source: general/prog/rust.xml@ 875b3b57

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Last change on this file since 875b3b57 was d71f68c9, checked in by Douglas R. Reno <renodr@…>, 6 months ago

Update to rustc-1.74.0

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File size: 27.5 KB
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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6
7 <!ENTITY rust-download-http "https://static.rust-lang.org/dist/rustc-&rust-version;-src.tar.xz">
8 <!ENTITY rust-download-ftp " ">
9 <!ENTITY rust-md5sum "c7f6519e67202c3dca07ef7292fa874f">
10 <!ENTITY rust-size "149 MB">
11 <!ENTITY rust-buildsize "8.9 GB (298 MB installed); add 6.4 GB if running the tests">
12 <!ENTITY rust-time "6.7 SBU (including download time; add 6.2 SBU for tests, both using parallelism=8)">
13]>
14
15<sect1 id="rust" xreflabel="rustc-&rust-version;">
16 <?dbhtml filename="rust.html"?>
17
18
19 <title>Rustc-&rust-version;</title>
20
21 <indexterm zone="rust">
22 <primary sortas="a-rust">Rust</primary>
23 </indexterm>
24
25 <sect2 role="package">
26 <title>Introduction to Rust</title>
27 <para>
28 The <application>Rust</application> programming language is designed
29 to be a safe, concurrent, practical language.
30 </para>
31
32 <para>
33 This package is updated on a six-weekly release cycle. Because it is
34 such a large and slow package to build, is at the moment only required
35 by a few packages in this book, and particularly because newer versions
36 tend to break older mozilla packages, the BLFS editors take the view that
37 it should only be updated when that is necessary (either to fix problems,
38 or to allow a new version of a package to build).
39 </para>
40
41 <para>
42 As with many other programming languages, rustc (the rust compiler)
43 needs a binary from which to bootstrap. It will download a stage0
44 binary at the start of the build, so you cannot compile it without an
45 Internet connection.
46 </para>
47
48 <note>
49 <para>
50 Although BLFS usually installs in <filename
51 class="directory">/usr</filename>, when you later upgrade to a newer
52 version of <application>rust</application> the old libraries in <filename
53 class="directory">/usr/lib/rustlib</filename> will remain, with various
54 hashes in their names, but will not be usable and will waste space. The
55 editors recommend placing the files in the <filename
56 class="directory">/opt</filename> directory. In particular, if you
57 have reason to rebuild with a modified configuration (e.g. using the
58 shipped LLVM after building with shared LLVM, perhaps to compile crates
59 for architectures which the BLFS LLVM build does not support)
60 it is possible for the install to leave a broken
61 <command>cargo</command> program. In such a situation, either remove
62 the existing installation first, or use a different prefix such as
63 /opt/rustc-&rust-version;-build2.
64 </para>
65
66 <para>
67 If you prefer, you can of course change the prefix to <filename
68 class="directory">/usr</filename>.
69 </para>
70 </note>
71
72 <para>
73 The current <application>rustbuild</application> build-system will use
74 all processors, although it does not scale well and often falls
75 back to just using one core while waiting for a library to compile.
76 However it can be mostly limited to a specified number of processors by
77 a combination of adding the switch <literal>--jobs &lt;N&gt;</literal>
78 (e.g. '--jobs 4' to limit to 4 processors) on each invocation of
79 <command>python3 x.py</command> <emphasis>and</emphasis> using an
80 environment variable <envar>CARGO_BUILD_JOBS=&lt;N&gt;</envar>. At the
81 moment this is not effective when some of the rustc tests are run.
82 </para>
83
84 <para>
85 The current version of rust's num_cpus crate now recognizes that cgroups
86 can be used to restrict which processors it is allowed to use. So if your
87 machine lacks DRAM (typically, less than 2GB DRAM per core) that might be
88 an alternative to taking CPUs offline.
89 Read <xref linkend='build-in-cgroup'/> for how to use a cgroup.
90 </para>
91
92 <para>
93 At the moment <application>Rust</application> does not provide any
94 guarantees of a stable ABI.
95 </para>
96
97 <note>
98 <para>
99 Rustc defaults to building for ALL supported architectures, using a
100 shipped copy of LLVM. In BLFS the build is only for the X86
101 architecture.
102 If you intend to develop rust crates, this build may not be good
103 enough for your purposes.
104 </para>
105 <para>
106 The build times of this version when repeated on the same machine are
107 often reasonably consistent, but as with all compilations using
108 <command>rustc</command> there can be some very slow outliers.
109 </para>
110 </note>
111
112 &lfs120_checked;
113
114 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Package Information</bridgehead>
115 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
116 <listitem>
117 <para>
118 Download (HTTP): <ulink url="&rust-download-http;"/>
119 </para>
120 </listitem>
121 <listitem>
122 <para>
123 Download (FTP): <ulink url="&rust-download-ftp;"/>
124 </para>
125 </listitem>
126 <listitem>
127 <para>
128 Download MD5 sum: &rust-md5sum;
129 </para>
130 </listitem>
131 <listitem>
132 <para>
133 Download size: &rust-size;
134 </para>
135 </listitem>
136 <listitem>
137 <para>
138 Estimated disk space required: &rust-buildsize;
139 </para>
140 </listitem>
141 <listitem>
142 <para>
143 Estimated build time: &rust-time;
144 </para>
145 </listitem>
146 </itemizedlist>
147
148<!--<bridgehead renderas="sect3">Additional Downloads</bridgehead>
149 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
150 <listitem>
151 <para>
152 Required patch:
153 <ulink url="&patch-root;/rustc-&rust-version;-llvm9_fixes-1.patch"/>
154 </para>
155 </listitem>
156 </itemizedlist>-->
157
158 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Rust Dependencies</bridgehead>
159
160 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Required</bridgehead>
161 <para role="required">
162 <xref linkend="cmake"/> and
163 <!-- Required for downloading stage 0 binaries.
164 Otherwise it's recommended (if not installed, a vendored copy
165 will be built). -->
166 <xref linkend="curl"/>
167 </para>
168
169 &build-use-internet;
170
171 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Recommended</bridgehead>
172 <para role="recommended">
173 <xref linkend="libssh2"/> and
174 <xref linkend="llvm"/>
175 (built with -DLLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON so that rust can link to
176 system LLVM instead of building its shipped version)
177 </para>
178
179 <note>
180 <para>
181 If a recommended dependency is not installed, a shipped copy in the
182 Rustc source tarball will be built and used.
183 </para>
184 </note>
185
186 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Optional</bridgehead>
187 <para role="optional">
188 <xref linkend="gdb"/> (used by the test suite if it is present),
189 <xref linkend="git"/> (required by the test suite), and
190 <ulink url='https://libgit2.org/'>libgit2</ulink>
191 </para>
192
193 <para condition="html" role="usernotes">
194 Editor Notes: <ulink url="&blfs-wiki;/rust"/>
195 </para>
196 </sect2>
197
198 <sect2 role="installation">
199 <title>Installation of Rust</title>
200
201 <note>
202 <para>
203 Currently the rust compiler produces SSE2 instructions for 32-bit x86,
204 causing the generated code to be broken on 32-bit systems without a
205 SSE2-capable processor. All x86 processor models released after
206 2004 should be SSE2-capable. Run
207 <command>lscpu | grep sse2</command> as a test. If it outputs
208 anything, your CPU is SSE2-capable and OK. Otherwise you may try
209 to build this package <emphasis>on a SSE2-capable system</emphasis>
210 with the following fix applied:
211 </para>
212
213 <!-- computeroutput used deliberately to stop anyone from copying
214 blindly -->
215<screen role="nodump"><computeroutput>sed 's@pentium4@pentiumpro@' -i \
216 compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/i686_unknown_linux_gnu.rs</computeroutput></screen>
217
218 <para>
219 And copy the resulting
220 <filename class="directory">/opt/rustc-&rust-version;</filename>
221 to the system without SSE2 capability. But this change is still
222 under upstream review and not tested by BLFS editors.
223 </para>
224 </note>
225
226 <para>
227 To install into the
228 <filename class="directory">/opt</filename> directory, remove any
229 existing <filename>/opt/rustc</filename> symlink
230 and create a new directory (i.e. with a different name if trying a
231 modified build of the same version).
232 As the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>
233 user:
234 </para>
235
236<screen role="root"><userinput>mkdir -pv /opt/rustc-&rust-version; &amp;&amp;
237ln -svfn rustc-&rust-version; /opt/rustc</userinput></screen>
238
239 <note>
240 <para>
241 If multiple versions of <application>Rust</application> are installed
242 in <filename class="directory">/opt</filename>, changing to another
243 version only requires changing the <filename> /opt/rustc</filename>
244 symbolic link and then running <command>ldconfig</command>.
245 </para>
246 </note>
247
248 <para>
249 Create a suitable <filename>config.toml</filename> file which will
250 configure the build.
251 </para>
252
253<screen><userinput>cat &lt;&lt; EOF &gt; config.toml
254<literal># see config.toml.example for more possible options
255# See the 8.4 book for an old example using shipped LLVM
256# e.g. if not installing clang, or using a version before 13.0
257
258# tell x.py to not keep printing an annoying warning
259changelog-seen = 2
260
261[llvm]
262# by default, rust will build for a myriad of architectures
263targets = "X86"
264
265# When using system llvm prefer shared libraries
266link-shared = true
267
268[build]
269# omit docs to save time and space (default is to build them)
270docs = false
271
272# install extended tools: cargo, clippy, etc
273extended = true
274
275# Do not query new versions of dependencies online.
276locked-deps = true
277
278# Specify which extended tools (those from the default install).
279tools = ["cargo", "clippy", "rustdoc", "rustfmt"]
280
281# Use the source code shipped in the tarball for the dependencies.
282# The combination of this and the "locked-deps" entry avoids downloading
283# many crates from Internet, and makes the Rustc build more stable.
284vendor = true
285
286[install]
287prefix = "/opt/rustc-&rust-version;"
288docdir = "share/doc/rustc-&rust-version;"
289
290[rust]
291channel = "stable"
292description = "for BLFS &version;"
293
294# BLFS used to not install the FileCheck executable from llvm,
295# so disabled codegen tests. The assembly tests rely on FileCheck
296# and cannot easily be disabled, so those will anyway fail if
297# FileCheck has not been installed.
298#codegen-tests = false
299
300[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
301# NB the output of llvm-config (i.e. help options) may be
302# dumped to the screen when config.toml is parsed.
303llvm-config = "/usr/bin/llvm-config"
304
305[target.i686-unknown-linux-gnu]
306# NB the output of llvm-config (i.e. help options) may be
307# dumped to the screen when config.toml is parsed.
308llvm-config = "/usr/bin/llvm-config"</literal>
309EOF</userinput></screen>
310
311 <para>
312 Compile <application>Rust</application> by running the following
313 commands:
314 </para>
315
316<!-- fixed in 1.58.0, retain as a reminder that fixed crates can be used
317<screen><userinput>sed -i -e '/^curl /s/0.4.38/0.4.40/' \
318 -e '/^curl-sys /s/0.4.48/0.4.50/' \
319 src/tools/cargo/Cargo.toml &amp;&amp; -->
320
321<screen><userinput>{ [ ! -e /usr/include/libssh2.h ] ||
322 export LIBSSH2_SYS_USE_PKG_CONFIG=1; } &amp;&amp;
323python3 x.py build</userinput></screen>
324
325 <note>
326 <para>
327 The test suite will generate some messages in the
328 <phrase revision="sysv">system log</phrase>
329 <phrase revision="systemd">systemd journal</phrase>
330 for traps on invalid opcodes, and for segmentation faults.
331 In themselves these are nothing to worry about, just a way for the
332 test to be terminated.
333 </para>
334 </note>
335
336 <para>
337 To run the tests (again using all available CPUs) issue:
338 </para>
339
340<screen remap="test"><userinput>SSL_CERT_DIR=/etc/ssl/certs \
341python3 x.py test --verbose --no-fail-fast | tee rustc-testlog</userinput></screen>
342
343 <!-- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115869 -->
344 <para>
345 Two tests,<filename>tests/ui/issues/issue-21763.rs</filename> and
346 <filename>tests/debuginfo/regression-bad-location-list-67992.rs</filename>,
347 are known to fail.
348 </para>
349
350 <para>
351 If <command>FileCheck</command> from <application>LLVM</application> has
352 not been installed, all 47 tests from the <quote>assembly</quote> suite
353 will fail.
354 </para>
355
356 <para>
357 As with all large test suites, other tests might fail on some machines -
358 if the number of additional failures is low,
359 check the log for 'failures:' and review lines above that, particularly the
360 'stderr:' lines. Any mention of
361 SIGSEGV or signal 11 in a failing test is a cause for concern.
362 </para>
363
364 <para>
365 If you get any <emphasis>other</emphasis> failing test which reports an
366 issue number then you should search for that issue. For example, when
367 rustc &gt;= 1.41.1 was built with a version of sysllvm before 10.0 the test
368 for issue 69225 failed <ulink
369 url="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69225"/> and that should be
370 regarded as a critical failure (they released 1.41.1 because of it).
371 Most other failures will not be critical.
372 </para>
373
374 <para>
375 Therefore, you should determine the number of failures.
376 </para>
377
378 <para>
379 The number of tests which passed and failed can be found by running:
380 </para>
381
382<!-- split into two lines for narrower screen windows -->
383<screen remap="test"><userinput>grep '^test result:' rustc-testlog |
384 awk '{sum1 += $4; sum2 += $6} END { print sum1 " passed; " sum2 " failed" }'</userinput></screen>
385
386 <para>
387 The other available fields are $8 for those which were ignored
388 (i.e. skipped), $10 for 'measured' and $12 for 'filtered out' but both
389 those last two are probably zero.
390 </para>
391
392 <para>
393 Now, as the &root; user, install the package:
394 </para>
395
396 <note>
397 <para>
398 If <command>sudo</command> or <command>su</command> is invoked for
399 switching to the &root; user, ensure
400 <envar>LIBSSH2_SYS_USE_PKG_CONFIG</envar> is correctly passed or the
401 following command may completely rebuild this package. For
402 <command>sudo</command>, use the
403 <option>--preserve-env=LIBSSH2_SYS_USE_PKG_CONFIG</option> option.
404 For <command>su</command>, do <emphasis>not</emphasis> use the
405 <option>-</option> or <option>--login</option>.
406 </para>
407 </note>
408
409<screen role='root'><userinput>python3 x.py install</userinput></screen>
410
411 <!-- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115213 -->
412 <para>
413 The building system attempts to install some files twice, and during
414 the second attempt it renames the old one (installed in the first
415 attempt) with the <filename class='extension'>.old</filename> suffix.
416 As the &root; user, remove these files:
417 </para>
418
419 <screen role='root'><userinput>find /opt/rustc-&rust-version; -name "*.old" -delete</userinput></screen>
420
421 <para>
422 Still as the &root; user, symlink a <application>Zsh</application>
423 completion file into the correct location:
424 </para>
425
426<screen role='root'><userinput>install -vdm755 /usr/share/zsh/site-functions &amp;&amp;
427ln -sfv /opt/rustc/share/zsh/site-functions/_cargo \
428 /usr/share/zsh/site-functions</userinput></screen>
429
430 </sect2>
431
432 <sect2 role="commands">
433 <title>Command Explanations</title>
434
435 <para>
436 <command>ln -svfn rustc-&rust-version; /opt/rustc</command>: if this is
437 not the first use of the <filename class="directory">/opt/rustc</filename>
438 symlink, overwrite it by forcing, and use the '-n' flag to avoid getting
439 confusing results from e.g. <command>ls -l</command>.
440 </para>
441
442 <para>
443 <literal>targets = "X86"</literal>: this avoids building all the available
444 linux cross-compilers (AArch64, MIPS, PowerPC, SystemZ, etc). Unfortunately,
445 rust insists on installing source files for these below
446 <filename class="directory">/opt/rustc/lib/src</filename>.
447 </para>
448
449 <para>
450 <literal>extended = true</literal>: this installs several tools
451 (specified by the <literal>tools</literal> entry) alongside
452 <command>rustc</command>.
453 </para>
454
455 <para>
456 <literal>tools = ["cargo", "clippy", "rustdoc", "rustfmt"]</literal>:
457 only build the tools from the 'default' profile in binary command
458 <command>rustup</command> which are recommended for most users.
459 The other tools are unlikely to be useful unless using (old) code
460 analyzers or editing the standard library.
461 </para>
462
463 <para>
464 <literal>channel = "stable"</literal>: this ensures only stable features
465 can be used, the default in <filename>config.toml</filename> is to use
466 development features, which is not appropriate for a released version.
467 </para>
468
469 <!-- comment while using shipped LLVM -->
470 <para>
471 <literal>[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]</literal>: the syntax of
472 <filename>config.toml</filename> requires an <literal>llvm-config</literal>
473 entry for each target for which system-llvm is to be used. Change the target
474 to <literal>[target.i686-unknown-linux-gnu]</literal> if you are building
475 on 32-bit x86. This whole section may be omitted if you wish to build
476 against the shipped llvm, or do not have clang, but the resulting build will
477 be larger and take longer.
478 </para>
479
480<!--<para>
481 <command>sed -i -e '/^curl /s/0.4.38/0.4.40/' ... </command>: two crates
482 normally downloaded for this release do not correctly initialise
483 <application>curl</application> if using
484 <application>openssl-3.0.0</application>. Upstream has fixed that for a
485 future release, this sed causes the fixed versions to be used.
486 </para>-->
487
488 <!-- https://github.com/alexcrichton/ssh2-rs/issues/173 -->
489 <para>
490 <command>export LIBSSH2_SYS_USE_PKG_CONFIG=1</command>: Allow
491 <command>cargo</command> to link to system libssh2.
492 </para>
493
494<!--<para>
495 <command>export RUSTFLAGS="$RUSTFLAGS -C link-args=-lffi"</command>:
496 This adds a link to libffi to any RUSTFLAGS you may already be passing
497 to the build. On some systems, linking fails to include libffi unless
498 this is used. The reason why this is needed is not clear.
499 2023-01-14 : assumed to be no longer needed, but it is some years
500 since one person reported needing this, keep it commented for the moment.
501 </para>-->
502
503 <!-- https://github.com/alexcrichton/openssl-probe/issues/25 -->
504 <para>
505 <envar>SSL_CERT_DIR=/etc/ssl/certs</envar>: Work around an issue
506 causing test failures with the CA certificate store layout used by
507 <xref linkend='make-ca'/>.
508 </para>
509
510 <para>
511 <parameter>--verbose</parameter>: this switch can sometimes provide more
512 information about a test which fails.
513 </para>
514
515 <para>
516 <parameter>--no-fail-fast</parameter>: this switch ensures that the test suite
517 will not stop at the first error.
518 </para>
519
520 </sect2>
521
522 <sect2 role="configuration">
523 <title>Configuring Rust</title>
524
525 <sect3 id="rustc-config">
526 <title>Configuration Information</title>
527
528 <para>
529 If you installed <application>rustc</application> in
530 <filename class="directory">/opt</filename>, you need to update the
531 following configuration files so that <application>rustc</application>
532 is correctly found by other packages and system processes.
533 </para>
534
535 <para>
536 As the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user, create
537 the <filename>/etc/profile.d/rustc.sh</filename> file:
538 </para>
539
540<screen role="root"><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/profile.d/rustc.sh &lt;&lt; "EOF"
541<literal># Begin /etc/profile.d/rustc.sh
542
543pathprepend /opt/rustc/bin PATH
544
545# Include /opt/rustc/man in the MANPATH variable to access manual pages
546pathappend /opt/rustc/share/man MANPATH
547
548# End /etc/profile.d/rustc.sh</literal>
549EOF</userinput></screen>
550
551 <para>
552 Immediately after installation, update the current PATH
553 for your current shell as a normal user:
554 </para>
555
556<screen><userinput>source /etc/profile.d/rustc.sh</userinput></screen>
557
558 </sect3>
559 </sect2>
560
561
562 <sect2 role="content">
563 <title>Contents</title>
564
565 <segmentedlist>
566 <segtitle>Installed Programs</segtitle>
567 <segtitle>Installed Libraries</segtitle>
568 <segtitle>Installed Directories</segtitle>
569
570 <seglistitem>
571 <seg>
572 cargo-clippy, cargo-fmt, cargo, clippy-driver, rust-gdb,
573 rust-gdbgui, rust-lldb, rustc, rustdoc, and rustfmt
574 </seg>
575 <seg>
576 librustc-driver-&lt;16-byte-hash&gt;.so,
577 libstd-&lt;16-byte-hash&gt;.so, and
578 libtest-&lt;16-byte-hash&gt;.so
579 </seg>
580 <seg>
581 ~/.cargo,
582 /opt/rustc, symbolic link to
583 /opt/rustc-&rust-version;
584 </seg>
585 </seglistitem>
586 </segmentedlist>
587
588 <variablelist>
589 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead>
590 <?dbfo list-presentation="list"?>
591 <?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?>
592
593 <varlistentry id="cargo-clippy">
594 <term><command>cargo-clippy</command></term>
595 <listitem>
596 <para>
597 provides lint checks for a cargo package
598 </para>
599 <indexterm zone="rust cargo-clippy">
600 <primary sortas="b-cargo-clippy">cargo-clippy</primary>
601 </indexterm>
602 </listitem>
603 </varlistentry>
604
605 <varlistentry id="cargo-fmt">
606 <term><command>cargo-fmt</command></term>
607 <listitem>
608 <para>
609 formats all bin and lib files of the current crate using
610 rustfmt
611 </para>
612 <indexterm zone="rust cargo-fmt">
613 <primary sortas="b-cargo-fmt">cargo-fmt</primary>
614 </indexterm>
615 </listitem>
616 </varlistentry>
617
618<!-- <varlistentry id="cargo-miri">
619 <term><command>cargo-miri</command></term>
620 <listitem>
621 <para>
622 is for use by Miri to interpret bin crates and tests. It is
623 not installed by default.
624 </para>
625 <indexterm zone="rust cargo-miri">
626 <primary sortas="b-cargo-miri">cargo-miri</primary>
627 </indexterm>
628 </listitem>
629 </varlistentry>-->
630
631 <varlistentry id="cargo">
632 <term><command>cargo</command></term>
633 <listitem>
634 <para>
635 is the Package Manager for Rust
636 </para>
637 <indexterm zone="rust cargo">
638 <primary sortas="b-cargo">cargo</primary>
639 </indexterm>
640 </listitem>
641 </varlistentry>
642
643 <varlistentry id="clippy-driver">
644 <term><command>clippy-driver</command></term>
645 <listitem>
646 <para>
647 provides lint checks for Rust
648 </para>
649 <indexterm zone="rust clippy-driver">
650 <primary sortas="b-clippy-driver">clippy-driver</primary>
651 </indexterm>
652 </listitem>
653 </varlistentry>
654
655<!-- <varlistentry id="miri">
656 <term><command>miri</command></term>
657 <listitem>
658 <para>
659 is an interpreter for Rust's mid-level intermediate representation
660 (MIR). It is not installed by default.
661 </para>
662 <indexterm zone="rust miri">
663 <primary sortas="b-miri">miri</primary>
664 </indexterm>
665 </listitem>
666 </varlistentry>
667
668 <varlistentry id="rls">
669 <term><command>rls</command></term>
670 <listitem>
671 <para>
672 is the Rust Language Server. This can run in the background to
673 provide IDEs, editors, and other tools with information about Rust
674 programs
675 </para>
676 <indexterm zone="rust rls">
677 <primary sortas="b-rls">rls</primary>
678 </indexterm>
679 </listitem>
680 </varlistentry>
681
682 <varlistentry id="rust-analyzer">
683 <term><command>rust-analyzer</command></term>
684 <listitem>
685 <para>
686 is an implementation of Language Server Protocol for the Rust
687 programming language.
688 </para>
689 <indexterm zone="rust rust-analyzer">
690 <primary sortas="b-rust-analyzer">rust-analyzer</primary>
691 </indexterm>
692 </listitem>
693 </varlistentry>
694
695 <varlistentry id="rust-demangler">
696 <term><command>rust-demangler</command></term>
697 <listitem>
698 <para>
699 converts a list of Rust mangled symbols into a
700 corresponding list of demangled symbols
701 </para>
702 <indexterm zone="rust rust-demangler">
703 <primary sortas="b-rust-demangler">rust-demangler</primary>
704 </indexterm>
705 </listitem>
706 </varlistentry> -->
707
708 <varlistentry id="rust-gdb">
709 <term><command>rust-gdb</command></term>
710 <listitem>
711 <para>
712 is a wrapper script for gdb, pulling in Python pretty-printing
713 modules installed in
714 <filename class="directory">/opt/rustc-&rust-version;/lib/rustlib/etc</filename>
715 </para>
716 <indexterm zone="rust rust-gdb">
717 <primary sortas="b-rust-gdb">rust-gdb</primary>
718 </indexterm>
719 </listitem>
720 </varlistentry>
721
722 <varlistentry id="rust-gdbgui">
723 <term><command>rust-gdbgui</command></term>
724 <listitem>
725 <para>
726 is a wrapper script for a graphical front end to gdb that runs in a
727 browser
728 </para>
729 <indexterm zone="rust rust-gdbgui">
730 <primary sortas="b-rust-gdbgui">rust-gdbgui</primary>
731 </indexterm>
732 </listitem>
733 </varlistentry>
734
735 <varlistentry id="rust-lldb">
736 <term><command>rust-lldb</command></term>
737 <listitem>
738 <para>
739 is a wrapper script for LLDB (the LLVM debugger)
740 pulling in the Python pretty-printing modules
741 </para>
742 <indexterm zone="rust rust-lldb">
743 <primary sortas="b-rust-lldb">rust=lldb</primary>
744 </indexterm>
745 </listitem>
746 </varlistentry>
747
748 <varlistentry id="rustc">
749 <term><command>rustc</command></term>
750 <listitem>
751 <para>
752 is the rust compiler
753 </para>
754 <indexterm zone="rust rustc">
755 <primary sortas="b-rustc">rustc</primary>
756 </indexterm>
757 </listitem>
758 </varlistentry>
759
760 <varlistentry id="rustdoc">
761 <term><command>rustdoc</command></term>
762 <listitem>
763 <para>
764 generates documentation from rust source code
765 </para>
766 <indexterm zone="rust rustdoc">
767 <primary sortas="b-rustdoc">rustdoc</primary>
768 </indexterm>
769 </listitem>
770 </varlistentry>
771
772 <varlistentry id="rustfmt">
773 <term><command>rustfmt</command></term>
774 <listitem>
775 <para>
776 formats rust code
777 </para>
778 <indexterm zone="rust rustfmt">
779 <primary sortas="b-rustfmt">rustfmt</primary>
780 </indexterm>
781 </listitem>
782 </varlistentry>
783
784 <varlistentry id="libstd">
785 <term><filename class="libraryfile">libstd-&lt;16-byte-hash&gt;.so</filename></term>
786 <listitem>
787 <para>
788 is the Rust Standard Library, the foundation of portable Rust software
789 </para>
790 <indexterm zone="rust libstd">
791 <primary sortas="c-libstd">libstd-&lt;16-byte-hash&gt;.so</primary>
792 </indexterm>
793 </listitem>
794 </varlistentry>
795 </variablelist>
796 </sect2>
797
798</sect1>
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