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qt-creator/src/plugins/languageclient/languageclientsettings.cpp

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Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
/****************************************************************************
**
** Copyright (C) 2018 The Qt Company Ltd.
** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/
**
** This file is part of Qt Creator.
**
** Commercial License Usage
** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in
** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the
** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in
** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms
** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further
** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us.
**
** GNU General Public License Usage
** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU
** General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software
** Foundation with exceptions as appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL3-EXCEPT
** included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following
** information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will
** be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html.
**
****************************************************************************/
#include "languageclientsettings.h"
#include "client.h"
#include "languageclientmanager.h"
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include "languageclient_global.h"
#include "languageclientinterface.h"
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <coreplugin/editormanager/documentmodel.h>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <coreplugin/icore.h>
#include <coreplugin/idocument.h>
#include <coreplugin/variablechooser.h>
#include <projectexplorer/project.h>
#include <projectexplorer/session.h>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <utils/algorithm.h>
#include <utils/delegates.h>
#include <utils/fancylineedit.h>
#include <utils/mimetypes/mimedatabase.h>
#include <utils/jsontreeitem.h>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <QBoxLayout>
#include <QComboBox>
#include <QCompleter>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <QCoreApplication>
#include <QDialog>
#include <QDialogButtonBox>
#include <QDir>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <QFileInfo>
#include <QHeaderView>
#include <QLabel>
#include <QListView>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <QPushButton>
#include <QSettings>
#include <QSortFilterProxyModel>
#include <QStringListModel>
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
#include <QTreeView>
constexpr char nameKey[] = "name";
constexpr char idKey[] = "id";
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
constexpr char enabledKey[] = "enabled";
constexpr char startupBehaviorKey[] = "startupBehavior";
constexpr char mimeTypeKey[] = "mimeType";
constexpr char filePatternKey[] = "filePattern";
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
constexpr char executableKey[] = "executable";
constexpr char argumentsKey[] = "arguments";
constexpr char settingsGroupKey[] = "LanguageClient";
constexpr char clientsKey[] = "clients";
namespace LanguageClient {
class LanguageClientSettingsModel : public QAbstractListModel
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
{
public:
LanguageClientSettingsModel() = default;
~LanguageClientSettingsModel() override;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
// QAbstractItemModel interface
int rowCount(const QModelIndex &/*parent*/ = QModelIndex()) const final { return m_settings.count(); }
QVariant data(const QModelIndex &index, int role) const final;
bool removeRows(int row, int count = 1, const QModelIndex &parent = QModelIndex()) final;
bool insertRows(int row, int count = 1, const QModelIndex &parent = QModelIndex()) final;
bool setData(const QModelIndex &index, const QVariant &value, int role) final;
Qt::ItemFlags flags(const QModelIndex &index) const final;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
void reset(const QList<BaseSettings *> &settings);
QList<BaseSettings *> settings() const { return m_settings; }
QList<BaseSettings *> removed() const { return m_removed; }
BaseSettings *settingForIndex(const QModelIndex &index) const;
QModelIndex indexForSetting(BaseSettings *setting) const;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
private:
QList<BaseSettings *> m_settings; // owned
QList<BaseSettings *> m_removed;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
};
class LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget : public QWidget
{
public:
LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget(LanguageClientSettingsModel &settings);
void currentChanged(const QModelIndex &index);
int currentRow() const;
void resetCurrentSettings(int row);
void applyCurrentSettings();
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
private:
LanguageClientSettingsModel &m_settings;
QTreeView *m_view = nullptr;
struct CurrentSettings {
BaseSettings *setting = nullptr;
QWidget *widget = nullptr;
} m_currentSettings;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
void addItem();
void deleteItem();
};
class LanguageClientSettingsPage : public Core::IOptionsPage
{
Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS(LanguageClientSettingsPage)
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
public:
LanguageClientSettingsPage();
~LanguageClientSettingsPage() override;
void init();
// IOptionsPage interface
QWidget *widget() override;
void apply() override;
void finish() override;
QList<BaseSettings *> settings() const;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
private:
LanguageClientSettingsModel m_model;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
QPointer<LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget> m_widget;
};
LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget(LanguageClientSettingsModel &settings)
: m_settings(settings)
, m_view(new QTreeView())
{
auto mainLayout = new QVBoxLayout();
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
auto layout = new QHBoxLayout();
m_view->setModel(&m_settings);
m_view->setHeaderHidden(true);
m_view->setSelectionMode(QAbstractItemView::SingleSelection);
m_view->setSelectionBehavior(QAbstractItemView::SelectItems);
connect(m_view->selectionModel(), &QItemSelectionModel::currentChanged,
this, &LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::currentChanged);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
auto buttonLayout = new QVBoxLayout();
auto addButton = new QPushButton(LanguageClientSettingsPage::tr("&Add"));
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
connect(addButton, &QPushButton::pressed, this, &LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::addItem);
auto deleteButton = new QPushButton(LanguageClientSettingsPage::tr("&Delete"));
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
connect(deleteButton, &QPushButton::pressed, this, &LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::deleteItem);
mainLayout->addLayout(layout);
setLayout(mainLayout);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
layout->addWidget(m_view);
layout->addLayout(buttonLayout);
buttonLayout->addWidget(addButton);
buttonLayout->addWidget(deleteButton);
buttonLayout->addStretch(10);
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::currentChanged(const QModelIndex &index)
{
if (m_currentSettings.widget) {
applyCurrentSettings();
layout()->removeWidget(m_currentSettings.widget);
delete m_currentSettings.widget;
}
if (index.isValid()) {
m_currentSettings.setting = m_settings.settingForIndex(index);
m_currentSettings.widget = m_currentSettings.setting->createSettingsWidget(this);
layout()->addWidget(m_currentSettings.widget);
} else {
m_currentSettings.setting = nullptr;
m_currentSettings.widget = nullptr;
}
}
int LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::currentRow() const
{
return m_settings.indexForSetting(m_currentSettings.setting).row();
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::resetCurrentSettings(int row)
{
if (m_currentSettings.widget) {
layout()->removeWidget(m_currentSettings.widget);
delete m_currentSettings.widget;
}
m_currentSettings.setting = nullptr;
m_currentSettings.widget = nullptr;
m_view->setCurrentIndex(m_settings.index(row));
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::applyCurrentSettings()
{
if (!m_currentSettings.setting)
return;
m_currentSettings.setting->applyFromSettingsWidget(m_currentSettings.widget);
auto index = m_settings.indexForSetting(m_currentSettings.setting);
emit m_settings.dataChanged(index, index);
}
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
void LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::addItem()
{
const int row = m_settings.rowCount();
m_settings.insertRows(row);
m_view->setCurrentIndex(m_settings.index(row));
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget::deleteItem()
{
auto index = m_view->currentIndex();
if (index.isValid())
m_settings.removeRows(index.row());
}
LanguageClientSettingsPage::LanguageClientSettingsPage()
{
setId(Constants::LANGUAGECLIENT_SETTINGS_PAGE);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
setDisplayName(tr("General"));
setCategory(Constants::LANGUAGECLIENT_SETTINGS_CATEGORY);
setDisplayCategory(QCoreApplication::translate("LanguageClient",
Constants::LANGUAGECLIENT_SETTINGS_TR));
setCategoryIcon(Utils::Icon({{":/languageclient/images/settingscategory_languageclient.png",
Utils::Theme::PanelTextColorDark}}, Utils::Icon::Tint));
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
LanguageClientSettingsPage::~LanguageClientSettingsPage()
{
if (m_widget)
delete m_widget;
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPage::init()
{
m_model.reset(LanguageClientSettings::fromSettings(Core::ICore::settings()));
apply();
finish();
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
QWidget *LanguageClientSettingsPage::widget()
{
if (!m_widget)
m_widget = new LanguageClientSettingsPageWidget(m_model);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
return m_widget;
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPage::apply()
{
if (m_widget)
m_widget->applyCurrentSettings();
LanguageClientManager::applySettings();
for (BaseSettings *setting : m_model.removed()) {
for (Client *client : LanguageClientManager::clientForSetting(setting))
LanguageClientManager::shutdownClient(client);
}
if (m_widget) {
int row = m_widget->currentRow();
m_model.reset(LanguageClientManager::currentSettings());
m_widget->resetCurrentSettings(row);
} else {
m_model.reset(LanguageClientManager::currentSettings());
}
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
void LanguageClientSettingsPage::finish()
{
m_model.reset(LanguageClientManager::currentSettings());
}
QList<BaseSettings *> LanguageClientSettingsPage::settings() const
{
return m_model.settings();
}
LanguageClientSettingsModel::~LanguageClientSettingsModel()
{
qDeleteAll(m_settings);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
QVariant LanguageClientSettingsModel::data(const QModelIndex &index, int role) const
{
BaseSettings *setting = settingForIndex(index);
if (!setting)
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
return QVariant();
if (role == Qt::DisplayRole)
return Utils::globalMacroExpander()->expand(setting->m_name);
else if (role == Qt::CheckStateRole)
return setting->m_enabled ? Qt::Checked : Qt::Unchecked;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
return QVariant();
}
bool LanguageClientSettingsModel::removeRows(int row, int count, const QModelIndex &parent)
{
if (row >= int(m_settings.size()))
return false;
const int end = qMin(row + count - 1, int(m_settings.size()) - 1);
beginRemoveRows(parent, row, end);
for (auto i = end; i >= row; --i)
m_removed << m_settings.takeAt(i);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
endRemoveRows();
return true;
}
bool LanguageClientSettingsModel::insertRows(int row, int count, const QModelIndex &parent)
{
if (row > m_settings.size() || row < 0)
return false;
beginInsertRows(parent, row, row + count - 1);
for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i)
m_settings.insert(row + i, new StdIOSettings());
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
endInsertRows();
return true;
}
bool LanguageClientSettingsModel::setData(const QModelIndex &index, const QVariant &value, int role)
{
BaseSettings *setting = settingForIndex(index);
if (!setting || role != Qt::CheckStateRole)
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
return false;
if (setting->m_enabled != value.toBool()) {
setting->m_enabled = !setting->m_enabled;
emit dataChanged(index, index, { Qt::CheckStateRole });
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
return true;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
Qt::ItemFlags LanguageClientSettingsModel::flags(const QModelIndex &/*index*/) const
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
{
return Qt::ItemIsSelectable | Qt::ItemIsEnabled | Qt::ItemIsUserCheckable;
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
void LanguageClientSettingsModel::reset(const QList<BaseSettings *> &settings)
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
{
beginResetModel();
qDeleteAll(m_settings);
qDeleteAll(m_removed);
m_removed.clear();
m_settings = Utils::transform(settings, [](const BaseSettings *other) { return other->copy(); });
endResetModel();
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
BaseSettings *LanguageClientSettingsModel::settingForIndex(const QModelIndex &index) const
{
if (!index.isValid() || index.row() >= m_settings.size())
return nullptr;
return m_settings[index.row()];
}
QModelIndex LanguageClientSettingsModel::indexForSetting(BaseSettings *setting) const
{
const int index = m_settings.indexOf(setting);
return index < 0 ? QModelIndex() : createIndex(index, 0, setting);
}
void BaseSettings::applyFromSettingsWidget(QWidget *widget)
{
if (auto settingsWidget = qobject_cast<BaseSettingsWidget *>(widget)) {
m_name = settingsWidget->name();
m_languageFilter = settingsWidget->filter();
m_startBehavior = settingsWidget->startupBehavior();
}
}
QWidget *BaseSettings::createSettingsWidget(QWidget *parent) const
{
return new BaseSettingsWidget(this, parent);
}
bool BaseSettings::needsRestart() const
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
{
const QVector<Client *> clients = LanguageClientManager::clientForSetting(this);
if (clients.isEmpty())
return m_enabled;
if (!m_enabled)
return true;
return Utils::anyOf(clients, [this](const Client *client) {
return client->needsRestart(this);
});
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
bool BaseSettings::isValid() const
{
return !m_name.isEmpty();
}
Client *BaseSettings::createClient()
{
if (!isValid() || !m_enabled)
return nullptr;
BaseClientInterface *interface = createInterface();
QTC_ASSERT(interface, return nullptr);
auto *client = new Client(interface);
client->setName(Utils::globalMacroExpander()->expand(m_name));
client->setSupportedLanguage(m_languageFilter);
return client;
}
QVariantMap BaseSettings::toMap() const
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
{
QVariantMap map;
map.insert(nameKey, m_name);
map.insert(idKey, m_id);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
map.insert(enabledKey, m_enabled);
map.insert(startupBehaviorKey, m_startBehavior);
map.insert(mimeTypeKey, m_languageFilter.mimeTypes);
map.insert(filePatternKey, m_languageFilter.filePattern);
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
return map;
}
void BaseSettings::fromMap(const QVariantMap &map)
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
{
m_name = map[nameKey].toString();
m_id = map.value(idKey, QUuid::createUuid().toString()).toString();
m_enabled = map[enabledKey].toBool();
m_startBehavior = BaseSettings::StartBehavior(
map.value(startupBehaviorKey, BaseSettings::RequiresFile).toInt());
m_languageFilter.mimeTypes = map[mimeTypeKey].toStringList();
m_languageFilter.filePattern = map[filePatternKey].toStringList();
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
static LanguageClientSettingsPage &settingsPage()
{
static LanguageClientSettingsPage settingsPage;
return settingsPage;
}
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
void LanguageClientSettings::init()
{
settingsPage().init();
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
}
QList<BaseSettings *> LanguageClientSettings::fromSettings(QSettings *settingsIn)
{
settingsIn->beginGroup(settingsGroupKey);
auto variants = settingsIn->value(clientsKey).toList();
auto settings = Utils::transform(variants, [](const QVariant& var){
BaseSettings *settings = new StdIOSettings();
settings->fromMap(var.toMap());
return settings;
});
settingsIn->endGroup();
return settings;
}
QList<BaseSettings *> LanguageClientSettings::currentPageSettings()
{
return settingsPage().settings();
}
void LanguageClientSettings::toSettings(QSettings *settings,
const QList<BaseSettings *> &languageClientSettings)
{
settings->beginGroup(settingsGroupKey);
settings->setValue(clientsKey, Utils::transform(languageClientSettings,
[](const BaseSettings *setting){
return QVariant(setting->toMap());
}));
settings->endGroup();
}
void StdIOSettings::applyFromSettingsWidget(QWidget *widget)
{
if (auto settingsWidget = qobject_cast<StdIOSettingsWidget *>(widget)) {
BaseSettings::applyFromSettingsWidget(settingsWidget);
m_executable = settingsWidget->executable();
m_arguments = settingsWidget->arguments();
}
}
QWidget *StdIOSettings::createSettingsWidget(QWidget *parent) const
{
return new StdIOSettingsWidget(this, parent);
}
bool StdIOSettings::needsRestart() const
{
if (BaseSettings::needsRestart())
return true;
return Utils::anyOf(LanguageClientManager::clientForSetting(this),
[this](QPointer<Client> client) {
if (auto stdIOInterface = qobject_cast<const StdIOClientInterface *>(
client->clientInterface()))
return stdIOInterface->needsRestart(this);
return false;
});
}
bool StdIOSettings::isValid() const
{
return BaseSettings::isValid() && !m_executable.isEmpty();
}
QVariantMap StdIOSettings::toMap() const
{
QVariantMap map = BaseSettings::toMap();
map.insert(executableKey, m_executable);
map.insert(argumentsKey, m_arguments);
return map;
}
void StdIOSettings::fromMap(const QVariantMap &map)
{
BaseSettings::fromMap(map);
m_executable = map[executableKey].toString();
m_arguments = map[argumentsKey].toString();
}
QString StdIOSettings::arguments() const
{
return Utils::globalMacroExpander()->expand(m_arguments);
}
BaseClientInterface *StdIOSettings::createInterface() const
{
return new StdIOClientInterface(m_executable, arguments());
}
class JsonTreeItemDelegate : public QStyledItemDelegate
{
public:
QString displayText(const QVariant &value, const QLocale &) const override
{
QString result = value.toString();
if (result.size() == 1) {
switch (result.at(0).toLatin1()) {
case '\n':
return QString("\\n");
case '\t':
return QString("\\t");
case '\r':
return QString("\\r");
}
}
return result;
}
};
static QWidget *createCapabilitiesView(const QJsonValue &capabilities)
{
auto root = new Utils::JsonTreeItem("Capabilities", capabilities);
if (root->canFetchMore())
root->fetchMore();
auto capabilitiesModel = new Utils::TreeModel<Utils::JsonTreeItem>(root);
capabilitiesModel->setHeader({BaseSettingsWidget::tr("Name"),
BaseSettingsWidget::tr("Value"),
BaseSettingsWidget::tr("Type")});
auto capabilitiesView = new QTreeView();
capabilitiesView->setModel(capabilitiesModel);
capabilitiesView->setAlternatingRowColors(true);
capabilitiesView->header()->setSectionResizeMode(QHeaderView::ResizeToContents);
capabilitiesView->setItemDelegate(new JsonTreeItemDelegate);
return capabilitiesView;
}
static QString startupBehaviorString(BaseSettings::StartBehavior behavior)
{
switch (behavior) {
case BaseSettings::AlwaysOn:
return QCoreApplication::translate("LanguageClient::BaseSettings", "Always On");
case BaseSettings::RequiresFile:
return QCoreApplication::translate("LanguageClient::BaseSettings", "Requires an Open File");
case BaseSettings::RequiresProject:
return QCoreApplication::translate("LanguageClient::BaseSettings",
"Start Server per Project");
default:
break;
}
return {};
}
BaseSettingsWidget::BaseSettingsWidget(const BaseSettings *settings, QWidget *parent)
: QWidget(parent)
, m_name(new QLineEdit(settings->m_name, this))
, m_mimeTypes(new QLabel(settings->m_languageFilter.mimeTypes.join(filterSeparator), this))
, m_filePattern(new QLineEdit(settings->m_languageFilter.filePattern.join(filterSeparator), this))
, m_startupBehavior(new QComboBox)
{
int row = 0;
auto *mainLayout = new QGridLayout;
mainLayout->addWidget(new QLabel(tr("Name:")), row, 0);
mainLayout->addWidget(m_name, row, 1);
auto chooser = new Core::VariableChooser(this);
chooser->addSupportedWidget(m_name);
mainLayout->addWidget(new QLabel(tr("Language:")), ++row, 0);
auto mimeLayout = new QHBoxLayout;
mimeLayout->addWidget(m_mimeTypes);
mimeLayout->addStretch();
auto addMimeTypeButton = new QPushButton(tr("Set MIME Types..."), this);
mimeLayout->addWidget(addMimeTypeButton);
mainLayout->addLayout(mimeLayout, row, 1);
m_filePattern->setPlaceholderText(tr("File pattern"));
mainLayout->addWidget(m_filePattern, ++row, 1);
mainLayout->addWidget(new QLabel(tr("Startup Behavior:")), ++row, 0);
for (int behavior = 0; behavior < BaseSettings::LastSentinel ; ++behavior)
m_startupBehavior->addItem(startupBehaviorString(BaseSettings::StartBehavior(behavior)));
m_startupBehavior->setCurrentIndex(settings->m_startBehavior);
mainLayout->addWidget(m_startupBehavior, row, 1);
connect(addMimeTypeButton, &QPushButton::pressed,
this, &BaseSettingsWidget::showAddMimeTypeDialog);
auto createInfoLabel = []() {
return new QLabel(tr("Available after server was initialized"));
};
mainLayout->addWidget(new QLabel(tr("Capabilities:")), ++row, 0, Qt::AlignTop);
QVector<Client *> clients = LanguageClientManager::clientForSetting(settings);
if (clients.isEmpty()) {
mainLayout->addWidget(createInfoLabel());
} else { // TODO move the capabilities view into a new widget outside of the settings
Client *client = clients.first();
if (client->state() == Client::Initialized)
mainLayout->addWidget(createCapabilitiesView(QJsonValue(client->capabilities())));
else
mainLayout->addWidget(createInfoLabel(), row, 1);
connect(client, &Client::finished, mainLayout, [mainLayout, row, createInfoLabel]() {
delete mainLayout->itemAtPosition(row, 1)->widget();
mainLayout->addWidget(createInfoLabel(), row, 1);
});
connect(client, &Client::initialized, mainLayout,
[mainLayout, row](
const LanguageServerProtocol::ServerCapabilities &capabilities) {
delete mainLayout->itemAtPosition(row, 1)->widget();
mainLayout->addWidget(createCapabilitiesView(QJsonValue(capabilities)), row, 1);
});
}
setLayout(mainLayout);
}
QString BaseSettingsWidget::name() const
{
return m_name->text();
}
LanguageFilter BaseSettingsWidget::filter() const
{
return {m_mimeTypes->text().split(filterSeparator),
m_filePattern->text().split(filterSeparator)};
}
BaseSettings::StartBehavior BaseSettingsWidget::startupBehavior() const
{
return BaseSettings::StartBehavior(m_startupBehavior->currentIndex());
}
class MimeTypeModel : public QStringListModel
{
public:
using QStringListModel::QStringListModel;
QVariant data(const QModelIndex &index, int role) const final
{
if (index.isValid() && role == Qt::CheckStateRole)
return m_selectedMimeTypes.contains(index.data().toString()) ? Qt::Checked : Qt::Unchecked;
return QStringListModel::data(index, role);
}
bool setData(const QModelIndex &index, const QVariant &value, int role) final
{
if (index.isValid() && role == Qt::CheckStateRole) {
QString mimeType = index.data().toString();
if (value.toInt() == Qt::Checked) {
if (!m_selectedMimeTypes.contains(mimeType))
m_selectedMimeTypes.append(index.data().toString());
} else {
m_selectedMimeTypes.removeAll(index.data().toString());
}
return true;
}
return QStringListModel::setData(index, value, role);
}
Qt::ItemFlags flags(const QModelIndex &index) const final
{
if (!index.isValid())
return Qt::NoItemFlags;
return (QStringListModel::flags(index)
& ~(Qt::ItemIsEditable | Qt::ItemIsDragEnabled | Qt::ItemIsDropEnabled))
| Qt::ItemIsUserCheckable;
}
QStringList m_selectedMimeTypes;
};
class MimeTypeDialog : public QDialog
{
Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS(MimeTypeDialog)
public:
explicit MimeTypeDialog(const QStringList &selectedMimeTypes, QWidget *parent = nullptr)
: QDialog(parent)
{
setWindowTitle(tr("Select MIME Types"));
auto mainLayout = new QVBoxLayout;
auto filter = new Utils::FancyLineEdit(this);
filter->setFiltering(true);
mainLayout->addWidget(filter);
auto listView = new QListView(this);
mainLayout->addWidget(listView);
auto buttons = new QDialogButtonBox(QDialogButtonBox::Ok | QDialogButtonBox::Cancel, this);
mainLayout->addWidget(buttons);
setLayout(mainLayout);
filter->setPlaceholderText(tr("Filter"));
connect(buttons, &QDialogButtonBox::accepted, this, &QDialog::accept);
connect(buttons, &QDialogButtonBox::rejected, this, &QDialog::reject);
auto proxy = new QSortFilterProxyModel(this);
m_mimeTypeModel = new MimeTypeModel(Utils::transform(Utils::allMimeTypes(),
&Utils::MimeType::name), this);
m_mimeTypeModel->m_selectedMimeTypes = selectedMimeTypes;
proxy->setSourceModel(m_mimeTypeModel);
proxy->sort(0);
connect(filter, &QLineEdit::textChanged, proxy, &QSortFilterProxyModel::setFilterWildcard);
listView->setModel(proxy);
setWindowFlags(windowFlags() & ~Qt::WindowContextHelpButtonHint);
setModal(true);
}
MimeTypeDialog(const MimeTypeDialog &other) = delete;
MimeTypeDialog(MimeTypeDialog &&other) = delete;
MimeTypeDialog operator=(const MimeTypeDialog &other) = delete;
MimeTypeDialog operator=(MimeTypeDialog &&other) = delete;
QStringList mimeTypes() const
{
return m_mimeTypeModel->m_selectedMimeTypes;
}
private:
MimeTypeModel *m_mimeTypeModel = nullptr;
};
void BaseSettingsWidget::showAddMimeTypeDialog()
{
MimeTypeDialog dialog(m_mimeTypes->text().split(filterSeparator, QString::SkipEmptyParts),
Core::ICore::dialogParent());
if (dialog.exec() == QDialog::Rejected)
return;
m_mimeTypes->setText(dialog.mimeTypes().join(filterSeparator));
}
StdIOSettingsWidget::StdIOSettingsWidget(const StdIOSettings *settings, QWidget *parent)
: BaseSettingsWidget(settings, parent)
, m_executable(new Utils::PathChooser(this))
, m_arguments(new QLineEdit(settings->m_arguments, this))
{
auto mainLayout = qobject_cast<QGridLayout *>(layout());
QTC_ASSERT(mainLayout, return);
const int baseRows = mainLayout->rowCount();
mainLayout->addWidget(new QLabel(tr("Executable:")), baseRows, 0);
mainLayout->addWidget(m_executable, baseRows, 1);
mainLayout->addWidget(new QLabel(tr("Arguments:")), baseRows + 1, 0);
m_executable->setExpectedKind(Utils::PathChooser::ExistingCommand);
m_executable->setPath(QDir::toNativeSeparators(settings->m_executable));
mainLayout->addWidget(m_arguments, baseRows + 1, 1);
auto chooser = new Core::VariableChooser(this);
chooser->addSupportedWidget(m_arguments);
}
QString StdIOSettingsWidget::executable() const
{
return m_executable->path();
}
QString StdIOSettingsWidget::arguments() const
{
return m_arguments->text();
}
bool LanguageFilter::isSupported(const Utils::FileName &filePath, const QString &mimeType) const
{
if (mimeTypes.isEmpty() && filePattern.isEmpty())
return true;
if (mimeTypes.contains(mimeType))
return true;
auto regexps = Utils::transform(filePattern, [](const QString &pattern){
return QRegExp(pattern, Utils::HostOsInfo::fileNameCaseSensitivity(), QRegExp::Wildcard);
});
return Utils::anyOf(regexps, [filePath](const QRegExp &reg){
return reg.exactMatch(filePath.toString()) || reg.exactMatch(filePath.fileName());
});
}
bool LanguageFilter::isSupported(const Core::IDocument *document) const
{
return isSupported(document->filePath(), document->mimeType());
}
Introduce a basic client for the language server protocol The language server protocol is used to transport language specific information needed to efficiently edit source files. For example completion, go to operations and symbol information. These information are transferred via JSON-RPC. The complete definition can be found under https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification. This language server protocol support consists of two major parts, the C++ representation of the language server protocol, and the client part for the communication with an external language server. The TypeScript definitions of the protocol interfaces are transferred to C++ classes. Those classes have getter and setter for every interface value. Optional values from the protocol are represented by Utils::optional<ValueType>. The JSON objects that are used to transfer the data between client and server are hidden by a specialized JsonObject class derived from QJsonObject. Additionally this JsonObject provides a validity check that is capable of creating a detailed error message for malformed, or at least unexpected JSON representation of the protocol. The client is the interface between Qt Creator and language server functionality, like completion, diagnostics, document and workspace synchronization. The base client converts the data that is sent from/to the server between the raw byte array and the corresponding C++ objects. The transportat layer is defined in a specialized base client (this initial change will only support stdio language server). The running clients are handled inside the language client manager, which is also used to connect global and exclusive Qt Creator functionality to the clients. Task-number: QTCREATORBUG-20284 Change-Id: I8e123e20c3f14ff7055c505319696d5096fe1704 Reviewed-by: Eike Ziller <eike.ziller@qt.io>
2018-07-13 12:33:46 +02:00
} // namespace LanguageClient