This PR adds the same `minimal-size` profile as `uv` repo workspace has
```toml
# Profile to build a minimally sized binary for uv-build
[profile.minimal-size]
inherits = "release"
opt-level = "z"
# This will still show a panic message, we only skip the unwind
panic = "abort"
codegen-units = 1
```
but removes its `panic = "abort"` setting
- As discussed in #21825
Compared to the ones pre-built via `uv tool install`, this builds 35%
smaller ruff and 24% smaller ty binaries
(as measured
[here](https://github.com/lmmx/just-pre-commit/blob/master/refresh_binaries.sh))
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Since 4c4ddc8c29, ruff uses the `WalkBuilder::current_dir` API
[introduced in `ignore` version
0.4.24](https://diff.rs/ignore/0.4.23/0.4.24/src%2Fwalk.rs), so it
should explicitly depend on this minimum version.
See also https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/20979.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
Source inspection verifies this version is necessary; no additional
testing is required since `Cargo.lock` already has (at least) this
version.
This is still early days, but I hope the framework introduced here makes
it very easy to add new truth data. Truth data should be seen as a form
of regression test for non-ideal ranking of completion suggestions.
I think it would help to read `crates/ty_completion_eval/README.md`
first to get an idea of what you're reviewing.
## Summary
Previous error:
```
▶ cargo shear
Analyzing /home/shark/ruff
ruff_diagnostics -- crates/ruff_diagnostics/Cargo.toml:
get-size2
ruff_index -- crates/ruff_index/Cargo.toml:
get-size2
ruff_source_file -- crates/ruff_source_file/Cargo.toml:
get-size2
ruff_text_size -- crates/ruff_text_size/Cargo.toml:
get-size2
ty_ide -- crates/ty_ide/Cargo.toml:
get-size2
ty_project -- crates/ty_project/Cargo.toml:
get-size2
cargo-shear may have detected unused dependencies incorrectly due to its limitations.
They can be ignored by adding the crate name to the package's Cargo.toml:
[package.metadata.cargo-shear]
ignored = ["crate-name"]
or in the workspace Cargo.toml:
[workspace.metadata.cargo-shear]
ignored = ["crate-name"]
```
Coming soon: The Renovate bot (GitHub App) will be renamed to Mend. PRs
from Renovate will soon appear from 'Mend'. Learn more
[here](https://redirect.github.com/renovatebot/renovate/discussions/37842).
This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| [hashbrown](https://redirect.github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown) |
workspace.dependencies | minor | `0.15.0` -> `0.16.0` |
---
> [!WARNING]
> Some dependencies could not be looked up. Check the Dependency
Dashboard for more information.
---
### Release Notes
<details>
<summary>rust-lang/hashbrown (hashbrown)</summary>
###
[`v0.16.0`](https://redirect.github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/blob/HEAD/CHANGELOG.md#0160---2025-08-28)
[Compare
Source](https://redirect.github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/compare/v0.15.5...v0.16.0)
##### Changed
- Bump foldhash, the default hasher, to 0.2.0.
- Replaced `DefaultHashBuilder` with a newtype wrapper around `foldhash`
instead
of re-exporting it directly.
</details>
---
### Configuration
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---------
Co-authored-by: renovate[bot] <29139614+renovate[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
Co-authored-by: Ibraheem Ahmed <ibraheem@ibraheem.ca>
This refactors the importer abstraction to use a shared
`Insertion`. This is mostly just moving some code around
with some slight tweaks.
The plan here is to keep the rest of the importing code
in `ruff_linter` and then write something ty-specific on
top of `Insertion`. This ends up sharing some code, but
not as much as would be ideal. In particular, the
`ruff_linter` imported is pretty tightly coupled with
ruff's semantic model. So to share the code, we'd need to
abstract over that.
## Summary
Use `Type::Divergent` to avoid "too many iterations" panic on an
infinitely-nested tuple in an implicit instance attribute.
The regression here is from checking all tuple elements to see if they
contain a Divergent type. It's 5% on one project, 1% on another, and
zero on the rest. I spent some time looking into eliminating this
regression by tracking a flag on inference results to note if they could
possibly contain any Divergent type, but this doesn't really work --
there are too many different ways a type containing a Divergent type
could enter an inference result. Still thinking about whether there are
other ways to reduce this. One option is if we see certain kinds of
non-atomic types that are commonly expensive to check for Divergent, we
could make `has_divergent_type` a Salsa query on those types.
## Test Plan
Added mdtest.
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Specifically, the [`if_not_else`] lint will sometimes flag
code to change the order of `if` and `else` bodies if this
would allow a `!` to be removed. While perhaps tasteful in
some cases, there are many cases in my experience where this
bows to other competing concerns that impact readability.
(Such as the relative sizes of the `if` and `else` bodies,
or perhaps an ordering that just makes the code flow in a
more natural way.)
[`if_not_else`]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/if_not_else
## Summary
We use the `System` abstraction in ty to abstract away the host/system
on which ty runs.
This has a few benefits:
* Tests can run in full isolation using a memory system (that uses an
in-memory file system)
* The LSP has a custom implementation where `read_to_string` returns the
content as seen by the editor (e.g. unsaved changes) instead of always
returning the content as it is stored on disk
* We don't require any file system polyfills for wasm in the browser
However, it does require extra care that we don't accidentally use
`std::fs` or `std::env` (etc.) methods in ty's code base (which is very
easy).
This PR sets up Clippy and disallows the most common methods, instead
pointing users towards the corresponding `System` methods.
The setup is a bit awkward because clippy doesn't support inheriting
configurations. That means, a crate can only override the entire
workspace configuration or not at all.
The approach taken in this PR is:
* Configure the disallowed methods at the workspace level
* Allow `disallowed_methods` at the workspace level
* Enable the lint at the crate level using the warn attribute (in code)
The obvious downside is that it won't work if we ever want to disallow
other methods, but we can figure that out once we reach that point.
What about false positives: Just add an `allow` and move on with your
life :) This isn't something that we have to enforce strictly; the goal
is to catch accidental misuse.
## Test Plan
Clippy found a place where we incorrectly used `std::fs::read_to_string`
## Summary
This PR implements support for providing LSP client settings.
The complementary PR in the ty VS Code extension:
astral-sh/ty-vscode#106.
Notes for the previous iteration of this PR is in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/19614#issuecomment-3136477864
(click on "Details").
Specifically, this PR splits the client settings into 3 distinct groups.
Keep in mind that these groups are not visible to the user, they're
merely an implementation detail. The groups are:
1. `GlobalOptions` - these are the options that are global to the
language server and will be the same for all the workspaces that are
handled by the server
2. `WorkspaceOptions` - these are the options that are specific to a
workspace and will be applied only when running any logic for that
workspace
3. `InitializationOptions` - these are the options that can be specified
during initialization
The initialization options are a superset that contains both the global
and workspace options flattened into a 1-dimensional structure. This
means that the user can specify any and all fields present in
`GlobalOptions` and `WorkspaceOptions` in the initialization options in
addition to the fields that are _specific_ to initialization options.
From the current set of available settings, following are only available
during initialization because they are required at that time, are static
during the runtime of the server and changing their values require a
restart to take effect:
- `logLevel`
- `logFile`
And, following are available under `GlobalOptions`:
- `diagnosticMode`
And, following under `WorkspaceOptions`:
- `disableLanguageServices`
- `pythonExtension` (Python environment information that is populated by
the ty VS Code extension)
### `workspace/configuration`
This request allows server to ask the client for configuration to a
specific workspace. But, this is only supported by the client that has
the `workspace.configuration` client capability set to `true`. What to
do for clients that don't support pulling configurations?
In that case, the settings needs to be provided in the initialization
options and updating the values of those settings can only be done by
restarting the server. With the way this is implemented, this means that
if the client does not support pulling workspace configuration then
there's no way to specify settings specific to a workspace. Earlier,
this would've been possible by providing an array of client options with
an additional field which specifies which workspace the options belong
to but that adds complexity and clients that actually do not support
`workspace/configuration` would usually not support multiple workspaces
either.
Now, for the clients that do support this, the server will initiate the
request to get the configuration for all the workspaces at the start of
the server. Once the server receives these options, it will resolve them
for each workspace as follows:
1. Combine the client options sent during initialization with the
options specific to the workspace creating the final client options
that's specific to this workspace
2. Create a global options by combining the global options from (1) for
all workspaces which in turn will also combine the global options sent
during initialization
The global options are resolved into the global settings and are
available on the `Session` which is initialized with the default global
settings. The workspace options are resolved into the workspace settings
and are available on the respective `Workspace`.
The `SessionSnapshot` contains the global settings while the document
snapshot contains the workspace settings. We could add the global
settings to the document snapshot but that's currently not needed.
### Document diagnostic dynamic registration
Currently, the document diagnostic server capability is created based on
the `diagnosticMode` sent during initialization. But, that wouldn't
provide us with the complete picture. This means the server needs to
defer registering the document diagnostic capability at a later point
once the settings have been resolved.
This is done using dynamic registration for clients that support it. For
clients that do not support dynamic registration for document diagnostic
capability, the server advertises itself as always supporting workspace
diagnostics and work done progress token.
This dynamic registration now allows us to change the server capability
for workspace diagnostics based on the resolved `diagnosticMode` value.
In the future, once `workspace/didChangeConfiguration` is supported, we
can avoid the server restart when users have changed any client
settings.
## Test Plan
Add integration tests and recorded videos on the user experience in
various editors:
### VS Code
For VS Code users, the settings experience is unchanged because the
extension defines it's own interface on how the user can specify the
server setting. This means everything is under the `ty.*` namespace as
usual.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c2e5ba5c-7617-406e-a09d-e397ce9c3b93
### Zed
For Zed, the settings experience has changed. Users can specify settings
during initialization:
```json
{
"lsp": {
"ty": {
"initialization_options": {
"logLevel": "debug",
"logFile": "~/.cache/ty.log",
"diagnosticMode": "workspace",
"disableLanguageServices": true
}
},
}
}
```
Or, can specify the options under the `settings` key:
```json
{
"lsp": {
"ty": {
"settings": {
"ty": {
"diagnosticMode": "openFilesOnly",
"disableLanguageServices": true
}
},
"initialization_options": {
"logLevel": "debug",
"logFile": "~/.cache/ty.log"
}
},
}
}
```
The `logLevel` and `logFile` setting still needs to go under the
initialization options because they're required by the server during
initialization.
We can remove the nesting of the settings under the "ty" namespace by
updating the return type of
db9ea0cdfd/src/tychecker.rs (L45-L49)
to be wrapped inside `ty` directly so that users can avoid doing the
double nesting.
There's one issue here which is that if the `diagnosticMode` is
specified in both the initialization option and settings key, then the
resolution is a bit different - if either of them is set to be
`workspace`, then it wins which means that in the following
configuration, the diagnostic mode is `workspace`:
```json
{
"lsp": {
"ty": {
"settings": {
"ty": {
"diagnosticMode": "openFilesOnly"
}
},
"initialization_options": {
"diagnosticMode": "workspace"
}
},
}
}
```
This behavior is mainly a result of combining global options from
various workspace configuration results. Users should not be able to
provide global options in multiple workspaces but that restriction
cannot be done on the server side. The ty VS Code extension restricts
these global settings to only be set in the user settings and not in
workspace settings but we do not control extensions in other editors.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8e2d6c09-18e6-49e5-ab78-6cf942fe1255
### Neovim
Same as in Zed.
### Other
Other editors that do not support `workspace/configuration`, the users
would need to provide the server settings during initialization.
## Summary
This PR adds a new `Type::TypedDict` variant. Before this PR, we treated
`TypedDict`-based types as dynamic Todo-types, and I originally planned
to make this change a no-op. And we do in fact still treat that new
variant similar to a dynamic type when it comes to type properties such
as assignability and subtyping. But then I somehow tricked myself into
implementing some of the things correctly, so here we are. The two main
behavioral changes are: (1) we now also detect generic `TypedDict`s,
which removes a few false positives in the ecosystem, and (2) we now
support *attribute* access (not key-based indexing!) on these types,
i.e. we infer proper types for something like
`MyTypedDict.__required_keys__`. Nothing exciting yet, but gets the
infrastructure into place.
Note that with this PR, the type of (the type) `MyTypedDict` itself is
still represented as a `Type::ClassLiteral` or `Type::GenericAlias` (in
case `MyTypedDict` is generic). Only inhabitants of `MyTypedDict`
(instances of `dict` at runtime) are represented by `Type::TypedDict`.
We may want to revisit this decision in the future, if this turns out to
be too error-prone. Right now, we need to use `.is_typed_dict(db)` in
all the right places to distinguish between actual (generic) classes and
`TypedDict`s. But so far, it seemed unnecessary to add additional `Type`
variants for these as well.
part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/154
## Ecosystem impact
The new diagnostics on `cloud-init` look like true positives to me.
## Test Plan
Updated and new Markdown tests
This PR contains the following updates:
| Package | Type | Update | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| [criterion](https://bheisler.github.io/criterion.rs/book/index.html)
([source](https://redirect.github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs)) |
workspace.dependencies | minor | `0.6.0` -> `0.7.0` |
---
> [!WARNING]
> Some dependencies could not be looked up. Check the Dependency
Dashboard for more information.
---
### Release Notes
<details>
<summary>bheisler/criterion.rs (criterion)</summary>
###
[`v0.7.0`](https://redirect.github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs/blob/HEAD/CHANGELOG.md#070---2025-07-25)
[Compare
Source](https://redirect.github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs/compare/0.6.0...0.7.0)
- Bump version of criterion-plot to align dependencies.
</details>
---
### Configuration
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This is a follow-on to #19410 that further reduces the memory usage of
our reachability constraints. When finishing the building of a use-def
map, we walk through all of the "final" states and mark only those
reachability constraints as "used". We then throw away the interior TDD
nodes of any reachability constraints that weren't marked as used.
(This helps because we build up quite a few intermediate TDD nodes when
constructing complex reachability constraints. These nodes can never be
accessed if they were _only_ used as an intermediate TDD node. The
marking step ensures that we keep any nodes that ended up being referred
to in some accessible use-def map state.)