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go/internal/lsp/protocol/protocol.go

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// Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package protocol
import (
"context"
"encoding/json"
internal/lsp: reorganize the generated Go code for the lsp protocol Code generation has been unified, so that tsprotocol.go and tsserver.go are produced by the same program. tsprotocol.go is about 900 lines shorter, partly from removing boilerplate comments that golint no longer requires. (And partly by generating fewer unneeded types.) The choice made for a union type is commented with the set of types. There is no Go equivalent for union types, but making themn all interface{} would replace type checking at unmarshalling with checking runtime conversions. Intersection types (A&B) are sometimes embedded (struct{A;B;}, and sometimes expanded, as they have to be if A and B have fields with the same names. There are fewer embedded structs, which had been verbose and confusing to initialize. They have been replaced by types whose names end in Gn. Essentially all the generated *structs have been removed. This makes no difference in what the client sends, and the server may send a {} where it previously might have sent nothing. The benefit is that some nil tests can be removed. Thus 'omitempty' in json tags is just documentation that the element is optional in the protocol. The files that generate this code will be submitted later, but soon. Change-Id: I52b997d9c58de3d733fc8c6ce061e47ce2bdb100 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/207598 Run-TryBot: Peter Weinberger <pjw@google.com> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Ian Cottrell <iancottrell@google.com>
2019-11-17 12:29:15 -07:00
"fmt"
"golang.org/x/tools/internal/event"
"golang.org/x/tools/internal/jsonrpc2"
"golang.org/x/tools/internal/xcontext"
)
var (
// RequestCancelledError should be used when a request is cancelled early.
RequestCancelledError = jsonrpc2.NewError(-32800, "JSON RPC cancelled")
)
internal/lsp: refactor LSP server instantiation Previously, the process of instantiating and running the LSP server was sharded across the lsp, protocol, and cmd packages, and this resulted in some APIs that are hard to work with. For example, it's hard to guess the difference between lsp.NewClientServer, lsp.NewServer, protocol.NewServer (which returns a client), and protocol.NewClient (which returns a server). This change reorganizes Server instantiation as follows: + The lsp.Server is now purely an implementation of the protocol.Server interface. It is no longer responsible for installing itself into the jsonrpc2 Stream, nor for running itself. + A new package 'lsprpc' is added, to implement the logic of binding an incoming connection to an LSP server session. This is put in a separate package for lack of a clear home: it didn't really philosophically belong in any of the lsp, cmd, or protocol packages. We can perhaps move it to cmd in the future, but I'd like to keep it as a separate package while I develop request forwarding. simplified import graph: jsonrpc2 ⭠ lsprpc ⭠ cmd ⭩ ⭦ lsp (t.b.d. client tests) ⭩ ⭨ protocol source + The jsonrpc2 package is extended to have a minimal API for running a 'StreamServer': something analogous to an HTTP server that listens for new connections and delegates to a handler (but we couldn't use the word 'Handler' for this delegate as it was already taken). After these changes, I hope that the concerns of "serving the LSP", "serving jsonrpc2", and "installing the LSP on jsonrpc2" are more logically organized, though one legitimate criticism is that the word 'Server' is still heavily overloaded. This change prepares a subsequent change which hijacks the jsonrpc2 connection when forwarding messages to a shared gopls instance. To test this change, the following improvements are made: + A servertest package is added to make it easier to run a test against an in-process jsonrpc2 server. For now, this uses TCP but it could easily be modified to use io.Pipe. + cmd tests are updated to use the servertest package. Unfortunately it wasn't yet possible to eliminate the concept of `remote=internal` in favor of just using multiple sessions, because view initialization involves calling both `go env` and `packages.Load`, which slow down session startup significantly. See also golang.org/issue/35968. Instead, the syntax for `-remote=internal` is modified to be `-remote=internal@127.0.0.1:12345`. + An additional test for request cancellation is added for the sessionserver package. This test uncovered a bug: when calling Canceller.Cancel, we were using id rather than &id, which resulted in incorrect json serialization (as only the pointer receiver implements the json.Marshaller interface). Updates golang/go#34111 Change-Id: I75c219df634348cdf53a9e57839b98588311a9ef Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/215742 Run-TryBot: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
2020-01-21 17:34:50 -07:00
// ClientDispatcher returns a Client that dispatches LSP requests across the
// given jsonrpc2 connection.
func ClientDispatcher(conn *jsonrpc2.Conn) Client {
return &clientDispatcher{Conn: conn}
}
// ServerDispatcher returns a Server that dispatches LSP requests across the
// given jsonrpc2 connection.
func ServerDispatcher(conn *jsonrpc2.Conn) Server {
return &serverDispatcher{Conn: conn}
}
func Handlers(handler jsonrpc2.Handler) jsonrpc2.Handler {
return CancelHandler(
CancelHandler(
jsonrpc2.AsyncHandler(
jsonrpc2.MustReplyHandler(handler))))
}
func CancelHandler(handler jsonrpc2.Handler) jsonrpc2.Handler {
handler, canceller := jsonrpc2.CancelHandler(handler)
return func(ctx context.Context, reply jsonrpc2.Replier, req jsonrpc2.Request) error {
if req.Method() != "$/cancelRequest" {
return handler(ctx, reply, req)
}
var params CancelParams
if err := json.Unmarshal(req.Params(), &params); err != nil {
return sendParseError(ctx, reply, err)
}
if n, ok := params.ID.(float64); ok {
canceller(jsonrpc2.NewIntID(int64(n)))
} else if s, ok := params.ID.(string); ok {
canceller(jsonrpc2.NewStringID(s))
} else {
return sendParseError(ctx, reply, fmt.Errorf("request ID %v malformed", params.ID))
}
return reply(ctx, nil, nil)
}
}
func Call(ctx context.Context, conn *jsonrpc2.Conn, method string, params interface{}, result interface{}) error {
id, err := conn.Call(ctx, method, params, result)
if ctx.Err() != nil {
cancelCall(ctx, conn, id)
}
return err
}
func cancelCall(ctx context.Context, conn *jsonrpc2.Conn, id jsonrpc2.ID) {
ctx = xcontext.Detach(ctx)
ctx, done := event.Start(ctx, "protocol.canceller")
defer done()
internal/lsp: refactor LSP server instantiation Previously, the process of instantiating and running the LSP server was sharded across the lsp, protocol, and cmd packages, and this resulted in some APIs that are hard to work with. For example, it's hard to guess the difference between lsp.NewClientServer, lsp.NewServer, protocol.NewServer (which returns a client), and protocol.NewClient (which returns a server). This change reorganizes Server instantiation as follows: + The lsp.Server is now purely an implementation of the protocol.Server interface. It is no longer responsible for installing itself into the jsonrpc2 Stream, nor for running itself. + A new package 'lsprpc' is added, to implement the logic of binding an incoming connection to an LSP server session. This is put in a separate package for lack of a clear home: it didn't really philosophically belong in any of the lsp, cmd, or protocol packages. We can perhaps move it to cmd in the future, but I'd like to keep it as a separate package while I develop request forwarding. simplified import graph: jsonrpc2 ⭠ lsprpc ⭠ cmd ⭩ ⭦ lsp (t.b.d. client tests) ⭩ ⭨ protocol source + The jsonrpc2 package is extended to have a minimal API for running a 'StreamServer': something analogous to an HTTP server that listens for new connections and delegates to a handler (but we couldn't use the word 'Handler' for this delegate as it was already taken). After these changes, I hope that the concerns of "serving the LSP", "serving jsonrpc2", and "installing the LSP on jsonrpc2" are more logically organized, though one legitimate criticism is that the word 'Server' is still heavily overloaded. This change prepares a subsequent change which hijacks the jsonrpc2 connection when forwarding messages to a shared gopls instance. To test this change, the following improvements are made: + A servertest package is added to make it easier to run a test against an in-process jsonrpc2 server. For now, this uses TCP but it could easily be modified to use io.Pipe. + cmd tests are updated to use the servertest package. Unfortunately it wasn't yet possible to eliminate the concept of `remote=internal` in favor of just using multiple sessions, because view initialization involves calling both `go env` and `packages.Load`, which slow down session startup significantly. See also golang.org/issue/35968. Instead, the syntax for `-remote=internal` is modified to be `-remote=internal@127.0.0.1:12345`. + An additional test for request cancellation is added for the sessionserver package. This test uncovered a bug: when calling Canceller.Cancel, we were using id rather than &id, which resulted in incorrect json serialization (as only the pointer receiver implements the json.Marshaller interface). Updates golang/go#34111 Change-Id: I75c219df634348cdf53a9e57839b98588311a9ef Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/215742 Run-TryBot: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Heschi Kreinick <heschi@google.com>
2020-01-21 17:34:50 -07:00
// Note that only *jsonrpc2.ID implements json.Marshaler.
conn.Notify(ctx, "$/cancelRequest", &CancelParams{ID: &id})
}
func sendParseError(ctx context.Context, reply jsonrpc2.Replier, err error) error {
return reply(ctx, nil, fmt.Errorf("%w: %s", jsonrpc2.ErrParse, err))
}