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>
When looking for references, look in the entire workspace rather than
the same package. This makes the references query more expensive because
it needs to look at every package in the workspace, but hopefully
it shouln't be user-noticable. This can be made more efficient by only
checking packages that are transitive reverse dependencies. I don't think a
mechanism to get all transitive reverse dependencies exists yet.
One of the references test have been changed: it looked up references
of the builtin int type, but now there are so many refererences that
the test too slow and doesn't make sense any more. Instead look up
references of the type "i" in that file.
Change-Id: I93b3bd3795386f06ce488e76e6c7c8c1b1074e22
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/206883
Run-TryBot: Michael Matloob <matloob@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org>
Objects for builtin types all have position token.NoPos. We do
not want all objects that have position token.NoPos to be matched
when we are looking for references for this object, so we need to
compare the names of the objects as well.
Fixesgolang/go#32991
Change-Id: I67e7aba9909ebcbb246203ea5c572debf996c792
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/185247
Run-TryBot: Suzy Mueller <suzmue@golang.org>
TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Rebecca Stambler <rstambler@golang.org>