This adds a "workspace-hack" crate, see
[mozilla's](https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/file/3a265fdc9f33e5946f0ca0a04af73acd7e6d1a39/build/workspace-hack/Cargo.toml#l7)
for a concise explanation of why this is useful. For us in practice this
means that if I were to run all the tests (`cargo nextest r
--workspace`) and then `cargo r`, all the deps from the previous cargo
command will be reused. Before this PR it would rebuild many deps due to
resolving different sets of features for them. For me this frequently
caused long rebuilds when things "should" already be cached.
To avoid manually maintaining our workspace-hack crate, we will use
[cargo hakari](https://docs.rs/cargo-hakari) to update the build files
when there's a necessary change. I've added a step to CI that checks
whether the workspace-hack crate is up to date, and instructs you to
re-run `script/update-workspace-hack` when it fails.
Finally, to make sure that people can still depend on crates in our
workspace without pulling in all the workspace deps, we use a `[patch]`
section following [hakari's
instructions](https://docs.rs/cargo-hakari/0.9.36/cargo_hakari/patch_directive/index.html)
One possible followup task would be making guppy use our
`rust-toolchain.toml` instead of having to duplicate that list in its
config, I opened an issue for that upstream: guppy-rs/guppy#481.
TODO:
- [x] Fix the extension test failure
- [x] Ensure the dev dependencies aren't being unified by Hakari into
the main dependencies
- [x] Ensure that the remote-server binary continues to not depend on
LibSSL
Release Notes:
- N/A
---------
Co-authored-by: Mikayla <mikayla@zed.dev>
Co-authored-by: Mikayla Maki <mikayla.c.maki@gmail.com>
This PR cleans up the tests for the various Git hosting providers.
These tests had rotted a bit over time, to the point that some of them
weren't even testing what they claimed anymore.
Release Notes:
- N/A
This PR adds support for self-hosted GitLab instances when generating
Git permalinks.
If the `origin` Git remote contains `gitlab` in the URL hostname we will
then attempt to register it as a self-hosted GitLab instance.
A note on this: I don't think relying on specific keywords is going to
be a suitable long-term solution to detection. In reality the
self-hosted instance could be hosted anywhere (e.g.,
`vcs.my-company.com`), so we will ultimately need a way to have the user
indicate which Git provider they are using (perhaps via a setting).
Closes https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues/18012.
Release Notes:
- Added support for self-hosted GitLab instances when generating Git
permalinks.
- The instance URL must have `gitlab` somewhere in the host in order to
be recognized.
This PR adds a registry for `GitHostingProvider`s.
The intent here is to help decouple these provider-specific concerns
from the lower-level `git` crate.
Similar to languages, the Git hosting providers live in the new
`git_hosting_providers` crate.
This work also lays the foundation for if we wanted to allow defining a
`GitHostingProvider` from within an extension. This could be useful if
we wanted to extend the support to work with self-hosted Git providers
(like GitHub Enterprise).
I also took the opportunity to move some of the provider-specific code
out of the `util` crate, since it had leaked into there.
Release Notes:
- N/A