Commit Graph

256 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
adpi2 eac9328db7 Replace -jar with -classpath in BuildServerConnectionDetails 2020-06-08 15:36:41 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez 0789fd7be6 Use java command in BspConnectionDetails 2020-05-25 13:32:48 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez b184be860f Add headers 2020-05-25 10:43:54 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez 6bce0a7b07 update NetworkClient 2020-05-22 11:17:33 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez a31747758c Create BSP connection file at server startup 2020-05-18 09:35:14 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez c80fe525c6 add BspClient 2020-05-16 09:52:21 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez 454ee61289 separate BSP and LSP handlers + add bspWorkspace task 2020-05-16 09:52:21 +02:00
Eugene Yokota cb93d20492 build server protocol
Initial draft for bsp support.

This shows two communication pattern around BSP.
First, if the request can be handled with the build knowledge is readily available in `NetworkChannel` we can reply immediately. `BuildServerImpl#onBspBuildTargets` is an example for that.

Second, if the request requires `State`, then we can forward the parameter into a custom command, and reply back from a command. `BuildServerProtocol.bspBuildTargetSources` is an example of that since it needs to invoke tasks to generate sources.
2020-05-16 09:52:20 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez 8df754eeb1 rename publish to either respond or notify 2020-05-12 16:26:33 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez 255a0a6ea6 send response to the source channel only 2020-05-12 14:44:10 +02:00
Adrien Piquerez 781584d137 id is mandatory in json rpc responses 2020-05-11 16:51:34 +02:00
Ethan Atkins 079cf2178c Add ClearScreenAfterCursor
This communicates intent better than clearScreen(0).
2020-05-01 13:02:48 -07:00
Ethan Atkins a449b1ff2d Move JLine apis into LineReader
It is better that sbt not expose the implementation detail that
LineReader is implemented by JLine. Other terminal related apis should
be handled by sbt.internal.util.Terminal.
2020-05-01 12:35:43 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 9218d3c087 Redraw command prompt after network command
Presently if a server command comes in while in the shell, the client
output can appear on the same line as the command prompt and the command
prompt will not appear again until the user hits enter. This is a
confusing ux. For example, if I start an sbt server and type
the partial command "comp" and then start up a client and run the clean
command followed by a compile, the output looks like:

[info] sbt server started at local:///Users/ethanatkins/.sbt/1.0/server/51cfad3281b3a8a1820a/sock
sbt:scala-compile> comp[info] new client connected: network-1
[success] Total time: 0 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:23:24 PM
[success] Total time: 0 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:23:27 PM
[success] Total time: 2 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:23:31 PM

Now, if I type "ile\n", I get:
[info] sbt server started at local:///Users/ethanatkins/.sbt/1.0/server/51cfad3281b3a8a1820a/sock
ile
[success] Total time: 0 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:23:34 PM
sbt:scala-compile>

Following the same set of inputs after this change, I get:
[info] sbt server started at local:///Users/ethanatkins/.sbt/1.0/server/51cfad3281b3a8a1820a/sock
sbt:scala-compile> comp
[info] new client connected: network-1
[success] Total time: 0 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:25:58 PM
sbt:scala-compile> comp
[success] Total time: 0 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:26:14 PM
sbt:scala-compile> comp
[success] Total time: 1 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:26:17 PM
sbt:scala-compile> compile
[success] Total time: 0 s, completed Dec 12, 2019, 7:26:19 PM
sbt:scala-compile>

To implement this change, I added the redraw() method to LineReader
which is a wrapper around ConsoleReader.drawLine; ConsoleReader.flush().
We invoke LineReader.redraw whenever the ConsoleChannel receives a
ConsolePromptEvent and there is a running thread.

To prevent log lines from being appended to the prompt line, in the
CommandExchange we print a newline character whenever a new command is
received from the network or a network client connects and we believe
that there is an active prompt.
2020-05-01 12:35:43 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 293e83ef9f Add Delete line to terminal prompt 2020-05-01 12:35:43 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 2e3a1e767d Don't poll System.in in ConsoleChannel
The ask user thread is a background thread so it's fine for it to block
on System.in. By blocking rather than polling, the cpu utilization of
sbt drops to 0 on idle. We have to explicitly handle <ctrl+d> if we
block though because the JLine console reader will return null both if
the input stream returns -1
2020-05-01 12:35:43 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 7902ec3b7d Add Terminal abstraction
This commit aims to centralize all of the terminal interactions
throughout sbt. It also seeks to hide the jline implementation details
and only expose the apis that sbt needs for interacting with the
terminal.

In general, we should be able to assume that the terminal is in
canonical (line buffered) mode with echo enabled. To switch to raw mode
or to enable/disable echo, there are apis: Terminal.withRawSystemIn and
Terminal.withEcho that take a thunk as parameter to ensure that the
terminal is reset back to the canonical mode afterwards.
2020-05-01 12:35:43 -07:00
Ethan Atkins cd65543d10 Deprecate unused ConsoleUnpromptEvent 2020-05-01 12:28:44 -07:00
Eugene Yokota 2396b449fe Contraband 0.4.6 2020-04-24 17:44:15 -04:00
Eugene Yokota 3ce4d22b84 integrate with VirtualFile changes
Ref https://github.com/sbt/zinc/pull/712
2020-04-24 17:44:14 -04:00
Ethan Atkins 3c54559236 Revert accidental debug logging commit
This was accidentally included in a formatting commit
cf745255e8.
2020-01-17 17:09:52 -08:00
Ethan Atkins cf745255e8 Apply javafmt in sbt project 2020-01-14 14:38:08 -08:00
Eugene Yokota 36a16673c0 reduce compiler warnings 2020-01-08 09:41:29 -05:00
Ethan Atkins aecdc44909 Update contraband sources
In 8bfae66b9d I upgraded contraband but
not all of the sources were regenerated because I didn't run clean
before recompiling.
2019-12-12 11:34:53 -08:00
Eugene Yokota 54b3405f42 apply -Yno-lub
To demonstrate [-Yno-lub](http://eed3si9n.com/stricter-scala-with-ynolub), this shows the code changes that removes lubing (Not all subprojects are done).

After I made the changes, I switched the Scala back to normal 2.12.10.
2019-10-13 23:46:23 -04:00
Ethan Atkins 955547e5bd Update deprecation warnings for api changes
During refactoring, these warnings got out of date. I also added
scaladoc to the watchTriggeredMessage key.

Ref: https://github.com/sbt/sbt/issues/5051.
2019-09-06 12:10:59 -07:00
xuwei-k dfe789d7c6 avoid deprecated /: and :\
use foldLeft and foldRight

https://github.com/scala/scala/blob/v2.13.0/src/library/scala/collection/IterableOnce.scala#L682-L686
2019-08-30 11:20:53 +09:00
Ethan Atkins 556a9384f3
Merge branch 'develop' into parser-fix 2019-07-29 21:57:44 -07:00
eugene yokota 5b0d0122af
Merge pull request #4906 from eatkins/turbo-resource-loader
Turbo resource loader
2019-07-29 16:21:17 -04:00
Ethan Atkins be489e05ca Clear expired loaders
Sometimes turbo mode didn't work correctly for projects where resources
were modified. This was because it was possible for the resource
classloader to inadvertently evict the dependency classloader from the
classloader cache because they had the same file stamps. There were two
fixes:
1) remove expired entries from the cache based on the
    (Parent, Classpath) pair rather than just classpath
2) do not close the classloaders during cache eviction. They may still
   be in use when we evict them so we need to wait until they are
   explicitly closed elsewhere or until the go out of scope and are
   collected by the CleanupThread

I tested this change with a spark project in which I kept modifying the
resources. Prior to this change, I could get into a state where if I
modified the resources, the dependency layer would get evicted every
time so the benefits of turbo mode were not realized.
2019-07-29 12:30:42 -07:00
Ethan Atkins c7ec97d18f Rework multi parser to exclude 'alias'
There have been numerous issues with the multi parser incorrectly
splitting commands like `alias foo = ; bar` into
`"alias foo =" :: "bar" :: Nil`. To fix this, I update the multi parser
implementation to accept a list of commands that cannot be part of a
multi command. For now, the only excluded command is "alias", but if
other issues come up, we can add more. I also thought about adding a
system property for excluding more commands but it didn't seem worth the
maintenance cost at this point.

In addition to adding a filter for the excluded commands, I also
reworked the multi parser so that I think its more clear (and should
hopefully have more predictable performance). I changed the cmdPart
parser to accept empty strings. Prior to this, the parser explicitly
handled the non-leading semicolon and leading semicolon cases
separately. With the relaxed cmdPart, we can handle both cases with a
single parser. We just have to strip any empty commands at the beginning
or end of the command list.
2019-07-28 12:35:13 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 196318e619 Fix multi parser performance regression
It was reported in https://github.com/sbt/sbt/issues/4890 that cosmetic
white space could cause problems for the paser. I tracked this down to
primarily being because of the
`val semi = token(OptSpace ~> ';' ~> OptSpace)` line. This would cause
excessive backtracking. I added a test for a multi line command with a
lot of cosmetic whitespace that was adapted from #4890 except that I
made it even more taxing by running adding 100 commands instead of the
roughly 10 in the report. Before the parser changes, the test would
more or less block indefinitely. I never saw it successfully complete.
After these changes, it completes in 30-50ms (which drops to about 2-3
ms if the number of commands is dropped from 100 to 3).

I verified manually in a different project that a number of different
multi command completions still worked. In particular, I tested that
`~foo/test; foo/tes` would expand to `~foo/test; foo/test` which is one
of the hardest cases to get right.

I also added a few extra test cases for the parser since I wasn't sure
what the impact of removing the OptSpace ~> from the semi parser would
be.
2019-07-28 12:35:03 -07:00
Ethan Atkins f5c8b8aad5 Don't use exception for reloading
I completely forgot about the StateTransform class which allows a task
to modify the state through its return value.
2019-07-26 15:03:32 -07:00
Nafer Sanabria 3f3d7d47e3 Minor clarification of logging message 2019-07-19 06:01:15 -05:00
Ethan Atkins 125c4ba532 Don't validate multi commands
We tried to prevent users from doing something like running a multi
command "foo; bar" where foo is valid but bar is invalid so that we
wouldn't run foo only to discover bar was an invalid key. It isn't
possible to know in general if any command other than the first command
in a multi command is valid because it might update the state and add
the initially invalid command.

The validation caused the intellij plugin to not work with 1.3.0-RC3.
2019-07-17 19:27:07 -07:00
Ethan Atkins a93d9e77ad Relax strict commands
The recent changes to make the multi parser strict broke any multi
command, or alias, where the multi command contained a command or task
that was not yet defined, but was possibly added by reload. This was
reported as #4869. I had had to work around this issue in ScriptedTests
by running `reload` and `setUpScripted` separately instead of as a multi
command. This workaround doesn't work for aliasing boot, which has been
a recommended approach by Mark Harrah since 2011.

To fix this, I relax the strict parser. We don't require that the parser
be valid to create a multi command string. In the multiApplied state
transformation, however, we validate all of the commands up to 'reload'.
Since there is no way to validate any commands to the right of 'reload,
we optimistically allow those commands to run.

So long as there is no 'reload' in the multi commands, all of the
commands will be validated.
2019-07-16 15:17:21 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 1b0159c547 Remove case in flatMap
I didn't notice that this was triggering a warning. I think at some
point I was actually doing something in the pattern match.
2019-07-13 10:46:25 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 60b1ac7ac4 Improve multi parser performance
The multi parser had very poor performance if there were many commands.
Evaluating the expansion of something like "compile;" * 30 could cause
sbt to hang indefinitely. I believe this was due to excessive
backtracking due to the optional `(parser <~ semi.?).?` part of the
parser in the non-leading semicolon case.

I also reworked the implementation so that the multi command now has a
name. This allows us to partition the commands into multi and non-multi
commands more easily in State while still having multi in the command
list. With this change, builds and plugins can exclude the multi parser
if they wish.

Using the partitioned parsers, I removed the high/priority low priority
distinction. Instead, I made it so that the multi command will actually
check if the first command is a named command, like '~'. If it is, it
will pass the raw command argument with the named command stripped out
into the parser for the named command. If that is parseable, then we
directly apply the effect. Otherwise we prefix each multi command to the
state.
2019-06-25 13:45:09 -07:00
Ethan Atkins ff16d76ad3 Remove matchers from MultiParserSpec
We've been trying to move away from the wordy dsl and stick with bare
assertions.
2019-06-19 16:12:45 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 4c814752fb Support braces in multi command parser
We run into issues if we naively split the command input on ';' and
treat each part as a separate command unless the ';' is inside of a
string because it is also valid to have ';'s inside of braced
expressions, e.g. `set foo := { val x = 1; x + 1 }`. There was no parser
for expressions enclosed in braces. I add one that should parse any
expression wrapped in braces so long as each opening brace is matched by a
closing brace. The parser returns the original expression. This allows
the multi parser to ignore ';' inside of '{...}'.

I had to rework the scripted tests to individually run 'reload' and
'setUpScripted' because the new parser rejects setUpScripted because it
isn't a valid command until reload has run.
2019-06-19 16:12:45 -07:00
Ethan Atkins ccfc3d7bc7 Validate commands in multiparser
It was reported in https://github.com/sbt/sbt/issues/4808 that compared
to 1.2.8, sbt 1.3.0-RC2 will truncate the command args of an input task
that contains semicolons. This is actually intentional, but not
completely robust. For sbt >= 1.3.0, we are making ';' syntactically
meaningful. This means that it always represents a command separator
_unless_ it is inside of a quoted string. To enforce this, the multi parser
will effectively split the input on ';', it will then validate that each
command that it extracted is valid. If not, it throws an exception. If
the input is not a multi command, then parsing fails with a normal
failure.

I removed the multi command from the state's defined commands and reworked
State.combinedParser to explicitly first try multi parsing and fall back
to the regular combined parser if it is a regular command. If the multi
parser throws an uncaught exception, parsing fails even if the regular
parser could have successfully parsed the command. The reason is so that
we do not ever allow the user to evaluate, say 'run a;b'. Otherwise the
behavior would be inconsitent when the user runs 'compile; run a;b'
2019-06-19 16:12:45 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 27fc4e57e3 Add missing match case
There was an incomplete pattern match that assumed that the jars in the
scala provider included one with the name  "scala-library.jar". In
practice, I think this is always true, but it's safer to have a fallback
case and it also removes the compiler warning.
2019-06-11 15:52:23 -07:00
Ethan Atkins f1698d2bf2 Re-use metabuild scala instance layer
At some point I noticed that projects with no scala sources in the build
loaded significantly faster than projects that had even a single scala
file -- no matter how simple that file was. This didn't really make
sense to me because *.sbt files _do_ have to be compiled. I finally
realized that classloading was a likely bottle neck because *.sbt
files are compiled on the sbt classpath while *.scala files are compiled
with a different classloader generated by the classloader cache. It then
occurred to me that we could pre-fill the classloader cache with the
scala layer of the sbt metabuild classloader.

I found that compared to 1.3.0-M5, a project with a simple scala file in
the project directory loaded about 2 seconds faster after this change.
Even if there are no scala sources in the build.sbt, there is a similar
performance improvement for running "sbt compile", which I found exited
2-3 seconds faster after this change.
2019-06-06 21:02:24 -07:00
eugene yokota e31fd3f082
Merge pull request #4765 from eatkins/watch-docs
Watch docs
2019-06-03 22:36:46 -04:00
Ethan Atkins 70899e5cad Switch private[sbt] status of Reload objects
The Reload exception that I added in the sbt package really wasn't
intended to be public. It's only meant to be used by
checkMetaBuildSources, which the users shouldn't override. I put it in
the top package though because I wanted it to be next to FullReload. I
also am not sure why the Reload object in Watch was private[sbt], but
while writing documentation, I realized that users couldn't access it.
2019-06-03 17:35:01 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 4193cc323d Remove leading semicolon from multi command help 2019-06-03 17:35:01 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 625470cdd5 Make LayeredClassLoaders parallel capable
The docs for ClassLoader,
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/lang/ClassLoader.html
say that all non-hierarchical custom classloaders should be registered
as parallel capable. The docs also suggest that custom classloaders
should try to only override findClass so I reworked LayerdClassLoader to
only override findClass. I also added locking to the class loading to
make it safe for concurrent loading.

All of the custom classloaders besides LayeredClassLoader either
subclass URLClassLoader or LayeredClassLoader but don't override
loadClass. Because those two classloaders are parallel capable, the
subclasses should be as well. It isn't possible to make classloaders
that are implemented in scala parallel capable because scala 2 doesn't
support jvm static blocks (dotty does support this with an annotation).
To work around this, I re-worked some of the classloaders so that they
are either directly implemented in java or I subclassed a scala
implementation class in java.
2019-06-03 17:26:14 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 6f7a824478 Reduce idle cpu usage
I noticed that sbt 1.3.0 was using more cpu when idling (either at the
shell or while waiting for file events) than 1.2.8. This was because I'd
reduced a number of timeouts to 2 milliseconds which was causing a
thread to keep waking up every 2 milliseconds to poll a queue. I thought
that this was cheaper than it actually is and drove the cpu utilization
to O(10%) of a cpu on my mac.

To address this, I consolidated a number of queues into a single queue
in CommandExchange and Continuous. In the CommandExchange case, I
reworked CommandChannel to have a register method that passes in a Queue
of CommandChannels. Whenever it appends an exec, it adds itself to the
queue. CommandExchange can then poll that queue directly and poll the
returned CommandChannel for the actual exec. Since the main thread is
blocking on this queue, it does not need to frequently wake up and can
just poll more or less indefinitely until a message is received. This
also reduces average latency compared to older versions of sbt since
messages will be processed almost as soon as they are received.

The continuous case is slightly more complicated because we are polling
from two sources, stdin and FileEventMonitor. In my ideal world, I'd
have a reactive api for both of those sources and they would just write
events to a shared queue that we could block on. That is nontrivial to
implement, so instead I consolidated the FileEventMonitor instances into
a single FileEventMonitor. Since there is now only one FileEventMonitor
queue, we can block on that queue for 30 milliseconds and the poll
stdin. This reduces cpu utilization to O(2%) on my machine while still
having reasonably low latency for key input events (the latency of file
events should be close to zero since we are usually polling the
FileEventMonitor queue when waiting).

I actually had a TODO about the FileEventMonitor change that this
resolves.
2019-05-31 09:34:04 -07:00
Ethan Atkins dc903bb4d8 Don't check parents in ClassLoaderCacheTest
This check doesn't actually make sense anymore with the new
ClassLoaderCache. In the old ClassLoaderCache, there were separate
layers for the snapshots and regular jars.  The test was verifying that
only the snapshot layer was invalidated but now there is just one layer.
2019-05-28 11:53:13 -07:00
Ethan Atkins 7b870d647a Add missing header 2019-05-28 10:36:44 -07:00