DFINITY's cargo2nix fork. Original here.
Nixify your Rust projects today with cargo2nix,
bringing you reproducible builds and better caching.
This repository hosts two components:
-
A Nixpkgs overlay, located at the
/overlaydirectory, providing utilities to build and test your Cargo workspace. -
A utility written in Rust to generate version pins of crate dependencies.
Together, these components will take an existing Cargo.lock and delegate the
process of fetching and compiling your dependencies (generated by Cargo) using
the deterministic Nix package manager.
This project assumes that the Nix package manager is
already installed on your machine. Run the command below to install cargo2nix:
nix-env -iA package -f https://github.com/tenx-tech/cargo2nix/tarball/masterThe basic process of converting an existing Cargo project to cargo2nix boils
down to the following steps:
- Generate a
Cargo.nixfile by runningcargo2nix -fat the root of your Cargo workspace. - Create a
default.nixfile which imports Nixpkgs with the cargo2nix and nixpkgs-mozilla overlays and builds your project using theCargo.nixfile from earlier. - Run
nix-buildto compile and/or test your project.
Check out our series of example projects which showcase how to use
cargo2nix in detail.
You can optionally use any of these crate derivations as your nix-shell
development shell. The advantage of this shell is that in this environment users
can develop their crates and be sure that their crates builds in the same way
that cargo2nix overlay will build them.
To do this, run nix-shell -A 'rustPkgs.<registry>.<crate>."x.y.z"' default.nix.
For instance, the following command being invoked in this repository root drops
you into such a development shell.
# When a crate is not associated with any registry, such as when building locally,
# the registry is "unknown" as shown below.
nix-shell -A 'rustPkgs.unknown.cargo2nix."0.8.3"' default.nixYou will need to bootstrap some environment in this declarative development shell first.
runHook configureCargo # This overrides your .cargo folder, e.g. for setting cross-compilers
runHook setBuildEnv # This sets up linker flags for the `rustc` invocationsYou will need to override your Cargo.toml and Cargo.lock in this shell,
so make sure that you have them backed up beforehand.
runHook overrideCargoManifestNow you can use your favorite editor in this environment. To run the build
command used by cargo2nix, use
runHook runCargo-
Many
crates.iopublic crates may not build using the current Rust compiler, unless a lint cap is put on these crates. For instance,cargo2nixcaps all lints towarnby default. -
Nix 2.1.3 ships with a broken
builtins.fromTOMLfunction which is unable to parse lines of TOML that look like this:[target.'cfg(target_os = "linux")'.dependencies.rscam]
If Nix fails to parse your project's
Cargo.tomlmanifest with an error similar to the one below, please upgrade to a newer version of Nix. Versions 2.3.1 and newer are not affected by this bug. If upgrading is not an option, removing the inner whitespace from the problematic keys should work around this issue.error: while parsing a TOML string at /nix/store/.../overlay/mkcrate.nix:31:14: Bare key 'cfg(target_os = "linux")' cannot contain whitespace at line 45 -
Git dependencies and crates from alternative Cargo registries rely on
builtins.fetchGitto support fetching from private Git repositories. This means that such dependencies cannot be evaluated withrestrict-evalapplied.Also, if your Git dependency is tied to a Git branch, e.g.
master, and you would like to force it to update on upstream changes, you should append--option tarball-ttl 0to yournix-buildcommand.
This Nixpkgs overlay builds your Rust crates and binaries by first pulling the
dependencies apart, building them individually as separate Nix derivations and
linking them together. This is achieved by passing custom linker flags to the
cargo invocations and the underlying rustc and rustdoc invocations.
In addition, this overlay takes cross-compilation into account and build the crates onto the correct host platform configurations with the correct platform-dependent feature flags specified in the Cargo manifests and build-time dependencies.
The design for the Nix overlay is inspired by the excellent work done by James Kay, which is described here and here. His source is available here. This work would have been impossible without these fantastic write-ups. Special thanks to James Kay!
cargo2nix is free and open source software distributed under the terms of the
MIT License.