## 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:

## Summary
Fixes#10780.
The server now send code actions to the client with a Ruff-specific
kind, `source.*.ruff`. The kind filtering logic has also been reworked
to support this.
## Test Plan
Add this to your `settings.json` in VS Code:
```json
{
"[python]": {
"editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
"source.organizeImports.ruff": "explicit",
},
}
}
```
Imports should be automatically organized when you manually save with
`Ctrl/Cmd+S`.
## Summary
Configuration is no longer the property of a workspace but rather of
individual documents. Just like the Ruff CLI, each document is
configured based on the 'nearest' project configuration. See [the Ruff
documentation](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/configuration/#config-file-discovery)
for more details.
To reduce the amount of times we resolve configuration for a file, we
have an index for each workspace that stores a reference-counted pointer
to a configuration for a given folder. If another file in the same
folder is opened, the configuration is simply re-used rather than us
re-resolving it.
## Guide for reviewing
The first commit is just the restructuring work, which adds some noise
to the diff. If you want to quickly understand what's actually changed,
I recommend looking at the two commits that come after it.
f7c073d441 makes configuration a property
of `DocumentController`/`DocumentRef`, moving it out of `Workspace`, and
it also sets up the `ConfigurationIndex`, though it doesn't implement
its key function, `get_or_insert`. In the commit after it,
fc35618f17, we implement `get_or_insert`.
## Test Plan
The best way to test this would be to ensure that the behavior matches
the Ruff CLI. Open a project with multiple configuration files (or add
them yourself), and then introduce problems in certain files that won't
show due to their configuration. Add those same problems to a section of
the project where those rules are run. Confirm that the lint rules are
run as expected with `ruff check`. Then, open your editor and confirm
that the diagnostics shown match the CLI output.
As an example - I have a workspace with two separate folders, `pandas`
and `scipy`. I created a `pyproject.toml` file in `pandas/pandas/io` and
a `ruff.toml` file in `pandas/pandas/api`. I changed the `select` and
`preview` settings in the sub-folder configuration files and confirmed
that these were reflected in the diagnostics. I also confirmed that this
did not change the diagnostics for the `scipy` folder whatsoever.
## Summary
This change adds a rule to detect functions declared `async` but lacking
any of `await`, `async with`, or `async for`. This resolves#9951.
## Test Plan
This change was tested by following
https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/contributing/#rule-testing-fixtures-and-snapshots
and adding positive and negative cases for each of `await` vs nothing,
`async with` vs `with`, and `async for` vs `for`.
## Summary
This PR moves the `Q003` rule to AST checker.
This is the final rule that used the docstring detection state machine
and thus this PR removes it as well.
resolves: #7595resolves: #7808
## Test Plan
- [x] `cargo test`
- [x] Make sure there are no changes in the ecosystem
## Summary
Adds more aggressive logic to PLR1730, `if-stmt-min-max`
Closes#10907
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
---------
Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>
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## Summary
Hi! 👋
Thanks for sharing ruff as software libre — it helps me keep Python code
quality up with pre-commit, both locally and CI 🙏
While studying the examples at
https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/function-uses-loop-variable/#example I
noticed that the last of the examples had a bug: prior to this fix, `ì`
was passed to the lambda for `x` rather than for `i` — the two are
mixed-up. The reason it's easy to overlook is because addition is an
commutative operation and so `x + i` and `i + x` give the same result
(and least with integers), despite the mix-up. For proof, let me demo
the relevant part with before and after:
```python
In [1]: from functools import partial
In [2]: [partial(lambda x, i: (x, i), i)(123) for i in range(3)]
Out[2]: [(0, 123), (1, 123), (2, 123)]
In [3]: [partial(lambda x, i: (x, i), i=i)(123) for i in range(3)]
Out[3]: [(123, 0), (123, 1), (123, 2)]
```
Does that make sense?
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
Was manually tested using IPython.
CC @r4f @grandchild
## Summary
If `RUF100` was included in a per-file-ignore, we respected it on cases
like `# noqa: F401`, but not the blanket variant (`# noqa`).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10906.
## Summary
Implement new rule: Prefer augmented assignment (#8877). It checks for
the assignment statement with the form of `<expr> = <expr>
<binary-operator> …` with a unsafe fix to use augmented assignment
instead.
## Test Plan
1. Snapshot test is included in the PR.
2. Manually test with playground.
Refs #3172
## Summary
Fix a typo in the docs example, and add a test for the case where a
negative pattern and a positive pattern overlap.
The behavior here is simple: patterns (positive or negative) are always
additive if they hit (i.e. match for a positive pattern, don't match for
a negated pattern). We never "un-ignore" previously-ignored rules based
on a pattern (positive or negative) failing to hit.
It's simple enough that I don't really see other cases we need to add
tests for (the tests we have cover all branches in the ignores_from_path
function that implements the core logic), but open to reviewer feedback.
I also didn't end up changing the docs to explain this more, because I
think they are accurate as written and don't wrongly imply any more
complex behavior. Open to reviewer feedback on this as well!
After some discussion, I think allowing negative patterns to un-ignore
rules is too confusing and easy to get wrong; if we need that, we should
add `per-file-selects` instead.
## Test Plan
Test/docs only change; tests pass, docs render and look right.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR adds the implementation for the current
[flake8-bugbear](https://github.com/PyCQA/flake8-bugbear)'s B038 rule.
The B038 rule checks for mutation of loop iterators in the body of a for
loop and alerts when found.
Rational:
Editing the loop iterator can lead to undesired behavior and is probably
a bug in most cases.
Closes#9511.
Note there will be a second iteration of B038 implemented in
`flake8-bugbear` soon, and this PR currently only implements the weakest
form of the rule.
I'd be happy to also implement the further improvements to B038 here in
ruff 🙂
See https://github.com/PyCQA/flake8-bugbear/issues/454 for more
information on the planned improvements.
## Test Plan
Re-using the same test file that I've used for `flake8-bugbear`, which
is included in this PR (look for the `B038.py` file).
Note: this is my first time using `rust` (beside `rustlings`) - I'd be
very happy about thorough feedback on what I could've done better
🙂 - Bring it on 😀
## Summary
Code cleanup for per-file ignores; use a struct instead of a tuple.
Named the structs for individual ignores and the list of ignores
`CompiledPerFileIgnore` and `CompiledPerFileIgnoreList`. Name choice is
because we already have a `PerFileIgnore` struct for a
pre-compiled-matchers form of the config. Name bikeshedding welcome.
## Test Plan
Refactor, should not change behavior; existing tests pass.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <alex.waygood@gmail.com>
## Summary
I believe this should close
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10880? The `.gitignore`
creation seems ok, since it truncates, but using `cachedir::is_tagged`
followed by `cachedir::add_tag` is not safe, as `cachedir::add_tag`
_fails_ if the file already exists.
This also matches the structure of the code in `uv`.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10880.
## Summary
Implement `write-whole-file` (`FURB103`), part of #1348. This is largely
a copy and paste of `read-whole-file` #7682.
## Test Plan
Text fixture added.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dhruv Manilawala <dhruvmanila@gmail.com>
## Summary
Improve `blanket-noqa` error message in cases where codes are provided
but not detected due to formatting issues. Namely `# noqa X100` (missing
colon) or `noqa : X100` (space before colon). The behavior is similar to
`NQA002` and `NQA003` from `flake8-noqa` mentioned in #850. The idea to
merge the rules into `PGH004` was suggested by @MichaReiser
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10325#issuecomment-2025535444.
## Test Plan
Test cases added to fixture.
Fixes#3172
## Summary
Allow prefixing [extend-]per-file-ignores patterns with `!` to negate
the pattern; listed rules / prefixes will be ignored in all files that
don't match the pattern.
## Test Plan
Added tests for the feature.
Rendered docs and checked rendered output.
Fixes#5499
## Summary
Add support for `FORCE_COLOR` env var, as specified at
https://force-color.org/
## Test Plan
I wrote an integration test for this, and then realized that can't work,
since we use a dev-dependency on `colored` with the `no-color` feature
to avoid ANSI color codes in test snapshots.
So this is just tested manually.
`cargo run --features test-rules -- check --no-cache --isolated -
--select RUF901 --diff < /dev/null` shows a colored diff.
`cargo run --features test-rules -- check --no-cache --isolated -
--select RUF901 --diff < /dev/null | less` does not have color, since we
pipe it to `less`.
`FORCE_COLOR=1 cargo run --features test-rules -- check --no-cache
--isolated - --select RUF901 --diff < /dev/null | less` does have color
(after this diff), even though we pipe it to `less`.
## Summary
Came across this code while digging into the semantic model with
@AlexWaygood, and found it confusing because of how it splits
`push_scope` from the paired `pop_scope` (took me a few minutes to even
figure out if/where we were popping the pushed scope). Since this
"cleanup" is already totally split by node type, there doesn't seem to
be any gain in having it as a separate "step" rather than just
incorporating it into the traversal clauses for those node types.
I left the equivalent cleanup step alone for the expression case,
because in that case it is actually generic across several different
node types, and due to the use of the common `visit_generators` utility
there isn't a clear way to keep the pushes and corresponding pops
localized.
Feel free to just reject this if I've missed a good reason for it to
stay this way!
## Test Plan
Tests and clippy.
## Summary
This is a follow-up to https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10764.
Support for diagnostics, quick fixes, and source actions can now be
disabled via client settings.
## Test Plan
### Manual Testing
Set up your workspace as described in the test plan in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10764, up to step 2. You don't
need to add a debug statement.
The configuration for `folder_a` and `folder_b` should be as follows:
`folder_a`:
```json
{
"ruff.codeAction.fixViolation": {
"enable": true
}
}
```
`folder_b`
```json
{
"ruff.codeAction.fixViolation": {
"enable": false
}
}
```
Finally, open up your VS Code User Settings and un-check the `Ruff > Fix
All` setting.
1. Open a Python file in `folder_a` that has existing problems. The
problems should be highlighted, and quick fix should be available.
`source.fixAll` should not be available as a source action.
2. Open a Python file in `folder_b` that has existing problems. The
problems should be highlighted, but quick fixes should not be available
for any of them. `source.fixAll` should not be available as a source
action.
3. Open up your VS Code Workspace Settings (second tab under the search
bar) and un-check `Ruff > Lint: Enable`
4. Both files you tested in steps 1 and 2 should now lack any visible
diagnostics. `source.organizeImports` should still be available as a
source action.
## Summary
Fixes#3011.
Type checkers currently allow forward references in all contexts in stub
files, and stubs frequently make use of this capability (although it
doesn't actually seem to be specc'd anywhere --neither in PEP 484, nor
https://typing.readthedocs.io/en/latest/source/stubs.html#id6, nor the
CPython typing docs). Implementing it so that Ruff allows forward
references in _all contexts_ in stub files seems non-trivial, however
(or at least, I couldn't figure out how to do it easily), so this PR
does not do that. Perhaps it _should_; if we think this apporach isn't
principled enough, I'm happy to close it and postpone changing anything
here.
However, this does reduce the number of F821 errors Ruff emits on
typeshed down from 76 to 2, which would mean that we could enable the
rule at typeshed. The remaining 2 F821 errors can be trivially fixed at
typeshed by moving definitions around; forward references in class bases
were really the only remaining places where there was a real _use case_
for forward references in stub files that Ruff wasn't yet allowing.
## Test plan
`cargo test`. I also ran this PR branch on typeshed to check to see if
there were any new false positives caused by the changes here; there
were none.
## Summary
`Path.read_bytes()` does not support any keyword arguments, so `FURB101`
should not be triggered if the file is opened in `rb` mode with any
keyword arguments.
## Test Plan
Move erroneous test to "Non-error" section of fixture.
## Summary
Historically, given:
```python
__all__ = [ # noqa: F822
"Bernoulli",
"Beta",
"Binomial",
]
```
The F822 violations would be attached to the `__all__`, so this `# noqa`
would be enforced for _all_ definitions in the list. This changed in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10525 for the better, in that we
now use the range of each string. But these `# noqa` directives stopped
working.
This PR sets the `__all__` as a parent range in the diagnostic, so that
these directives are respected once again.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10795.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
Add new rule `pyupgrade - UP042` (I picked next available number).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/discussions/3867
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9569
It should warn + provide a fix `class A(str, Enum)` -> `class
A(StrEnum)` for py311+.
## Test Plan
Added UP042.py test.
## Notes
I did not find a way to call `remove_argument` 2 times consecutively, so
the automatic fixing works only for classes that inherit exactly `str,
Enum` (regardless of the order).
I also plan to extend this rule to support IntEnum in next PR.
## Summary
This builds off of the work in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10652 to implement a command
executor, backwards compatible with the commands from the previous LSP
(`ruff.applyAutofix`, `ruff.applyFormat` and
`ruff.applyOrganizeImports`).
This involved a lot of refactoring and tweaks to the code action
resolution code - the most notable change is that workspace edits are
specified in a slightly different way, using the more general `changes`
field instead of the `document_changes` field (which isn't supported on
all LSP clients). Additionally, the API for synchronous request handlers
has been updated to include access to the `Requester`, which we use to
send a `workspace/applyEdit` request to the client.
## Test Plan
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/7932e30f-d944-4e35-b828-1d81aa56c087
## Summary
When a language server initializes, it is passed a serialized JSON
object, which is known as its "initialization options". Until now, `ruff
server` has ignored those initialization options, meaning that
user-provided settings haven't worked. This PR is the first step for
supporting settings from the LSP client. It implements procedures to
deserialize initialization options into a settings object, and then
resolve those settings objects into concrete settings for each
workspace.
One of the goals for user settings implementation in `ruff server` is
backwards compatibility with `ruff-lsp`'s settings. We won't support all
settings that `ruff-lsp` had, but the ones that we do support should
work the same and use the same schema as `ruff-lsp`.
These are the existing settings from `ruff-lsp` that we will continue to
support, and which are part of the settings schema in this PR:
| Setting | Default Value | Description |
|----------------------------------------|---------------|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| `codeAction.disableRuleComment.enable` | `true` | Whether to display
Quick Fix actions to disable rules via `noqa` suppression comments. |
| `codeAction.fixViolation.enable` | `true` | Whether to display Quick
Fix actions to autofix violations. |
| `fixAll` | `true` | Whether to register Ruff as capable of handling
`source.fixAll` actions. |
| `lint.enable` | `true` | Whether to enable linting. Set to `false` to
use Ruff exclusively as a formatter. |
| `organizeImports` | `true` | Whether to register Ruff as capable of
handling `source.organizeImports` actions. |
To be clear: this PR does not implement 'support' for these settings,
individually. Rather, it constructs a framework for these settings to be
used by the server in the future.
Notably, we are choosing *not* to support `lint.args` and `format.args`
as settings for `ruff server`. This is because we're now interfacing
with Ruff at a lower level than its CLI, and converting CLI arguments
back into configuration is too involved.
We will have support for linter and formatter specific settings in
follow-up PRs. We will also 'hook up' user settings to work with the
server in follow up PRs.
## Test Plan
### Snapshot Tests
Tests have been created in
`crates/ruff_server/src/session/settings/tests.rs` to ensure that
deserialization and settings resolution works as expected.
### Manual Testing
Since we aren't using the resolved settings anywhere yet, we'll have to
add a few printing statements.
We want to capture what the resolved settings look like when sent as
part of a snapshot, so modify `Session::take_snapshot` to be the
following:
```rust
pub(crate) fn take_snapshot(&self, url: &Url) -> Option<DocumentSnapshot> {
let resolved_settings = self.workspaces.client_settings(url, &self.global_settings);
tracing::info!("Resolved settings for document {url}: {resolved_settings:?}");
Some(DocumentSnapshot {
configuration: self.workspaces.configuration(url)?.clone(),
resolved_client_capabilities: self.resolved_client_capabilities.clone(),
client_settings: resolved_settings,
document_ref: self.workspaces.snapshot(url)?,
position_encoding: self.position_encoding,
url: url.clone(),
})
}
```
Once you've done that, build the server and start up your extension
testing environment.
1. Set up a workspace in VS Code with two workspace folders, each one
having some variant of Ruff file-based configuration (`pyproject.toml`,
`ruff.toml`, etc.). We'll call these folders `folder_a` and `folder_b`.
2. In each folder, open up `.vscode/settings.json`.
3. In folder A, use these settings:
```json
{
"ruff.codeAction.disableRuleComment": {
"enable": true
}
}
```
4. In folder B, use these settings:
```json
{
"ruff.codeAction.disableRuleComment": {
"enable": false
}
}
```
5. Finally, open up your VS Code User Settings and un-check the `Ruff >
Code Action: Disable Rule Comment` setting.
6. When opening files in `folder_a`, you should see logs that look like
this:
```
Resolved settings for document <file>: ResolvedClientSettings { fix_all: true, organize_imports: true, lint_enable: true, disable_rule_comment_enable: true, fix_violation_enable: true }
```
7. When opening files in `folder_b`, you should see logs that look like
this:
```
Resolved settings for document <file>: ResolvedClientSettings { fix_all: true, organize_imports: true, lint_enable: true, disable_rule_comment_enable: false, fix_violation_enable: true }
```
8. To test invalid configuration, change `.vscode/settings.json` in
either folder to be this:
```json
{
"ruff.codeAction.disableRuleComment": {
"enable": "invalid"
},
}
```
10. You should now see these error logs:
```
<time> [info] <duration> ERROR ruff_server::session::settings Failed to deserialize initialization options: data did not match any variant of untagged enum InitializationOptions. Falling back to default client settings...
<time> [info] <duration> WARN ruff_server::server No workspace settings found for file:///Users/jane/testbed/pandas
<duration> WARN ruff_server::server No workspace settings found for file:///Users/jane/foss/scipy
```
11. Opening files in either folder should now print the following
configuration:
```
Resolved settings for document <file>: ResolvedClientSettings { fix_all: true, organize_imports: true, lint_enable: true, disable_rule_comment_enable: true, fix_violation_enable: true }
```
## Summary
This PR adds a new semantic model flag to indicate that the checker is
inside an f-string replacement field. This will be used to ignore
certain checks if the target version doesn't support a specific feature
like PEP 701.
fixes: #10761
## Test Plan
Add a test case from the raised issue.
Fixes#3259
## Summary
Renames `UnnecessaryComprehensionAnyAll` to
`UnnecessaryComprehensionInCall` and extends the check to `sum`, `min`,
and `max`, in addition to `any` and `all`.
## Test Plan
Updated snapshot test.
Built docs locally and verified the docs for this rule still render
correctly.
## Summary
Needed for https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10686.
We no longer support `root_uri` as an initialization parameter, relying
solely on `workspace_folders` to find the working directories. This
means that the minimum supported LSP version is now `0.3.6`.
## Test Plan
When opening a folder in VS Code, you shouldn't see any errors in the
log which say `No workspace(s) were provided(...)`.
## Summary
We may not have had access to this in the past, but in short, if the
diagnostic is related to a specific section of a docstring, it seems
better to highlight the section (via the header) than the _entire_
docstring.
This should be completely compatible with existing `# noqa` since it's
always inside of a multi-line string anyway, and in such cases the `#
noqa` is always placed at the end of the multiline string.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10736.
## Summary
This PR adds the `as_str` implementation for all the operator methods.
It already exists for `CmpOp` which is being [used in the
linter](ffcd77860c/crates/ruff_linter/src/rules/flake8_simplify/rules/key_in_dict.rs (L117))
and it makes sense to implement it for the rest as well. This will also
be utilized in error messages for the new parser.
## Summary
This PR removes unused operator methods and impl traits. There is
already the `is_macro::Is` implementation for all the operators and this
seems unnecessary.
## Summary
We lost the per-rule ignores when these were migrated to the AST, so if
_any_ `Q` rule is enabled, they're now all enabled.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10724.
## Test Plan
Ran:
```shell
ruff check . --isolated --select Q --ignore Q000
ruff check . --isolated --select Q --ignore Q001
ruff check . --isolated --select Q --ignore Q002
ruff check . --isolated --select Q --ignore Q000,Q001
ruff check . --isolated --select Q --ignore Q000,Q002
ruff check . --isolated --select Q --ignore Q001,Q002
```
...against:
```python
'''
bad docsting
'''
a = 'single'
b = '''
bad multi line
'''
```
## Summary
An annotated lambda assignment within a class scope is often
intentional. For example, within a dataclass or Pydantic model, these
are treated as fields rather than methods (and so can be passed values
in constructors).
I originally wrote this to special-case dataclasses and Pydantic
models... But was left feeling like we'd see more false positives here
for little gain (an annotated lambda within a `class` is likely
intentional?). Open to opinions, though.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10718.
## Summary
Currently, [this
line](716688d44e/crates/ruff_linter/src/fix/edits.rs (L101))
assumes that the `noqa` comment begins with an octothorpe followed by a
space. (`# `) With anyone's random code, this of course is not always
true.
When there's a multi-byte character after the leading octothorpe, such
as
[`\u0085`](https://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/85/index.htm),
we try slicing from within the character, causing a panic.
To fix this, the logic has been changed to remove unused `noqa`
directives and keep any trailing comments, or removing the whole comment
if the comment is just the unused `noqa`
Fixes#10097.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Implement FURB164 in the issue #1348.
Relevant Refurb docs is here:
https://github.com/dosisod/refurb/blob/v2.0.0/docs/checks.md#furb164-no-from-float
I've changed the name from `no-from-float` to
`verbose-decimal-fraction-construction`.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
I've written it in the `FURB164.py`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>
## Summary
When `relative-imports-order = "closest-to-furthest"` is set, we should
_still_ put non-relative imports after relative imports. It's rare for
them to be in the same section, but _possible_ if you use
`known-local-folder`.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10655.
## Test Plan
New tests.
Also sorted this file:
```python
from ..models import ABC
from .models import Question
from .utils import create_question
from django_polls.apps.polls.models import Choice
```
With both:
- `isort view.py`
- `ruff check view.py --select I --fix`
And the following `pyproject.toml`:
```toml
[tool.ruff.lint.isort]
order-by-type = false
relative-imports-order = "closest-to-furthest"
known-local-folder = ["django_polls"]
[tool.isort]
profile = "black"
reverse_relative = true
known_local_folder = ["django_polls"]
```
I verified that Ruff and isort gave the same result, and that they
_still_ gave the same result when removing the relevant setting:
```toml
[tool.ruff.lint.isort]
order-by-type = false
known-local-folder = ["django_polls"]
[tool.isort]
profile = "black"
known_local_folder = ["django_polls"]
```
## Summary
Add a setting `extend-allowed-calls` to allow users to define their own
list of calls which allow boolean traps.
Resolves#10485.
Resolves#10356.
## Test Plan
Extended text fixture and added setting test.
## Summary
This PR fixes the bug for `DTZ007` rule where it didn't consider to
check for the presence of `%z` in f-strings. It also considers the
string parts of an implicitly concatenated f-strings for which I want to
find a better solution (#10308).
fixes: #10601
## Test Plan
Add test cases and update the snapshots.
## Summary
Fixes#10589.
Code that violates `F401` or `F841` (in other words, unused variables or
imports) should now appear greyed out or 'unused' in an editor.
## Test Plan
Put the following test code in a new file within the extension
development host window:
```python
import math
def func():
if False:
unused = "<- this should be greyed out"
```
The following test code should have greyed out/unused import and
variable names, like so:
<img width="294" alt="Screenshot 2024-03-28 at 4 23 18 AM"
src="https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/assets/19577865/e84a6e7a-49e2-4fed-9624-f8f9559e0837">
## Summary
Fixes#10588.
Most diagnostics from `ruff server` now appear as a much less alarming
warning instead of an error. Three diagnostics still appear as errors:
`F821` (`undefined name <name>`), `E902` (`IOError`) and `E999`
(`SyntaxError`).
## Test Plan
With an extension using the path to a locally-built executable, open a
file with multiple highlighted problems. Toggle the `Experimental
Server` setting on and off. The highlights should stay as warnings.
Then, modify the file to have a syntactically incorrect element. The
start of the invalid syntax should now have a red highlight.
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## Summary
This PR updates the warning message for rule S305 to accurately reflect
the security concern over using ECB mode in block ciphers, which is
considered insecure compared to other modes like CBC or CTR. The
previous message incorrectly mentioned AES as a [block cipher
mode](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_cipher_mode_of_operation),
which has been corrected to avoid confusion.
Ref:
c85576d903/bandit/blacklists/calls.py (L99-L102)825fd7c990/crates/ruff_linter/src/rules/flake8_bandit/rules/suspicious_function_call.rs (L187-L216)
## Test Plan
No testing required as the change is limited to a minor change of
warning message update.
## Summary
The example for tab-after-comma (E242):
```python
a = 4,\t5
```
Use instead:
```python
a = 4, 3
```
is confusing since both the whitespace and the numbers are changed.
Change so the examples use the same numbers before/after.
## Test Plan
Untested.
- Clearly state in the documentation that passing `tz=None` is just as bad as not passing a `tz=` argument, from the perspective of these rules.
- Clearly state in the error messages exactly what the user is doing wrong, if the user is passing `tz=None` rather than failing to pass a `tz=` argument at all.
- Make error messages more concise, and separate out the suggested remedy from the thing that the user is identified as doing wrong.
Co-authored-by: Christian Clauss <cclauss@me.com>
## Summary
Fixes#10618.
This PR introduces a proper API for sending requests to the client and
handling any response sent back. Dynamic capability registration now
uses this new API, fixing an issue where a much more simplistic response
handler silently flushes a code action request that needed a response.
## Test Plan
#10618 can no longer be reproduced. No errors about unhandled responses
should appear in the extension output, and you should see this new log
when the server starts:
```
<DATE> <TIME> [info] <DURATION> INFO ruff_server::server Configuration file watcher successfully registered
```
## Summary
This PR adds an overview and roadmap to the `README.md` for the
`ruff_server` crate along with a rudimentary `CONTRIBUTING.md` that
explains some of the technical decisions behind the project and basic
information about local testing.
## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Similar to #10419, there was a case where there is a collision of C401
and C416 (as discussed in #10101).
Fixed this by implementing short-circuit for the comprehension of the
form `{x for x in foo}`.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
Extended `C401.py` with the case where `set` is not builtin function,
and divided the case where the short-circuit should occur.
Removed the last testcase of `print(f"{ {set(a for a in 'abc')} }")`
test as this is invalid as a python code, but should I keep this?
## Summary
This is just a nitpicky improvement, but I thought it'd be a good
opportunity to look at the ruff source.
> The rules list in the documentation is generated using the registry
order. Currently, flake8-logging is separated from the rest of the
flake8 plugins. This patch puts it next to them.
https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/
If it makes sense, we could alternatively just sort the linters in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/blob/main/crates/ruff_dev/src/generate_rules_table.rs.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Laíns <lains@riseup.net>
## Summary
This is not the holistic solution but just to fix that issue.
fixes: #10546
## Test Plan
Add a regression test for it and check the snapshots.
## Summary
Fixed false-positive on the rule `PLW1641`, where the explicit
assignment on the `__hash__` method is not counted as an definition of
`__hash__`. (Discussed in #10557).
Also, added one new testcase.
## Test Plan
Checked on `cargo test` in `eq_without_hash.py`.
Before the change, for the assignment into `__hash__`, only `__hash__ =
None` was counted as an explicit definition of `__hash__` method.
Probably any assignment into `__hash__` property could be counted as an
explicit definition of hash, so I removed `value.is_none_literal_expr()`
check.
## Summary
Closes#10228
The PR makes the blank lines rules keep track of the cell status when
running on a notebook, and makes the rules not trigger when the line is
the first of the cell.
## Test Plan
The example given in #10228 is added as a fixture, along with a few
tests from the main blank lines fixtures.
## Summary
Continuing with #7595, this PR moves the `Q004` rule to the AST checker.
## Test Plan
- [x] Existing test cases should pass
- [x] No ecosystem updates
## Summary
PEP 420 says [nested namespace
packages](https://peps.python.org/pep-0420/#nested-namespace-packages)
are allowed, i.e. marking a directory as a namespace package marks all
subdirectories in the subtree as namespace packages.
`is_package` is modified to use `Path::starts_with` and the order of
checks is reversed to do in-memory checks first before hitting the disk.
## Test Plan
Added unit tests. Previously all tests were run with `namespace_packages
== &[]`. Verified that one of the tests was failing before changing the
implementation.
## Future Improvements
The `is_package_with_cache` can probably be rewritten to avoid repeated
calls to `Path::starts_with`, by caching all directories up to the
`namespace_root`:
```ruff
let namespace_root = namespace_packages
.iter()
.filter(|namespace_package| path.starts_with(namespace_package))
.min();
```
## Summary
Closes#10337.
I've fixed the code to count usage of variable.
Usage count inside the block is reset when there is a following
statement.
- continue
- break
- return
## Test Plan
Add test case.
## Summary
The fix for PYI025 is currently marked as unsafe in non-global scopes
for both `.py` and `.pyi` files, on the grounds that all global-scope
symbols in Python are implicitly exported from the module, so changing
the name of something in the global scope could break other modules that
import the module we're fixing. Unlike in `.py` files, however, imported
symbols are never implicitly re-exported from stub files. Symbols are
only understood by static analysis tools as being re-exported from stubs
if they are marked as explicit re-exports, which take three forms:
```py
from foo import * # all symbols from foo are re-exported from the stub
# the "redundant" alias marks it as an explicit re-export
# (note that the alias needs to be identical to the symbol's "actual" name
# in order for it to be a re-export)
from bar import barrr as barrr
# inclusion in __all__ also marks it as an explicit re-export,
# just like in `.py` files
from baz import bazzz
__all__ = ["bazzz"]
```
This is [specc'd in PEP
484](https://peps.python.org/pep-0484/#stub-files), and means that we
can mark the fix for PYI025 as safe in more cases for `.pyi` files.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`. An existing test case goes from being an unsafe fix to a
safe fix in a `.pyi` fixture. I also added a new fixture so we have
coverage of global-scope imports that are marked as re-exports using
"redundant" `from collections.abc import Set as Set` aliases.
## Summary
Continuing with https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/7595, this PR
moves the `Q001`, `Q002`, `Q003` rules to the AST based checker.
## Test Plan
Make sure all of the existing test cases pass and verify there are no
ecosystem changes.
## Summary
This error was found browsing
https://github.com/qarmin/Automated-Fuzzer/actions/runs/8396966850.
Which failed when trying to autofix the PT014 violation in the following
code:
```python
@pytest.mark.parametrize('data, spec', [(1.0, 1.0), (1.0, 1.0)])
def test_numbers(data, spec):
...
```
Investigation revealed that the implementation was not properly tested,
when the duplicate value was also the last in the list. In particular
the following function, which is in charge of finding the comma
following an element to create the suggested fix,
0a99bd84ce/crates/ruff_linter/src/rules/flake8_pytest_style/rules/parametrize.rs (L647-L651)
would find the next comma even if it was outside the list itself leading
to a lot of code being deleted.
This PR fixes that.
## Test Plan
Added misbehaving code to the test fixture.
## Summary
Ensures that we use the raw identifier as provided in the source code,
rather than the normalized Unicode identifier.
This _does_ mean that we treat these as two separate identifiers, and
_don't_ merge them, even though Python will treat them as the same
symbol:
```python
import numpy as ℂℇℊℋℌℍℎℐℑℒℓℕℤΩℨKÅℬℭℯℰℱℹℴ
import numpy as CƐgHHHhIILlNZΩZKÅBCeEFio
```
I think that's fine, this is super rare anyway and would likely be
confusing for users.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10528.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
Adds commas as an accepted separator between copyright years by default,
which is actually documented in one spot, but not currently accurate.
Fixes#9477.
## Summary
Fixes#10366.
`ruff server` now registers a file watcher on the client side using the
LSP protocol, and listen for events on configuration files. On such an
event, it reloads the configuration in the 'nearest' workspace to the
file that was changed.
## Test Plan
N/A
## Summary
Some contributors have referenced settings in their documentation
without adding the settings to an options section, this has lead to some
rendering issues (#10427). This PR addresses this looking for potential
inline links to settings, cross-checking them with the options sections,
and then linking them anyway if they are not found.
Resolves#10427.
## Test Plan
Manually verified that the correct modifications were made and no docs
were broken.
## Summary
In https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10341, we fixed some false
positives in `.pyi` files, but introduced others. This PR effectively
reverts the change in #10341 and fixes it in a slightly different way.
Instead of changing the _bindings_ we generate in the semantic model in
`.pyi` files, we instead change how we _resolve_ them.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/10509.
- Improve clarity over the motivation for some rules
- Improve links to external references. In particular, reduce links to PEPs, as PEPs are generally historical documents rather than pieces of living documentation. Where possible, it's better to link to the official typing spec, the other docs at typing.readthedocs.io/en/latest, or the docs at docs.python.org/3/library/typing.html.
- Use more concise language in a few places
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## Summary
Fix `E231` bug: Inconsistent catch compared to pycodestyle, such as when
dict nested in list. Resolves#10113.
## Test Plan
Example from #10113 added to test fixture.
## Summary
This is a follow up on https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/10492
I incorrectly assumed that `subscript.value.end()` always points past
the value. However, this isn't the case for parenthesized values where
the end "ends" before the parentheses.
## Test Plan
I added new tests for the parenthesized case.