Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Heschi Kreinick aeb8e36929 internal/lsp: remove multi-module support in tests
Mostly a rollback of CL 217541. No changes in the actual tests.

Change-Id: I910551d4750822bd2d8c5039d1cf194e42d01500
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/256363
Trust: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
gopls-CI: kokoro <noreply+kokoro@google.com>
TryBot-Result: Go Bot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
2020-09-22 16:28:30 +00:00
Rohan Challa 2529d2857a internal/lsp/tests: standardize testdata folder format
This change standardizes the folder structure for testdata that are used for testing the lsp. In particular, it uses the following format:
- dir
  - primarymod
    - .go files
    - packages
    - go.mod (optional)
  - modules
    - repoa
      - mod1
        - .go files
        -  packages
        - go.mod (optional)

As we can see, any folder inside of testdata should be of this format, where the primary test files with the markers are all located inside the primarymod folder. The modules folder is used to hold any potential dependencies that are used for testing.

A consequence of this change is that we can have one directory separated by folders, where each folder is it's own module, this allows us to use internal/lsp/tests with go.mod files. Now, tests.Load() will return an array of Data objects, where each object corresponds to one of the directories structured above.

Updates golang/go#36091

Change-Id: I437cc2a2a9fc1bac93779845737aa74383fbf9c3
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/217541
Run-TryBot: Rohan Challa <rohan@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org>
2020-02-06 14:14:23 +00:00
Muir Manders f80fb1dfa1 internal/lsp: refactor find-references and rename
The main goal is to push the package variant logic from internal/lsp
into internal/lsp/source so all users of internal/lsp/source benefit.

"references" and "rename" now have top-level source.References() and
source.Rename() entry points (as opposed to hanging off
source.Identifier()). I expanded objectsAtProtocolPos() to know about
implicit objects (type switch and import spec), and to
handle *ast.ImportSpec generically. This gets rid of special case
handling of *types.PkgName in various places.

The biggest practical benefit, though, is that "references" no longer
needs to compute the objectpath for every types.Object comparison it
does, instead using direct types.Object equality. This speeds up
"references" and "rename" a lot.

Two other notable improvements that fell out of not using
source.Identifier()'s logic:

- Finding references on an embedded field now shows references to the
  field, not the type being embedded.
- Finding references on an imported object now works
  correctly (previously it searched the importing package's dependents
  rather than the imported package's dependents).

Finally, I refactored findIdentifier() to use pathEnclosingObjNode()
instead of astutil.PathEnclosingInterval. Now we only need a single
call to get the path because pathEnclosingObjNode() has the
"try pos || try pos-1" logic built in.

Change-Id: I667be9bed6ad83912404b90257c5c1485b3a7025
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/211999
Run-TryBot: Muir Manders <muir@mnd.rs>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org>
2020-01-16 06:24:15 +00:00