as an alternative
solution. (Crafting a realistic example was quite a challenge 😅).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11408.
## Summary
This moves the string-prefix enumerations in `ruff_python_ast` to a
separate submodule. I think this helps clarify that these prefixes are
purely abstract: they only depend on each other, and do not depend on
any of the other code in `nodes.rs` in any way. Moreover, while various
AST nodes _use_ them, they're not really nodes themselves, so they feel
slightly out of place in `nodes.rs`.
I considered moving all of them to `str.rs`, but it felt like enough
code that it could be a separate submodule.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
Followup on #11168 and resolve#10391
# User facing changes
* F401 now recommends a fix to add unused import bindings to to
`__all__` if a single `__all__` list or tuple is found in `__init__.py`.
* If there are no `__all__` found in the file, fall back to recommending
redundant-aliases.
* If there are multiple `__all__` or only one but of the wrong type (non
list or tuple) then diagnostics are generated without fixes.
* `fix_title` is updated to reflect what the fix/recommendation is.
Subtlety: For a renamed import such as `import foo as bees`, we can
generate a fix to add `bees` to `__all__` but cannot generate a fix to
produce a redundant import (because that would break uses of the binding
`bees`).
# Implementation changes
* Add `name` field to `ImportBinding` to contain the name of the
_binding_ we want to add to `__all__` (important for the `import foo as
bees` case). It previously only contained the `AnyImport` which can give
us information about the import but not the binding.
* Add `binding` field to `UnusedImport` to contain the same. (Naming
note: the field `name` field already existed on `UnusedImport` and
contains the qualified name of the imported symbol/module)
* Change `fix_by_reexporting` to branch on the size of `dunder_all:
Vec<&Expr>`
* For length 0 call the edit-producing function `make_redundant_alias`.
* For length 1 call edit-producing function `add_to_dunder_all`.
* Otherwise, produce no fix.
* Implement the edit-producing function `add_to_dunder_all` and add unit
tests.
* Implement several fixture tests: empty `__all__ = []`, nonempty
`__all__ = ["foo"]`, mis-typed `__all__ = None`, plus-eq `__all__ +=
["foo"]`
* `UnusedImportContext::Init` variant now has two fields: whether the
fix is in `__init__.py` and how many `__all__` were found.
# Other changes
* Remove a spurious pattern match and instead use field lookups b/c the
addition of a field would have required changing the unrelated pattern.
* Tweak input type of `make_redundant_alias`
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR follows up from #11420 to move `UP034` to use `TokenKind`
instead of `Tok`.
The main reason to have a separate PR is so that the reviewing is easy.
This required a lot more updates because the rule used an index (`i`) to
keep track of the current position in the token vector. Now, as it's
just an iterator, we just use `next` to move the iterator forward and
extract the relevant information.
This is part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11401
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
This PR moves the following rules to use `TokenKind` instead of `Tok`:
* `PLE2510`, `PLE2512`, `PLE2513`, `PLE2514`, `PLE2515`
* `E701`, `E702`, `E703`
* `ISC001`, `ISC002`
* `COM812`, `COM818`, `COM819`
* `W391`
I've paused here because the next set of rules
(`pyupgrade::rules::extraneous_parentheses`) indexes into the token
slice but we only have an iterator implementation. So, I want to isolate
that change to make sure the logic is still the same when I move to
using the iterator approach.
This is part of #11401
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
Alternative to #11237
This PR adds a new `Tokens` struct which is a newtype wrapper around a
vector of lexer output. This allows us to add a `kinds` method which
returns an iterator over the corresponding `TokenKind`. This iterator is
implemented as a separate `TokenKindIter` struct to allow using the type
and provide additional methods like `peek` directly on the iterator.
This exposes the linter to access the stream of `TokenKind` instead of
`Tok`.
Edit: I've made the necessary downstream changes and plan to merge the
entire stack at once.
## Summary
This PR updates the linter benchmark to use the `tokenize` function
instead of the lexer.
The linter expects the token list to be up to and including the first
error which is what the `ruff_python_parser::tokenize` function returns.
This was not a problem before because the benchmarks only uses valid
Python code.
## Summary
This PR adds a newtype wrapper around `Vec<FStringElement>` that derefs
to a `&Vec<FStringElement>`.
Both f-string and format specifier are made up of `Vec<FStringElement>`.
By creating a newtype wrapper around it, we can share the methods for
both parent types.
## Summary
This PR adds support to iterate over each part of a string-like
expression.
This similar to the one in the formatter:
128414cd95/crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/string/any.rs (L121-L125)
Although I don't think it's a 1-1 replacement in the formatter because
the one implemented in the formatter has another information for certain
variants (as can be seen for `FString`).
The main motivation for this is to avoid duplication for rules which
work only on the parts of the string and doesn't require any information
from the parent node. Here, the parent node being the expression node
which could be an implicitly concatenated string.
This PR also updates certain rule implementation to make use of this and
avoids logic duplication.
## Summary
This PR renames `AnyStringKind` to `AnyStringFlags` and `AnyStringFlags`
to `AnyStringFlagsInner`.
The main motivation is to have consistent usage of "kind" and "flags".
For each string kind, it's "flags" like `StringLiteralFlags`,
`BytesLiteralFlags`, and `FStringFlags` but it was `AnyStringKind` for
the "any" variant.
## Summary
Changes `future-rewritable-type-annotation` (`FA100`) message to be less
confusing. Uses phrasing from the rule documentation to be consistent.
For example,
```
from_typing_import.py:5:13: FA100 Add `from __future__ import annotations` to rewrite `typing.List` more succinctly
```
Closes#10573.
## Test Plan
`cargo nextest run`
## Summary
Should this consider the decorator only if the name is actually a
property or is the logic in this PR correct?
fixes: #11358
## Test Plan
Add test case.
## Summary
This PR fixes a bug where the auto-fix for `TCH005` would delete the
entire `if` statement.
The fix in this PR is to not consider it a violation if there are any
`elif`/`else` blocks. This also matches the behavior of the original
plugin.
fixes: #11368
## Test plan
Add test cases.
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10594.
Code actions to disable a diagnostic via `noqa` comment are now
available.
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/6d3bcf11-a9d9-499b-8c7f-a10cd39cfbba
`DiagnosticFix` has been changed so that `noqa` code actions appear even
for diagnostics with no available quick fix. It can contain quick fix
edits, `noqa` comment edits, or both.
## Test Plan
The scenarios that need to be tested are as follows:
* A code action to disable a diagnostic should be available for every
diagnostic.
* Using this code action should append to the appropriate line with the
diagnostic, or modify an existing `noqa` comment.
* Adding a `noqa` comment manually should make a diagnostic disappear
* `Fix all auto-fixable problems` should not add `noqa` comments
* Removing a code from a `noqa` comment should make the diagnostic
re-appear
## Summary
`--add-noqa` now runs in two stages: first, the linter finds all
diagnostics that need noqa comments and generate edits on a per-line
basis. Second, these edits are applied, in order, to the document.
A public-facing function, `generate_noqa_edits`, has also been
introduced, which returns noqa edits generated on a per-diagnostic
basis. This will be used by `ruff server` for noqa comment quick-fixes.
## Test Plan
Unit tests have been updated.
## Summary
This PR adds updates the semantic model to detect attribute docstring.
Refer to [PEP 258](https://peps.python.org/pep-0258/#attribute-docstrings)
for the definition of an attribute docstring.
This PR doesn't add full support for it but only considers string
literals as attribute docstring for the following cases:
1. A string literal following an assignment statement in the **global
scope**.
2. A global class attribute
For an assignment statement, it's considered an attribute docstring only
if the target expression is a name expression (`x = 1`). So, chained
assignment, multiple assignment or unpacking, and starred expression,
which are all valid in the target position, aren't considered here.
In `__init__` method, an assignment to the `self` variable like `self.x = 1`
is also a candidate for an attribute docstring. **This PR does not
support this position.**
## Test Plan
I used the following source code along with a print statement to verify
that the attribute docstring detection is correct.
Refer to the PR description for the code snippet.
I'll add this in the follow-up PR
(https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11302) which uses this method.
## Summary
Lots of TODOs and things to clean up here, but it demonstrates the
working lint rule.
## Test Plan
```
➜ cat main.py
from typing import override
from base import B
class C(B):
@override
def method(self): pass
➜ cat base.py
class B: pass
➜ cat typing.py
def override(func):
return func
```
(We provide our own `typing.py` since we don't have typeshed vendored or
type stub support yet.)
```
➜ ./target/debug/red_knot main.py
...
1 0.012086s TRACE red_knot Main Loop: Tick
[crates/red_knot/src/main.rs:157:21] diagnostics = [
"Method C.method is decorated with `typing.override` but does not override any base class method",
]
```
If we add `def method(self): pass` to class `B` in `base.py` and run
red_knot again, there is no lint error.
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
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## Summary
Resolves#11263
Detect `pathlib.Path.open` calls which do not specify a file encoding.
## Test Plan
Test cases added to fixture.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
This PR vendors typeshed!
- The first commit vendors the stdlib directory from typeshed into a new crates/red_knot/vendored_typeshed directory.
- The second commit adjusts various linting config files to make sure that the vendored code is excluded from typo checks, formatting checks, etc.
- The LICENSE and README.md files are also vendored, but all other directories and files (stubs, scripts, tests, test_cases, etc.) are excluded. We should have no need for them (except possibly stubs/, discussed in more depth below).
- Similar to the way pyright has a commit.txt file in its vendored copy of typeshed, to indicate which typeshed commit the vendored code corresponds to, I've also added a crates/red_knot/vendored_typeshed/source_commit.txt file in the third commit of this PR.
One open question is: should we vendor the stdlib and stubs directories, or just the stdlib directory? The stubs/ directory contains stubs for 162 third-party packages outside the stdlib. Mypy and typeshed_client1 only vendor the stdlib directory; pyright and pyre vendor both the stdlib and stubs directories; pytype vendors the entire typeshed repo (scripts/, tests/ and all).
In this PR, I've chosen to copy mypy and typeshed_client. Unlike vendoring the stdlib, which is unavoidable if we want to do typechecking of the stdlib, it's not strictly necessary to vendor the stubs directory: each subdirectory in stubs is published to PyPI as a standalone stubs distribution that can be (uv)-pip-installed into a virtual environment. It might be useful for our users if we vendored those stubs anyway, but there are costs as well as benefits to doing so (apart from just the sheer amount of vendored code in the ruff repository), so I'd rather consider it separately.
Resolves https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11313
## Summary
PLR0912(too-many-branches) did not count branches inside with: blocks.
With this fix, the branches inside with statements are also counted.
## Test Plan
Added a new test case.
## Summary
This PR removes the cyclic dev dependency some of the crates had with
the parser crate.
The cyclic dependencies are:
* `ruff_python_ast` has a **dev dependency** on `ruff_python_parser` and
`ruff_python_parser` directly depends on `ruff_python_ast`
* `ruff_python_trivia` has a **dev dependency** on `ruff_python_parser`
and `ruff_python_parser` has an indirect dependency on
`ruff_python_trivia` (`ruff_python_parser` - `ruff_python_ast` -
`ruff_python_trivia`)
Specifically, this PR does the following:
* Introduce two new crates
* `ruff_python_ast_integration_tests` and move the tests from the
`ruff_python_ast` crate which uses the parser in this crate
* `ruff_python_trivia_integration_tests` and move the tests from the
`ruff_python_trivia` crate which uses the parser in this crate
### Motivation
The main motivation for this PR is to help development. Before this PR,
`rust-analyzer` wouldn't provide any intellisense in the
`ruff_python_parser` crate regarding the symbols in `ruff_python_ast`
crate.
```
[ERROR][2024-05-03 13:47:06] .../vim/lsp/rpc.lua:770 "rpc" "/Users/dhruv/.cargo/bin/rust-analyzer" "stderr" "[ERROR project_model::workspace] cyclic deps: ruff_python_parser(Idx::<CrateData>(50)) -> ruff_python_ast(Idx::<CrateData>(37)), alternative path: ruff_python_ast(Idx::<CrateData>(37)) -> ruff_python_parser(Idx::<CrateData>(50))\n"
```
## Test Plan
Check the logs of `rust-analyzer` to not see any signs of cyclic
dependency.
## Summary
While I was here, I also updated the rule to use
`function_type::classify` rather than hard-coding `staticmethod` and
friends.
Per Carl:
> Enum instances are already referred to by the class, forming a cycle
that won't get collected until the class itself does. At which point the
`lru_cache` itself would be collected, too.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9912.
## Summary
Historically, we only ignored `flake8-blind-except` if you re-raised or
logged the exception as a _direct_ child statement; but it could be
nested somewhere. This was just a known limitation at the time of adding
the previous logic.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11289.
## Summary
A follow-up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11222. `ruff
server` stalls during shutdown with Neovim because after it receives an
exit notification and closes the I/O thread, it attempts to log a
success message to `stderr`. Removing this log statement fixes this
issue.
## Test Plan
Track the instances of `ruff` in the OS task manager as you open and
close Neovim. A new instance should appear when Neovim starts and it
should disappear once Neovim is closed.
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11258.
This PR fixes the settings resolver to match the expected behavior when
file-based configuration is not available.
## Test Plan
In a workspace with no file-based configuration, set a setting in your
editor and confirm that this setting is used instead of the default.
## Summary
Users can now include tildes and environment variables in the provided
path, just like with `--config`.
Closes#11277.
## Test Plan
Set the configuration path to `"ruff.configuration": "~/x.toml"`;
verified that the server attempted to read from `/Users/crmarsh/x.toml`.

## Summary
Change `hardcoded-tmp-directory-extend` example to follow the schema:
1e91a09918/ruff.schema.json (L896-L901)
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
## Summary
In #9218 `Rule::NeverUnion` was partially removed from a
`checker.any_enabled` call. This makes the change consistent.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11207.
The server would hang after handling a shutdown request on
`IoThreads::join()` because a global sender (`MESSENGER`, used to send
`window/showMessage` notifications) would remain allocated even after
the event loop finished, which kept the writer I/O thread channel open.
To fix this, I've made a few structural changes to `ruff server`. I've
wrapped the send/receive channels and thread join handle behind a new
struct, `Connection`, which facilitates message sending and receiving,
and also runs `IoThreads::join()` after the event loop finishes. To
control the number of sender channels, the `Connection` wraps the sender
channel in an `Arc` and only allows the creation of a wrapper type,
`ClientSender`, which hold a weak reference to this `Arc` instead of
direct channel access. The wrapper type implements the channel methods
directly to prevent access to the inner channel (which would allow the
channel to be cloned). ClientSender's function is analogous to
[`WeakSender` in
`tokio`](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/sync/mpsc/struct.WeakSender.html).
Additionally, the receiver channel cannot be accessed directly - the
`Connection` only exposes an iterator over it.
These changes will guarantee that all channels are closed before the I/O
threads are joined.
## Test Plan
Repeatedly open and close an editor utilizing `ruff server` while
observing the task monitor. The net total amount of open `ruff`
instances should be zero once all editor windows have closed.
The following logs should also appear after the server is shut down:
<img width="835" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-30 at 3 56 22 PM"
src="https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/404b74f5-ef08-4bb4-9fa2-72e72b946695">
This can be tested on VS Code by changing the settings and then checking
`Output`.
* Add `decorators: Vec<Type>` to `FunctionType` struct
* Thread decorators through two `add_function` definitions
* Populate decorators at the callsite in `infer_symbol_type`
* Small test
Resolves#10390 and starts to address #10391
# Changes to behavior
* In `__init__.py` we now offer some fixes for unused imports.
* If the import binding is first-party this PR suggests a fix to turn it
into a redundant alias.
* If the import binding is not first-party, this PR suggests a fix to
remove it from the `__init__.py`.
* The fix-titles are specific to these new suggested fixes.
* `checker.settings.ignore_init_module_imports` setting is
deprecated/ignored. There is probably a documentation change to make
that complete which I haven't done.
---
<details><summary>Old description of implementation changes</summary>
# Changes to the implementation
* In the body of the loop over import statements that contain unused
bindings, the bindings are partitioned into `to_reexport` and
`to_remove` (according to how we want to resolve the fact they're
unused) with the following predicate:
```rust
in_init && is_first_party(checker, &import.qualified_name().to_string())
// true means make it a reexport
```
* Instead of generating a single fix per import statement, we now
generate up to two fixes per import statement:
```rust
(fix_by_removing_imports(checker, node_id, &to_remove, in_init).ok(),
fix_by_reexporting(checker, node_id, &to_reexport, dunder_all).ok())
```
* The `to_remove` fixes are unsafe when `in_init`.
* The `to_explicit` fixes are safe. Currently, until a future PR, we
make them redundant aliases (e.g. `import a` would become `import a as
a`).
## Other changes
* `checker.settings.ignore_init_module_imports` is deprecated/ignored.
Instead, all fixes are gated on `checker.settings.preview.is_enabled()`.
* Got rid of the pattern match on the import-binding bound by the inner
loop because it seemed less readable than referencing fields on the
binding.
* [x] `// FIXME: rename "imports" to "bindings"` if reviewer agrees (see
code)
* [x] `// FIXME: rename "node_id" to "import_statement"` if reviewer
agrees (see code)
<details>
<summary><h2>Scope cut until a future PR</h2></summary>
* (Not implemented) The `to_explicit` fixes will be added to `__all__`
unless it doesn't exist. When `__all__` doesn't exist they're resolved
by converting to redundant aliases (e.g. `import a` would become `import
a as a`).
---
</details>
# Test plan
* [x] `crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/fixtures/pyflakes/F401_24`
contains an `__init__.py` with*out* `__all__` that exercises the
features in this PR, but it doesn't pass.
* [x]
`crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/fixtures/pyflakes/F401_25_dunder_all`
contains an `__init__.py` *with* `__all__` that exercises the features
in this PR, but it doesn't pass.
* [x] Write unit tests for the new edit functions in
`fix::edits::make_redundant_alias`.
</details>
---------
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
This PR removes the `ImportMap` implementation and all its routing
through ruff.
The import map was added in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/3243
but we then never ended up using it to do cross file analysis.
We are now working on adding multifile analysis to ruff, and revisit
import resolution as part of it.
```
hyperfine --warmup 10 --runs 20 --setup "./target/release/ruff clean" \
"./target/release/ruff check crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/cpython -e -s --extend-select=I" \
"./target/release/ruff-import check crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/cpython -e -s --extend-select=I"
Benchmark 1: ./target/release/ruff check crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/cpython -e -s --extend-select=I
Time (mean ± σ): 37.6 ms ± 0.9 ms [User: 52.2 ms, System: 63.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 35.8 ms … 39.8 ms 20 runs
Benchmark 2: ./target/release/ruff-import check crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/cpython -e -s --extend-select=I
Time (mean ± σ): 36.0 ms ± 0.7 ms [User: 50.3 ms, System: 58.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 34.5 ms … 37.6 ms 20 runs
Summary
./target/release/ruff-import check crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/cpython -e -s --extend-select=I ran
1.04 ± 0.03 times faster than ./target/release/ruff check crates/ruff_linter/resources/test/cpython -e -s --extend-select=I
```
I suspect that the performance improvement should even be more
significant for users that otherwise don't have any diagnostics.
```
hyperfine --warmup 10 --runs 20 --setup "cd ../ecosystem/airflow && ../../ruff/target/release/ruff clean" \
"./target/release/ruff check ../ecosystem/airflow -e -s --extend-select=I" \
"./target/release/ruff-import check ../ecosystem/airflow -e -s --extend-select=I"
Benchmark 1: ./target/release/ruff check ../ecosystem/airflow -e -s --extend-select=I
Time (mean ± σ): 53.7 ms ± 1.8 ms [User: 68.4 ms, System: 63.0 ms]
Range (min … max): 51.1 ms … 58.7 ms 20 runs
Benchmark 2: ./target/release/ruff-import check ../ecosystem/airflow -e -s --extend-select=I
Time (mean ± σ): 50.8 ms ± 1.4 ms [User: 50.7 ms, System: 60.9 ms]
Range (min … max): 48.5 ms … 55.3 ms 20 runs
Summary
./target/release/ruff-import check ../ecosystem/airflow -e -s --extend-select=I ran
1.06 ± 0.05 times faster than ./target/release/ruff check ../ecosystem/airflow -e -s --extend-select=I
```
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## 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 https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11158.
A settings file in the ruff user configuration directory will be used as
a configuration fallback, if it exists.
## Test Plan
Create a `pyproject.toml` or `ruff.toml` configuration file in the ruff
user configuration directory.
* On Linux, that will be `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/ruff/` or `$HOME/.config`
* On macOS, that will be `$HOME/Library/Application Support`
* On Windows, that will be `{FOLDERID_LocalAppData}`
Then, open a file inside of a workspace with no configuration. The
settings in the user configuration file should be used.
## Summary
I think the check included here does make sense, but I don't see why we
would allow it if a value is provided for the attribute -- since, in
that case, isn't it _not_ abstract?
Closes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/11208.
## Summary
This PR changes the `DebugStatistics` and `ReleaseStatistics` structs so
that they implement a common `StatisticsRecorder` trait, and makes the
`KeyValueCache` struct generic over a type parameter bound to that
trait. The advantage of this approach is that it's much harder for the
`DebugStatistics` and `ReleaseStatistics` structs to accidentally grow
out of sync in the methods that they implement, which was the cause of
the release-build failure recently fixed in #11177.
## Test Plan
`cargo test -p red_knot` and `cargo build --release` both continue to
pass for me locally
* Adds `Symbol.flag` bitfield. Populates it from (the three renamed)
`add_or_update_symbol*` methods.
* Currently there are these flags supported:
* `IS_DEFINED` is set in a scope where a variable is defined.
* `IS_USED` is set in a scope where a variable is referenced. (To have
both this and `IS_DEFINED` would require two separate appearances of a
variable in the same scope-- one def and one use.)
* `MARKED_GLOBAL` and `MARKED_NONLOCAL` are **not yet implemented**.
(*TODO: While traversing, if you find these declarations, add these
flags to the variable.*)
* Adds `Symbol.kind` field (commented) and the data structure which will
populate it: `Kind` which is an enum of freevar, cellvar,
implicit_global, and implicit_local. **Not yet populated**. (*TODO: a
second pass over the scope (or the ast?) will observe the
`MARKED_GLOBAL` and `MARKED_NONLOCAL` flags to populate this field. When
that's added, we'll uncomment the field.*)
* Adds a few tests that the `IS_DEFINED` and `IS_USED` fields are
correctly set and/or merged:
* Unit test that subsequent calls to `add_or_update_symbol` will merge
the flag arguments.
* Unit test that in the statement `x = foo`, the variable `foo` is
considered used but not defined.
* Unit test that in the statement `from bar import foo`, the variable
`foo` is considered defined but not used.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carl Meyer <carl@astral.sh>
## Summary
This PR adds a basic README for the `ruff_python_parser` crate and
updates the CONTRIBUTING docs with the fuzzer and benchmark section.
Additionally, it also updates some inline documentation within the
parser crate and splits the `parse_program` function into
`parse_single_expression` and `parse_module` which will be called by
matching against the `Mode`.
This PR doesn't go into too much internal detail around the parser logic
due to the following reasons:
1. Where should the docs go? Should it be as a module docs in `lib.rs`
or in README?
2. The parser is still evolving and could include a lot of refactors
with the future work (feedback loop and improved error recovery and
resilience)
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
## Summary
`cargo build --release` currently fails to compile on `main`:
<details>
```
error[E0599]: no method named `hit` found for struct `ReleaseStatistics` in the current scope
--> crates/red_knot/src/cache.rs:22:29
|
22 | self.statistics.hit();
| ^^^ method not found in `ReleaseStatistics`
...
145 | pub struct ReleaseStatistics;
| ---------------------------- method `hit` not found for this struct
error[E0599]: no method named `miss` found for struct `ReleaseStatistics` in the current scope
--> crates/red_knot/src/cache.rs:25:29
|
25 | self.statistics.miss();
| ^^^^ method not found in `ReleaseStatistics`
...
145 | pub struct ReleaseStatistics;
| ---------------------------- method `miss` not found for this struct
error[E0599]: no method named `hit` found for struct `ReleaseStatistics` in the current scope
--> crates/red_knot/src/cache.rs:36:33
|
36 | self.statistics.hit();
| ^^^ method not found in `ReleaseStatistics`
...
145 | pub struct ReleaseStatistics;
| ---------------------------- method `hit` not found for this struct
error[E0599]: no method named `miss` found for struct `ReleaseStatistics` in the current scope
--> crates/red_knot/src/cache.rs:41:33
|
41 | self.statistics.miss();
| ^^^^ method not found in `ReleaseStatistics`
...
145 | pub struct ReleaseStatistics;
| ---------------------------- method `miss` not found for this struct
```
</details>
This is because in a release build, `CacheStatistics` is a type alias
for `ReleaseStatistics`, and `ReleaseStatistics` doesn't have `hit()` or
`miss()` methods. (In a debug build, `CacheStatistics` is a type alias
for `DebugStatistics`, which _does_ have those methods.)
Possibly we could make this less likely to happen in the future by
making both structs implement a common trait instead of using type
aliases that vary depending on whether it's a debug build or not? For
now, though, this PR just brings the two structs in sync w.r.t. the
methods they expose.
## Test Plan
`cargo build --release` now once again compiles for me locally
## Summary
This PR adds an override to the fixer to ensure that we apply any
`redefined-while-unused` fixes prior to `unused-import`.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10905.
## Summary
Implement duplicate code detection as part of `RUF100`, mirroring the
behavior of `flake8-noqa` (`NQA005`) mentioned in #850. The idea to
merge the rule into `RUF100` was suggested by @MichaReiser
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10325#issuecomment-2025535444.
## Test Plan
Test cases were added to the fixture.
This syntax wasn't "deprecated" in Python 3; it was removed.
I started looking at this rule because I was curious how Ruff could even
detect this without a Python 2 parser. Then I realized that
"print >> f, x" is actually valid Python 3 syntax: it creates a tuple
containing a right-shifted version of the print function.
## Summary
Based on discussion in #10850.
As it stands today `RUF100` will attempt to replace code redirects with
their target codes even though this is not the "goal" of `RUF100`. This
behavior is confusing and inconsistent, since code redirects which don't
otherwise violate `RUF100` will not be updated. The behavior is also
undocumented. Additionally, users who want to use `RUF100` but do not
want to update redirects have no way to opt out.
This PR explicitly detects redirects with a new rule `RUF101` and
patches `RUF100` to keep original codes in fixes and reporting.
## Test Plan
Added fixture.
## Summary
Closes#10985.
The server now supports a custom TOML configuration file as a client
setting. The setting must be an absolute path to a file. If the file is
called `pyproject.toml`, the server will attempt to parse it as a
pyproject file - otherwise, it will attempt to parse it as a `ruff.toml`
file, even if the file has a name besides `ruff.toml`.
If an option is set in both the custom TOML configuration file and in
the client settings directly, the latter will be used.
## Test Plan
1. Create a `ruff.toml` file outside of the workspace you are testing.
Set an option that is different from the one in the configuration for
your test workspace.
2. Set the path to the configuration in NeoVim:
```lua
require('lspconfig').ruff.setup {
init_options = {
settings = {
configuration = "absolute/path/to/your/configuration"
}
}
}
```
3. Confirm that the option in the configuration file is used, regardless
of what the option is set to in the workspace configuration.
4. Add the same option, with a different value, to the NeoVim
configuration directly. For example:
```lua
require('lspconfig').ruff.setup {
init_options = {
settings = {
configuration = "absolute/path/to/your/configuration",
lint = {
select = []
}
}
}
}
```
5. Confirm that the option set in client settings is used, regardless of
the value in either the custom configuration file or in the workspace
configuration.
## Summary
This PR fixes the bug where the formatter would format an f-string and
could potentially change the AST.
For a triple-quoted f-string, the element can't be formatted into
multiline if it has a format specifier because otherwise the newline
would be treated as part of the format specifier.
Given the following f-string:
```python
f"""aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb ccccccccccc {
variable:.3f} ddddddddddddddd eeeeeeee"""
```
The formatter sees that the f-string is already multiline so it assumes
that it can contain line breaks i.e., broken into multiple lines. But,
in this specific case we can't format it as:
```python
f"""aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb ccccccccccc {
variable:.3f
} ddddddddddddddd eeeeeeee"""
```
Because the format specifier string would become ".3f\n", which is not
the original string (`.3f`).
If the original source code already contained a newline, they'll be
preserved. For example:
```python
f"""aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb ccccccccccc {
variable:.3f
} ddddddddddddddd eeeeeeee"""
```
The above will be formatted as:
```py
f"""aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb ccccccccccc {variable:.3f
} ddddddddddddddd eeeeeeee"""
```
Note that the newline after `.3f` is part of the format specifier which
needs to be preserved.
The Python version is irrelevant in this case.
fixes: #10040
## Test Plan
Add some test cases to verify this behavior.
## Summary
This is intended to address
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-vscode/issues/425, and is a follow-up
to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11062.
A new client setting is now supported by the server,
`prioritizeFileConfiguration`. This is a boolean setting (default:
`false`) that, if set to `true`, will instruct the configuration
resolver to prioritize file configuration (aka discovered TOML files)
over configuration passed in by the editor.
A corresponding extension PR has been opened, which makes this setting
available for VS Code:
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-vscode/pull/457.
## Test Plan
To test this with VS Code, you'll need to check out [the VS Code
PR](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-vscode/pull/457) that adds this
setting.
The test process is similar to
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/11062, but in scenarios where the
editor configuration would take priority over file configuration, file
configuration should take priority.
## Summary
Resolves#11102
The error stems from these lines
f5c7a62aa6/crates/ruff_linter/src/noqa.rs (L697-L702)
I don't really understand the purpose of incrementing the last index,
but it makes the resulting range invalid for indexing into `contents`.
For now I just detect if the index is too high in `blanket_noqa` and
adjust it if necessary.
## Test Plan
Created fixture from issue example.
## Summary
This PR updates the playground to display the AST even if it contains a
syntax error. This could be useful for development and also to give a
quick preview of what error recovery looks like.
Note that not all recovery is correct but this allows us to iterate
quickly on what can be improved.
## Test Plan
Build the playground locally and test it.
<img width="1688" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-25 at 21 02 22"
src="https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/67177269/2b94934c-4f2c-4a9a-9693-3d8460ed9d0b">
## 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 allows `raise from` in BLE001.
```python
try:
...
except Exception as e:
raise ValueError from e
```
Fixes#10806
## Test Plan
Test case added.