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nixpkgs/doc/languages-frameworks/rust.md
2017-12-12 04:58:45 -06:00

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Rust Matthias Beyer 2017-03-05

User's Guide to the Rust Infrastructure

To install the rust compiler and cargo put

rustc
cargo

into the environment.systemPackages or bring them into scope with nix-shell -p rustc cargo.

For daily builds (beta and nightly) use either rustup from nixpkgs or use the Rust nightlies overlay.

Compiling Rust applications with Cargo

Rust applications are packaged by using the buildRustPackage helper from rustPlatform:

rustPlatform.buildRustPackage rec {
  name = "ripgrep-${version}";
  version = "0.4.0";

  src = fetchFromGitHub {
    owner = "BurntSushi";
    repo = "ripgrep";
    rev = "${version}";
    sha256 = "0y5d1n6hkw85jb3rblcxqas2fp82h3nghssa4xqrhqnz25l799pj";
  };

  cargoSha256 = "0q68qyl2h6i0qsz82z840myxlnjay8p1w5z7hfyr8fqp7wgwa9cx";

  meta = with stdenv.lib; {
    description = "A fast line-oriented regex search tool, similar to ag and ack";
    homepage = https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep;
    license = licenses.unlicense;
    maintainers = [ maintainers.tailhook ];
    platforms = platforms.all;
  };
}

buildRustPackage requires a cargoSha256 attribute which is computed over all crate sources of this package. Currently it is obtained by inserting a fake checksum into the expression and building the package once. The correct checksum can be then take from the failed build.

To install crates with nix there is also an experimental project called nixcrates.

Compiling Rust crates using Nix instead of Cargo

When run, cargo build produces a file called Cargo.lock, containing pinned versions of all dependencies. Nixpkgs contains a tool called carnix (nix-env -iA nixos.carnix), which can be used to turn a Cargo.lock into a Nix expression.

That Nix expression calls rustc directly (hence bypassing Cargo), and can be used to compile a crate and all its dependencies. Here is an example for a minimal hello crate:

$ cargo new hello
$ cd hello
$ cargo build
 Compiling hello v0.1.0 (file:///tmp/hello)
  Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.20 secs
$ carnix -o hello.nix --src ./. Cargo.lock --standalone
$ nix-build hello.nix

Now, the file produced by the call to carnix, called hello.nix, looks like:

with import <nixpkgs> {};
let kernel = buildPlatform.parsed.kernel.name;
    # ... (content skipped)
    hello_0_1_0_ = { dependencies?[], buildDependencies?[], features?[] }: buildRustCrate {
      crateName = "hello";
      version = "0.1.0";
      authors = [ "Authorname <user@example.com>" ];
      src = ./.;
      inherit dependencies buildDependencies features;
    };
in
rec {
  hello_0_1_0 = hello_0_1_0_ rec {};
}

In particular, note that the argument given as --src is copied verbatim to the source. If we look at a more complicated dependencies, for instance by adding a single line libc="*" to our Cargo.toml, we first need to run cargo build to update the Cargo.lock. Then, carnix needs to be run again, and produces the following nix file:

with import <nixpkgs> {};
let kernel = buildPlatform.parsed.kernel.name;
    # ... (content skipped)
    hello_0_1_0_ = { dependencies?[], buildDependencies?[], features?[] }: buildRustCrate {
      crateName = "hello";
      version = "0.1.0";
      authors = [ "Jörg Thalheim <joerg@thalheim.io>" ];
      src = ./.;
      inherit dependencies buildDependencies features;
    };
    libc_0_2_34_ = { dependencies?[], buildDependencies?[], features?[] }: buildRustCrate {
      crateName = "libc";
      version = "0.2.34";
      authors = [ "The Rust Project Developers" ];
      sha256 = "11jmqdxmv0ka10ay0l8nzx0nl7s2lc3dbrnh1mgbr2grzwdyxi2s";
      inherit dependencies buildDependencies features;
    };
in
rec {
  hello_0_1_0 = hello_0_1_0_ rec {
    dependencies = [ libc_0_2_34 ];
  };
  libc_0_2_34_features."default".from_hello_0_1_0__default = true;
  libc_0_2_34 = libc_0_2_34_ rec {
    features = mkFeatures libc_0_2_34_features;
  };
  libc_0_2_34_features."use_std".self_default = hasDefault libc_0_2_34_features;
}

Here, the libc crate has no src attribute, so buildRustCrate will fetch it from crates.io. A sha256 attribute is still needed for Nix purity.

Some crates require external libraries. For crates from crates.io, such libraries can be specified in defaultCrateOverrides package in nixpkgs itself.

Starting from that file, one can add more overrides, to add features or build inputs by overriding the hello crate in a seperate file.

with import <nixpkgs> {};
(import ./hello.nix).hello_0_1_0.override {
  crateOverrides = defaultCrateOverrides // {
    hello = attrs: { buildInputs = [ openssl ]; };
  };
}

Here, crateOverrides is expected to be a attribute set, where the key is the crate name without version number and the value a function. The function gets all attributes passed to buildRustCrate as first argument and returns a set that contains all attribute that should be overwritten.

For more complicated cases, such as when parts of the crate's derivation depend on the the crate's version, the attrs argument of the override above can be read, as in the following example, which patches the derivation:

with import <nixpkgs> {};
(import ./hello.nix).hello_0_1_0.override {
  crateOverrides = defaultCrateOverrides // {
    hello = attrs: lib.optionalAttrs (lib.versionAtLeast attrs.version "1.0")  {
      postPatch = ''
        substituteInPlace lib/zoneinfo.rs \
          --replace "/usr/share/zoneinfo" "${tzdata}/share/zoneinfo"
      '';
    };
  };
}

Another situation is when we want to override a nested dependency. This actually works in the exact same way, since the crateOverrides parameter is forwarded to the crate's dependencies. For instance, to override the build inputs for crate libc in the example above, where libc is a dependency of the main crate, we could do:

with import <nixpkgs> {};
(import hello.nix).hello_0_1_0.override {
  crateOverrides = defaultCrateOverrides // {
    libc = attrs: { buildInputs = []; };
  };
}

Three more parameters can be overridden:

  • The version of rustc used to compile the crate:

    hello_0_1_0.override { rust = pkgs.rust; };
    
  • Whether to build in release mode or debug mode (release mode by default):

    hello_0_1_0.override { release = false; };
    
  • Whether to print the commands sent to rustc when building (equivalent to --verbose in cargo:

    hello_0_1_0.override { verbose = false; };
    

Using the Rust nightlies overlay

Mozilla provides an overlay for nixpkgs to bring a nightly version of Rust into scope. This overlay can also be used to install recent unstable or stable versions of Rust, if desired.

To use this overlay, clone nixpkgs-mozilla, and create a symbolic link to the file rust-overlay.nix in the ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays directory.

$ git clone https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla.git
$ mkdir -p ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays
$ ln -s $(pwd)/nixpkgs-mozilla/rust-overlay.nix ~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays/rust-overlay.nix

The latest version can be installed with the following command:

$ nix-env -Ai nixos.latest.rustChannels.stable.rust

Or using the attribute with nix-shell:

$ nix-shell -p nixos.latest.rustChannels.stable.rust

To install the beta or nightly channel, "stable" should be substituted by "nightly" or "beta", or use the function provided by this overlay to pull a version based on a build date.

The overlay automatically updates itself as it uses the same source as rustup.