Fallback to default testing for all queries present in the parser's
queries directory.
For a given query <QUERY>.scm, the test files are searched in
test/<QUERY>/*
Also mimic the output of other test-running subcommands when testing
queries.
Co-authored-by: Thomas Vigouroux <thomas.vigouroux@protonmail.com>
This resolves https://github.com/tree-sitter/tree-sitter/issues/3454.
This brings the usage of wasmtime::Engine in line with how wasmtime
intends it to be used. All wasmtime functions that receive an Engine
always receive an `&Engine`, never an owned `Engine`. They are always
responsible for cloning the reference if they need it.
This brings the usage of wasmtime::Engine in line with how TSParser
treats TSLanguages: when setting a language to the parser, the parser is
responsible for cloning the reference to the TSLanguage. It is
counterintuitive for TSParser to have different behavior when receiving
wasmtime_engine_t.
C API users also expect this behavior, see "Memory Management"
[here](https://docs.wasmtime.dev/c-api/wasm_8h.html). Talking about the
C API: without this change, failing to clone the `wasmtime_engine_t`
(which, again, is never something API users need to do in wasmtime) and
then reusing the engine in multiple TSLanguages results in a use after
free. With this change, failing to call `wasm_engine_delete` on your
owned Engine results in a memory leak. Memory leaks are safer than
use-after-free.
This allows users to build parsers without having to run `test` or
`parse` to invoke the compilation process, and allows them to output the
object file to wherever they like. The `build-wasm` command was merged
into this by just specifying the `--wasm` flag.
It's confusing to have tests in two different top-level directories when working between different grammars, and most of them use `test/corpus` which is more fitting, so time to go.
On macOS, this was done by default regardless of what the user wants.
This was also not done on Windows or Linux. Instead, we now provide a
`--open-log` flag to open the log file in the default browser, and it
works on all platforms.