7c92435f8f
Closes #9818 Closes #9567 Closes #8924 Closes #8910 Closes #8392 Closes #7692 Closes #7499 Closes #7220
196 lines
6.4 KiB
Groff
196 lines
6.4 KiB
Groff
.TH RUSTPKG "1" "July 2013" "rustpkg 0.7" "User Commands"
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.SH NAME
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rustpkg \- package manager for Rust applications
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B rustpkg
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[\fICOMMAND\fR] [\fIOPTIONS\fR] \fIINPUT\fR
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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This tool is a package manager for applications written in the Rust language,
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available at <\fBhttps://www.rust-lang.org\fR>. It provides commands to build,
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install and test Rust programs.
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\fBrustpkg\fR is still a work in progress. See \fBdoc/rustpkg.md\fR in the Rust source distribution for future plans.
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.SH COMMANDS
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.TP
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\fBbuild\fR
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Searches for a package with the specified name and builds it in the workspace in
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which it is found.
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.TP
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\fBclean\fR
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Remove all generated files from the \fIbuild\fR directory in the target's workspace.
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.TP
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\fBinstall\fR
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Builds the specified target, and all its dependencies, and then installs the
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build products into the \fIlib\fR and \fIbin\fR directories of their respective
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workspaces.
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.TP
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\fBinit\fR
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Initializes the current working directory into a workspace.
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.SS "BUILD COMMAND"
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rustpkg build \fI[pkgname]\fR
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The \fBbuild\fR command searches for a package with specified package name and
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builds it in any workspace(s) where it finds one. Any dependent packages are
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also built. The output files produced by the build phase are stored in the
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\fIbuild\fR subdirectories of each package. The executables and libraries are
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not copied to the 'bin' or 'lib' directories; that is the purpose of the
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\fBinstall\fR command.
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.SS "CLEAN COMMAND"
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rustpkg clean \fI[pkgname]\fR
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deletes the contents of package's build directory.
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.SS "INSTALL COMMAND"
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rustpkg install \fI[url]\fR
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builds the libraries and/or executables that are targets for the specified
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package name or URL, and then installs them either into package's \fIlib\fR
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and \fIbin\fR directories, or into the \fIlib\fR and \fIbin\fR subdirectories
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of the first entry in RUST_PATH.
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Examples:
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$ rustpkg install github.com/mozilla/servo.git#1.2
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$ rustpkg install rust-glfw
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.SS "INIT COMMAND"
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rustpkg init
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This will turn the current working directory into a workspace. The first
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command you run when starting off a new project.
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Example:
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$ rustpkg init
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.SH "ENVIRONMENT"
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.TP
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RUST_PATH
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A colon-separated (semicolon-separated) list of paths denoting workspaces
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to search for Rust source files. See the section \fBPATHS\fR for full details.
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.SH "PATHS"
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The \fBrustpkg\fR tool searches for packages in the folders specified by the
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\fBRUST_PATH\fR environment variable. Each folder constitutes a
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\fIworkspace\fR, which contains one or more modules available to import.
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In addition to the RUST_PATH settings, the following implicit paths are
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\fIalways\fR searched, in the following order:
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1. Any folders named ".rust" in the current directory, \fIand every parent\fR
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of the curent directory, up to the filesystem root;
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2. The system path "/usr/local" on Unix-style systems, or the equivalent on
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Windows; and
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3. A folder named ".rust" in the user's home directory (ie. "~/.rust" on Unix-
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style systems or the equivalent on Windows).
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.SH "PACKAGE STRUCTURE"
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A valid workspace must contain each of the following subdirectories:
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.TP
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\fBsrc/\fR
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Contains the Rust source code, with one subdirectory per package. Each
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subdirectory contains source files for a given package.
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.TP
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\fBlib/\fR
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"rustpkg install" installs libraries into a target-specific subdirectory of this directory.
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.TP
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\fBbin/\fR
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"rustpkg install" installs executable binaries into a target-specific subdirectory of this directory.
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.TP
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\fBbuild/\fR
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"rustpkg build" stores temporary build artifacts in a target-specific subdirectory of this directory.
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For example, if "foo" is a workspace containing the package "bar", then
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"foo/src/bar/main.rs" would be the "main" entry point for building a "bar"
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executable.
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.SH "PACKAGE IDENTIFIERS"
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A package identifier uniquely identifies a package. A package can be stored in
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a workspace on the local file system, or on a remote Web server, in which case
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the package ID resembles a URL.
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For example, \fIgithub.com/mozilla/rust\fR is a package ID
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that would refer to the git repository browsable at \fIhttp://github.com/mozilla/rust\fR.
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A package ID can also specify a version, like:
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\fIgithub.com/mozilla/rust#0.3\fR. In this case, \fBrustpkg\fR will check that
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the repository \fIgithub.com/mozilla/rust\fR has a tag named \fI0.3\fR, and
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report an error otherwise.
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.SH "SPECIAL MODULES"
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\fBrustpkg\fR searches for four different known filenames in the src directory
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in order to determine which crates to build:
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.TP
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\fBmain.rs\fR
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Assumed to be a main entry point for building an executable (install destination is 'bin' directory).
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.TP
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\fBlib.rs\fR
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Assumed to be a library crate (install destination is 'lib' directory).
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.TP
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\fBtest.rs\fR
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Assumed to contain tests declared with the \fI#[test]\fR attribute.
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.TP
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\fBbench.rs\fR
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Assumed to contain benchmarks declared with the \fI#[bench]\fR attribute.
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.SH "CRATE VERSIONS"
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\fBrustpkg\fR packages do not need to declare their versions with an attribute
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inside one of the source files, because rustpkg infers it from the version
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control system. When building a package that is in a git repository,
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rustpkg assumes that the most recent tag specifies the current version. When
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building a package that is not under version control, or that has no tags,
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rustpkg defaults the version to 0.1.
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.SH "DEPENDENCIES"
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rustpkg infers dependencies from "extern mod" directives. Thus, there should
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be no need to pass a "-L" flag to rustpkg to tell it where to find a library.
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(In the future, it will also be possible to write an "extern mod" directive
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referring to a remote package.)
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.SH "CUSTOM BUILD SCRIPTS"
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A file called \fIpkg.rs\fR at the root level in a workspace is called a \fIpackage
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script\fR. If a package script exists, rustpkg executes it to build the
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package rather than inferring crates as described previously.
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Inside \fIpkg.rs\fR, it's possible to call back into rustpkg to finish up the
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build. The \fIrustpkg::api\fR module contains functions to build, install, or
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clean libraries and executables in the way rustpkg normally would without
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custom build logic.
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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rustc, rustdoc
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.SH "BUGS"
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See <\fBhttps://github.com/mozilla/rust/issues\fR> for issues.
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.SH "AUTHOR"
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See \fBAUTHORS.txt\fR in the Rust source distribution. Graydon Hoare
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<\fIgraydon@mozilla.com\fR> is the project leader.
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.SH "COPYRIGHT"
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This work is dual-licensed under Apache 2.0 and MIT terms. See \fBCOPYRIGHT\fR
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file in the rust source distribution.
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