Closes#41832
Extends https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/19455
When an internal `.editorconfig` is detected in the worktree, we
traverse parent directories up to the filesystem root looking for
additional `.editorconfig` files. All discovered external configs are
loaded and cached (shared when multiple worktrees reference the same
parent directories). When computing settings for a file, external
configs are applied first (from furthest to closest), then internal
configs.
For local projects, file watchers are set up for each external config so
changes are applied immediately. When a project is shared via collab,
external configs are sent to guests through the existing
`UpdateWorktreeSettings` proto message (with a new `outside_worktree`
field). SSH remoting works similarly.
Limitations: We don't currently take creation of new external editor
config files into account since they are loaded once on worktree add.
Release Notes:
- Added support for `.editorconfig` files outside the project directory.
Zed now traverses parent directories to find and apply EditorConfig
settings. Use `root = true` in any `.editorconfig` to stop inheriting
settings from parent directories.
While at it, annotate more functions that are potentially related to
language parsing in buffers.
Also, on macOS, in order to actually have callstack frames properly
recorded by Tracy, you need to manually run `dsymutil` on the binary.
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes #ISSUE
Moves the settings content definitions into their own crate, so that
they are compiled+cached separately from settings, primarily to avoid
recompiles due to changes in gpui. In that vain many gpui types such as
font weight/features, and `SharedString` were replaced in the content
crate, either with `*Content` types for font/modifier things, or
`String`/`Arc<str>` for `SharedString`. To make the conversions easy a
new trait method in the settings crate named `IntoGpui::into_gpui`
allows for `into()` like conversions to the gpui types in
`from_settings` impls.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Piotr Osiewicz <24362066+osiewicz@users.noreply.github.com>
## Motivation
This PR unifies the async execution infrastructure between GPUI and
other components that depend on the `scheduler` crate (such as our cloud
codebase). By having a scheduler that lives independently of GPUI, we
can enable deterministic testing across the entire stack - testing GPUI
applications alongside cloud services with a single, unified scheduler.
## Summary
This PR completes the integration of the `scheduler` crate into GPUI,
unifying async execution and enabling deterministic testing of GPUI
combined with other components that depend on the scheduler crate.
## Key Changes
### Scheduler Integration (Phases 1-5, previously completed)
- `TestDispatcher` now delegates to `TestScheduler` for timing, clock,
RNG, and task scheduling
- `PlatformScheduler` implements the `Scheduler` trait for production
use
- GPUI executors wrap scheduler executors, selecting `TestScheduler` or
`PlatformScheduler` based on environment
- Unified blocking logic via `Scheduler::block()`
### Dead Code Cleanup
- Deleted orphaned `crates/gpui/src/platform/platform_scheduler.rs`
(older incompatible version)
## Intentional Removals
### `spawn_labeled` and `deprioritize` removed
The `TaskLabel` system (`spawn_labeled`, `deprioritize`) was removed
during this integration. It was only used in a few places for test
ordering control.
cc @maxbrunsfeld @as-cii - The new priority-weighted scheduling in
`TestScheduler` provides similar functionality through
`Priority::High/Medium/Low`. If `deprioritize` is important for specific
test scenarios, we could add it back to the scheduler crate. Let me know
if this is blocking anything.
### `start_waiting` / `finish_waiting` debug methods removed
Replaced by `TracingWaker` in `TestScheduler` - run tests with
`PENDING_TRACES=1` to see backtraces of pending futures when parking is
forbidden.
### Realtime Priority removed
The realtime priority feature was unused in the codebase. I'd prefer to
reintroduce it when we have an actual use case, as the implementation
(bounded channel with capacity 1) could potentially block the main
thread. Having a real use case will help us validate the design.
## Testing
- All GPUI tests pass
- All scheduler tests pass
- Clippy clean
## Architecture
```
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ GPUI │
│ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┌────────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ gpui::Background- │ │ gpui::ForegroundExecutor │ │
│ │ Executor │ │ - wraps scheduler:: │ │
│ │ - scheduler: Arc< │ │ ForegroundExecutor │ │
│ │ dyn Scheduler> │ └────────────┬───────────────┘ │
│ └──────────┬───────────┘ │ │
│ │ │ │
│ └──────────┬──────────────────┘ │
│ ▼ │
│ ┌───────────────────────┐ │
│ │ Arc<dyn Scheduler> │ │
│ └───────────┬───────────┘ │
│ ┌──────────────┴──────────────┐ │
│ ▼ ▼ │
│ ┌──────────────────┐ ┌────────────────────┐ │
│ │ PlatformScheduler│ │ TestScheduler │ │
│ │ (production) │ │ (deterministic) │ │
│ └──────────────────┘ └────────────────────┘ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
```
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Antonio Scandurra <me@as-cii.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Yara <git@yara.blue>
Co-authored-by: Zed Zippy <234243425+zed-zippy[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Also improves the commit view to use the same status-based buffer header
visual overrides as the project diff as a driveby.
Fixes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/45735
Release Notes:
- git: Binary files are no longer shown in garbled form when viewing an
old commit.
Embeddings have neither been used nor maintained in over a year and
there are currently no plans to use these again any time soon. Hence,
remove support for these here to more clearly indicate that these are
actually not used.
Release Notes:
- N/A
We use `block_with_timeout` to give the reparse task a millisecond to
complete, and if it takes longer we put the work off to the background.
The reason for this is that we want tree-sitter based features to feel
snappy.
The reparse task is non-cooperative though, it has no yield points,
giving us no place to actually check for our timeout, meaning we will
always drive it to completion and block for the entire duration.
This kicks out the `block_with_timeout` in favor of using the treesitter
progress callback to handle timeouts instead.
Release Notes:
- Improved responsiveness with very language language files on edits
Closes#45046
The root of the issue is anchor resolution. When we apply adjacent
edits, they get merged into a single edit. In the scenario described in
the issue, this is what happens:
1. We create an anchor at the end of each selection (bias::right) on the
snapshot before the edits.
2. We collect the edits and apply them to the buffer.
3. Since the edits are adjacent (>=), the buffer merges them into a
single edit.
4. As a result, we apply one edit to the text buffer, creating a single
visible fragment with length = 3.
5. The buffer ends up with fragments like: [F(len = 3, visible = true),
F(len = 1, visible = false), ...]
6. After the edits, we resolve the previously created anchors to produce
zero-width selections (cursors).
7. All anchors resolve into deleted fragments, so their resolved offset
equals the cumulative visible offset, which is 3.
8. We now have 3 cursors with identical coordinates (0;3).
9. These cursors get merged into a single cursor.
I tried several approaches, but they either felt wrong or didn’t work.
In particular, I tried adjusting anchor resolution using the delta
stored in handle_input, but this doesn’t help because selections are
merged immediately after anchor resolution.
The only workable solution I found is to avoid anchors entirely for the
adjacent-edit case. Instead, we can compute the final cursor positions
directly from the edits and create the selections based on that
information.
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where adjacent selection insert would merge cursors
---------
Signed-off-by: Marco Mihai Condrache <52580954+marcocondrache@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <me@lukaswirth.dev>
This mimics VSCode's `files.readonlyExclude` setting, to allow setting
specific path matches as readonly locations like lockfiles and generated
sources etc.
Also renders a lock icon to the right side of the path names for
readonly files now.
This does a couple more things for completion sake:
- Tabs of readonly buffers now render a file lock icon
- Multibuffer buffer headers now render a file lock icon if the excerpts
buffer is readonly
- ReadWrite multibuffers now no longer allow edits to read only buffers
contained within
Release Notes:
- Added `read_only_files` setting to allow specifying glob patterns of
files that should not be editable by default
---------
Co-authored-by: Danilo Leal <daniloleal09@gmail.com>
* Fix some bugs in capture of EP examples from running app
* Tweak markdown format for EP examples
* Store repo and revision in TOML front matter
* Represent cursor position using a comment line
* Allow multiple expected patches in evals
* Remove line-based scoring criteria for evals
* Add a `synthesize` subcommand to the EP cli that generates examples
from git commits
Release Notes:
- N/A
This makes this take the LSP adapter delegate instead of the binary
itself.
Despite us passing `LanguageServerBinaryOptions` with `allow_download:
false`, extensions would still try to download the binary because it was
never implemented for these to respect that. This would cause us to try
to download all langauge servers provided by extensions when opening a
settings file and/or requesting the JSON schema for that.
This PR fixes this by passing the LSP adapter delegate instead, so the
few language servers which actually want to have the binary for
resolving the initialization options can decide on this by themselves.
With that, we no longer download all language servers for the schema
request
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR improves the `edit prediction: Capture Example` in several ways:
* fixed bugs in how the uncommitted diff was calculated
* added a `edit_predictions.examples_dir` setting that can be set in
order to have the action automatically save examples into the given
folder
* moved the action into the `edit_predictions` crate, in preparation for
collecting this data passively from end users, when they have opted in
to data sharing, similar to what we did for Zeta 1
Release Notes:
- N/A
Closes#18287
Release Notes:
- Added autocomplete for lsp initialization_options
## Description
This MR adds the following code-changes:
- `initialization_options_schema` to the `LspAdapter` to get JSON
Schema's from the language server
- Adds a post-processing step to inject schema request paths into the
settings schema in `SettingsStore::json_schema`
- Adds an implementation for fetching the schema for rust-analyzer which
fetches it from the binary it is provided with
- Similarly for ruff
<img width="857" height="836" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3cc10883-364f-4f04-b3b9-3c3881f64252"
/>
## Open Questions(Would be nice to get some advice here)
- Binary Fetching:
- I'm pretty sure the binary fetching is suboptimal. The main problem
here was getting access to the delegate but i figured that out
eventually in a way that i _hope_ should be fine.
- The toolchain and binary options can differ from what the user has
configured potentially leading to mismatches in the autocomplete values
returned(these are probably rarely changed though). I could not really
find a way to fetch these in this context so the provided ones are for
now just `default` values.
- For the trait API it is just provided a binary, since i wanted to use
the potentially cached binary from the CachedLspAdapter. Is that fine
our should the arguments be passed to the LspAdapter such that it can
potentially download the LSP?
- As for those LSPs with JSON schema files in their repositories i can
add the files to zed manually e.g. in
languages/language/initialization_options_schema.json, which could cause
mismatches with the actual binary. Is there a preferred approach for Zed
here also with regards to updating them?
The failure would happen if the current version of the file was open as
an editor. This happened because the git blob and current version of the
buffer would have the same `ProjectPath`.
The fix was adding a new `DiskState::Historic` variant to represent
buffers that are past versions of a file (usually a snapshot from
version control). Historic buffers don't return a `ProjectPath` because
the file isn't real, thus there isn't and shouldn't be a `ProjectPath`
to it. (At least with the current way we represent a project path)
I also change the display name to use the local OS's path style instead
of being hardcoded to Posix, and cleaned up some code too.
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Cole Miller <cole@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: cameron <cameron.studdstreet@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: xipengjin <jinxp18@gmail.com>
This commit fixes an issue where saving UTF-16 files resulted in UTF-8
bytes due to `encoding_rs` default behavior. It also introduces a
heuristic to detect BOM-less UTF-16 and binary files.
Changes:
- Manually implement UTF-16LE/BE encoding during file save to avoid
implicit UTF-8 conversion.
- Add `analyze_byte_content` to guess UTF-16LE/BE or Binary based on
null byte distribution.
- Prevent loading binary files as text by returning an error when binary
content is detected.
Special thanks to @CrazyboyQCD for pointing out the `encoding_rs`
behavior and providing the fix, and to @ConradIrwin for the suggestion
on the detection heuristic.
Closes#14654
Release Notes:
- (nightly only) Fixed an issue where saving files with UTF-16 encoding
incorrectly wrote them as UTF-8. Also improved detection for binary
files and BOM-less UTF-16.
Closes#5089
Release notes:
- Markdown lists now continue automatically when you press Enter
(unordered, ordered, and task lists). This can be configured with
`extend_list_on_newline` (default: true).
- You can now indent list markers with Tab to quickly create nested
lists. This can be configured with `indent_list_on_tab` (default: true).
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Closes#42268
We've migrated user selections when a given workspace has a single
worktree (as then we could determine what the target worktree is).
Release Notes:
- python: Fixed selected virtual environments not being
persisted/deserialized correctly within long-running Zed sessions (where
multiple different projects might've been opened). This is a breaking
change for users of multi-worktree projects - your selected toolchain
for those projects will be reset.
Co-authored-by: Dino <dino@zed.dev>
## Summary
Addresses #16965
This PR adds support for **opening and saving** files with legacy
encodings (non-UTF-8).
Previously, Zed failed to open files encoded in Shift-JIS, EUC-JP, Big5,
etc., displaying a "Could not open file" error screen. This PR
implements automatic encoding detection upon opening and ensures the
original encoding is preserved when saving.
## Implementation Details
1. **Worktree (Loading)**:
* Updated `load_file` to use `chardetng` for automatic encoding
detection.
* Files are decoded to UTF-8 internal strings for editing, while
preserving the detected `Encoding` metadata.
2. **Language / Buffer**:
* Added an `encoding` field to the `Buffer` struct to store the detected
encoding.
3. **Worktree (Saving)**:
* Updated `write_file` to accept the stored encoding.
* **Performance Optimization**:
* **UTF-8 Path**: Uses the existing optimized `fs.save` (streaming
chunks directly from Rope), ensuring no performance regression for the
vast majority of files.
* **Legacy Encoding Path**: Implemented a fallback that converts the
Rope to a contiguous `String/Bytes` in memory, re-encodes it to the
target format (e.g., Shift-JIS), and writes it to disk.
* *Note*: This fallback involves memory allocation, but it is necessary
to support legacy encodings without refactoring the `fs` crate's
streaming interfaces.
## Changes
- `crates/worktree`:
- Add dependencies: `encoding_rs`, `chardetng`.
- Update `load_file` to detect encoding and decode content.
- Update `write_file` to handle re-encoding on save.
- `crates/language`: Add `encoding` field and accessors to `Buffer`.
- `crates/project`: Pass encoding information between Worktree and
Buffer.
- `crates/vim`: Update `:w` command to use the new `write_file`
signature.
## Verification
I validated this manually using a Rust script to generate test files
with various encodings.
**Results:**
* ✅ **Success (Opened & Saved correctly):**
* **Japanese:** `Shift-JIS` (CP932), `EUC-JP`, `ISO-2022-JP`
* **Chinese:** `Big5` (Traditional), `GBK/GB2312` (Simplified)
* **Western/Unicode:** `Windows-1252` (CP1252), `UTF-16LE`, `UTF-16BE`
* ⚠️ **limitations (Detection accuracy):**
* Some specific encodings like `KOI8-R` or generic `Latin1` (ISO-8859-1)
may partially display replacement characters (`?`) depending on the file
content length. This is a known limitation of the heuristic detection
library (`chardetng`) rather than the saving logic.
Release Notes:
- Added support for opening and saving files with legacy encodings
(Shift-JIS, Big5, etc.)
---------
Co-authored-by: CrazyboyQCD <53971641+CrazyboyQCD@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Conrad Irwin <conrad.irwin@gmail.com>
Closes#35930
When a TypeScript file is renamed or moved, vtsls can automatically
update the imports in other files. It pops up a message with the option
to always automatically update imports. This choice would previously
only be remembered for the current session and would pop up again after
a restart.
Now we persist that choice to the vtsls LSP settings in Zed, so that it
remembers across editor sessions.
Release Notes:
- When renaming a TypeScript or JavaScript file, the selected option to
automatically update imports will now be remembered across editor
sessions.
Closes #ISSUE
This PR is rather a nice to have change than anything critical, so
review priority should remain low.
Switch to using `semver::Version` for representing node binary and npm
package versions. This is in an effort to root out implicit behavior and
improve type safety when interacting with the `node_runtime` crate by
catching invalid versions where they appear. Currently Zed may
implicitly assume the current version is correct, or always install the
newest version when a invalid version is passed. `semver::Version` also
doesn't require the heap, which is probably more of a fun fact than
anything useful.
`npm_install_packages` still takes versions as a `&str`, because
`latest` can be used to fetch the latest version on npm. This could
likely be made into an enum as well, but would make the PR even larger.
I tested changes with some node based language servers and external
agents, which all worked fine. It would be nice to have some e2e tests
for node. To be safe I'd put it on nightly after a Wednesday release.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
Closes#44624
Before this change, white space would be trimmed from word diff ranges.
Users found this behavior confusing, so we're changing it to be more
inline with how GitHub treats whitespace in their word diffs.
Release Notes:
- git: Word diffs won't filter out pure whitespace diffs now
Closes#43722
Release Notes:
- Fixed an issue where auto-indentation didn’t work correctly for Python
code blocks in Markdown.
---------
Co-authored-by: Smit Barmase <heysmitbarmase@gmail.com>
Closes#44825
Release Notes:
- Fixed a case where an incorrect match could be generated in
label_for_completion
---------
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Currently we have a single cache for this data shared between all
snapshots which is incorrect, as we might update the cache to a new
version while having old snapshots around which then may try to access
new data with old offsets/rows.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/39056
Leverages a new `await_on_background` API that spawns the future on the
background but blocks the current task, allowing to borrow from the
surrounding scope.
Release Notes:
- N/A *or* Added/Fixed/Improved ...
Fixes a bug that led to us unnecessarily restarting a language server
when we were looking at a single file of a given language.
Release Notes:
- Fixed a bug that led to Zed sometimes starting an excessive amount of
language servers
Implements a specialized constructor `LanguageName::new_static` for
`&'static str` which reduces allocations.
`LanguageName::new` always backs the underlying `SharedString` with an
owned `Arc<str>` even when a `&'static str` is passed. This makes us
allocate each time we create a new `LanguageName` no matter what.
Creating a specialized constructor for `&'static str` allows us to
essentially construct them for free.
Additional change:
Encourages using explicit constructors to avoid needless allocations.
Currently there were no instances of this trait being called where the
lifetime was not `'static` saving another 48 locations of allocation.
```rust
impl<'a> From<&'a str> for LanguageName {
fn from(str: &'a str) -> Self {
Self(SharedString::new(str))
}
}
// to
impl From<&'static str> for LanguageName {
fn from(str: &'static str) -> Self {
Self(SharedString::new_static(str))
}
}
```
Release Notes:
- N/A
Follow-up of https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/43854
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/40970
Seems that json language server does not distinguish between JSONC and
JSON files in runtime, but there is a static schema, which accepts globs
in its `fileMatch` fields.
Use all glob overrides and file suffixes for JSONC inside those match
fields, and provide a grammar for such matches, which accepts trailing
commas.
Release Notes:
- Improved JSONC trailing comma handling
To do
* [x] Default to no context retrieval. Allow opting in to LSP-based
retrieval via a setting (for users in `zeta2` feature flag)
* [x] Feed this context to models when enabled
* [x] Make the zeta2 context view work well with LSP retrieval
* [x] Add a UI for the setting (for feature-flagged users)
* [x] Ensure Zeta CLI `context` command is usable
---
* [ ] Filter out LSP definitions that are too large / entire files (e.g.
modules)
* [ ] Introduce timeouts
* [ ] Test with other LSPs
* [ ] Figure out hangs
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Ben Kunkle <ben@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Agus Zubiaga <agus@zed.dev>
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/41935
The registration ID responsible for generating each diagnostic is now
tracked. This allows us to replace only the diagnostics from the same
registration ID when a pull diagnostics report is applied.
Additionally, various deficiencies in our support for pull diagnostics
have been fixed:
- Document pulls are issued for all open buffers, not just the edited
one. A shorter debounce is used for the edited buffer. Workspace
diagnostics are also now ignored for open buffers.
- Tracking of `lastResultId` is improved.
- Stored pull diagnostics are discarded when the corresponding buffer is
closed.
Release Notes:
- Improved compatibility with language servers that use the "pull
diagnostics" feature of Language Server Protocol.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <mail4score@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kirill Bulatov <kirill@zed.dev>
This PR adds word/character diff for expanded diff hunks that have both
a deleted and added section, as well as a setting `word_diff_enabled` to
enable/disable word diffs per language.
- `word_diff_enabled`: Defaults to true. Whether or not expanded diff
hunks will show word diff highlights when they're able to.
### Preview
<img width="1502" height="430" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1a8d5b71-449e-44cd-bc87-d6b65bfca545"
/>
### Architecture
I had three architecture goals I wanted to have when adding word diff
support:
- Caching: We should only calculate word diffs once and save the result.
This is because calculating word diffs can be expensive, and Zed should
always be responsive.
- Don't block the main thread: Word diffs should be computed in the
background to prevent hanging Zed.
- Lazy calculation: We should calculate word diffs for buffers that are
not visible to a user.
To accomplish the three goals, word diffs are computed as a part of
`BufferDiff` diff hunk processing because it happens on a background
thread, is cached until the file is edited, and is only refreshed for
open buffers.
My original implementation calculated word diffs every frame in the
Editor element. This had the benefit of lazy evaluation because it only
calculated visible frames, but it didn't have caching for the
calculations, and the code wasn't organized. Because the hunk
calculations would happen in two separate places instead of just
`BufferDiff`. Finally, it always happened on the main thread because it
was during the `EditorElement` layout phase.
I used Zed's
[`diff_internal`](02b2aa6c50/crates/language/src/text_diff.rs (L230-L267))
as a starting place for word diff calculations because it uses
`Imara_diff` behind the scenes and already has language-specific
support.
#### Future Improvements
In the future, we could add `AST` based word diff highlights, e.g.
https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/pull/43691.
Release Notes:
- git: Show word diff highlight in expanded diff hunks with less than 5
lines.
- git: Add `word_diff_enabled` as a language setting that defaults to
true.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Kleingeld <davidsk@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Cole Miller <cole@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: cameron <cameron.studdstreet@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukas@zed.dev>