There are four GN target templates which should be used for Rust projects:
rustc_library
defines a library and optionally a unit test target. The library can be depended on by other targets.rustc_binary
defines an executable and optionally a unit test target.rustc_test
defines a test-only target.rustc_macro
defines a procedural macro target.The examples/rust directory has some examples of Rust packages that use these targets, as do the Rust FIDL examples.
Note: The example Rust BUILD.gn file contains the line group("rust")
. In this instance, rust
refers to the directory the .gn
file is in, not the language.
If you want to test out Fuchsia with your own custom-built versions of rustc or cargo, you can set the rustc_prefix
argument to fx set
, like this:
fx set core.x64 --release --args "rustc_prefix=\"/path/to/bin/dir\""
Fuchsia Rust targets are not built with cargo. That said, you can generate Cargo.toml files for use with external tooling. This functionality is not guaranteed to work.
You can generate and browse HTML documentation for your target and its dependencies by running:
fx rustdoc path/from/fuchsia/root/to/target:label --open
You can run unit tests on connected devices using fx
, with the fx test {package name}
command. See Testing Rust code for information on adding and running tests.
Procedural macro targets are executed on the host at compile time. Therefore, they cannot depend on other crates which are only available on device, e.g. zircon.
Negative tests, e.g. asserting that a macro fails to compile with a specific error, are currently not supported.
By default our build configuration makes all Rust warnings into errors. This requirement can be onerous during development, and on your local machine you may wish to see warnings as warnings and let CQ enforce the hard boundary.
The rust_cap_lints
GN arg allows you to control this behavior in your development environment. Setting rust_cap_lints = "warn"
in fx args
or fx set
will allow you to develop locally without being blocked by warnings.
We don't currently have a style guide for Rust, but you should run fx rustfmt
or fx format-code
before submitting. We mostly use the rustfmt defaults, but have a couple custom settings.
If you're new to Rust, and would like someone to review your changes to validate that your usage of Rust is idiomatic, contact one of the following (or add them as a reviewer to your change.)
(To volunteer for this, please add yourself to the list above and upload the change with one of the above as the reviewer).
Public discussion happens on the rust-users@fuchsia.dev mailing list.
{% dynamic if user.is_googler %}
[Googlers only] For Googler-only channels, see go/fuchsia-rust-googlers.
{% dynamic endif %}