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Update the ocaml-tree-sitter runtime library #510
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the accompanying changes in semgrep are not ready. We're reverting the contents of semgrep-go to commit 9b59bf4
in programs where both semgrep-vue and semgrep-html are used.
aryx
approved these changes
Sep 18, 2024
@yosefAlsuhaibani @brandonspark once this is merged you will need to restore your improvements to semgrep-go and other |
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…oprietary#2260) This changes the type of tree-sitter parsing results. This required regenerating all the grammars. Passing CI tests with this pull requests validates the other two pull requests: * semgrep/ocaml-tree-sitter-core#48 * semgrep/ocaml-tree-sitter-semgrep#510 test plan: `make test` synced from Pro bc3fa2e1e2838941e3860d422569ca6a35826b15
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…oprietary#2260) This changes the type of tree-sitter parsing results. This required regenerating all the grammars. Passing CI tests with this pull requests validates the other two pull requests: * semgrep/ocaml-tree-sitter-core#48 * semgrep/ocaml-tree-sitter-semgrep#510 test plan: `make test` synced from Pro bc3fa2e1e2838941e3860d422569ca6a35826b15
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…oprietary#2260) This changes the type of tree-sitter parsing results. This required regenerating all the grammars. Passing CI tests with this pull requests validates the other two pull requests: * semgrep/ocaml-tree-sitter-core#48 * semgrep/ocaml-tree-sitter-semgrep#510 test plan: `make test` synced from Pro bc3fa2e1e2838941e3860d422569ca6a35826b15
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This required reverting changes for the following languages because the Semgrep integration wasn't in sync:
There was also a tricky bug occurring only in Semgrep which was due to tree-sitter-vue which was solved by patching tree-sitter-vue (it was declaring
tree_sitter_html_*
functions that were apparently picked by the linker instead of the real tree-sitter-html functions). Here's the modified version of tree-sitter-vue we're now using: ikatyang/tree-sitter-vue#30. I added a safeguard so that future updates of the tree-sitter-vue submodule fail gracefully if sometree_sitter_html_*
functions make a comeback.The accompanying pull requests are:
On my machine, regenerating the Hack grammar takes 16.4 GB of RAM. C# is the second biggest memory consumer with 14.2 GB.
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