2e24bc6591
For example, the Cargo git repo contains multiple "case" Cargo.toml files in the testsuite. Let's ignore them like what Cargo does [1]. Co-authored-by: Ivan Petkov <ivanppetkov@gmail.com> |
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.github | ||
checks | ||
ci | ||
docs | ||
examples | ||
extra-tests | ||
lib | ||
.envrc | ||
.git-blame-ignore-revs | ||
.gitignore | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
default.nix | ||
flake.lock | ||
flake.nix | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
shell.nix |
Crane
A Nix library for building cargo projects.
- Source fetching: automatically done using a Cargo.lock file
- Incremental: build your workspace dependencies just once, then quickly lint, build, and test changes to your project without slowing down
- Composable: split builds and tests into granular steps. Gate CI without burdening downstream consumers building from source.
Features
Examples can be found here. Detailed API docs are available, but at a glance, the following are supported:
- Automatic vendoring of dependencies in a way that works with Nix
- Alternative cargo registries are supported (with a minor configuration change)
- Git dependencies are automatically supported without additional
configuration.
- Cargo retains the flexibility to only use these dependencies when they are actually needed, without forcing an override for the entire workspace.
- Reusing dependency artifacts after only building them once
- clippy checks
- rustfmt checks
- cargo-tarpaulin for code coverage
Getting Started
The easiest way to get started is to initialize a flake from a template:
# Start with a comprehensive suite of tests
nix flake init -t github:ipetkov/crane#quick-start
# Or if you want something simpler
nix flake init -t github:ipetkov/crane#quick-start-simple
# If you need a custom rust toolchain (e.g. to build WASM targets):
nix flake init -t github:ipetkov/crane#custom-toolchain
# If you need to use another crate registry besides crates.io
nix flake init -t github:ipetkov/crane#alt-registry
# If you need cross-compilation, you can also try out
nix flake init -t github:ipetkov/crane#cross-rust-overlay
# For statically linked binaries using musl
nix flake init -t github:ipetkov/crane#cross-musl
For an even more lean, no frills set up, create a flake.nix
file with the
following contents at the root of your cargo workspace:
{
inputs = {
nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixpkgs-unstable";
crane.url = "github:ipetkov/crane";
crane.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils";
};
outputs = { self, nixpkgs, crane, flake-utils, ... }:
flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system:
let
craneLib = crane.lib.${system};
in
{
packages.default = craneLib.buildPackage {
src = craneLib.cleanCargoSource ./.;
# Add extra inputs here or any other derivation settings
# doCheck = true;
# buildInputs = [];
# nativeBuildInputs = [];
};
});
}
Philosophy
Crane is designed around the idea of composing cargo invocations such that they can take advantage of the artifacts generated in previous invocations. This allows for both flexible configurations and great caching (à la Cachix) in CI and local development builds.
Here's how it works at a high level: when a cargo workspace is built its source
is first transformed such that only the dependencies listed by the Cargo.toml
and Cargo.lock
files are built, and none of the crate's real source is
included. This allows cargo to build all dependency crates and prevents Nix from
invalidating the derivation whenever the source files are updated. Then, a
second derivation is built, this time using the real source files, which also
imports the cargo artifacts generated in the first step.
This pattern can be used with any arbitrary sequence of commands, regardless of whether those commands are running additional lints, performing code coverage analysis, or even generating types from a model schema. Let's take a look at two examples at how very similar configurations can give us very different behavior!
Example One
Suppose we are developing a crate and want to run our CI assurance checks
via nix flake check
. Perhaps we want the CI gate to be very strict and block
any changes which raise warnings when run with cargo clippy
. Oh, and we want
to enforce some code coverage too!
Except we do not want to push our strict guidelines on any downstream consumers
who may want to build our crate. Suppose they need to build the crate with a
different compiler version (for one reason or another) which comes with a new lint
whose warnings we have not yet addressed. We don't want to make their life
harder, so we want to make sure we do not run cargo clippy
as part of the
crate's actual derivation, but at the same time, we don't want to have to
rebuild dependencies from scratch.
Here's how we can set up our flake to achieve our goals:
{
inputs = {
nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixpkgs-unstable";
crane.url = "github:ipetkov/crane";
crane.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils";
};
outputs = { self, nixpkgs, crane, flake-utils, ... }:
flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system:
let
pkgs = import nixpkgs {
inherit system;
};
craneLib = crane.lib.${system};
# Common derivation arguments used for all builds
commonArgs = {
src = craneLib.cleanCargoSource ./.;
buildInputs = with pkgs; [
# Add extra build inputs here, etc.
# openssl
];
nativeBuildInputs = with pkgs; [
# Add extra native build inputs here, etc.
# pkg-config
];
};
# Build *just* the cargo dependencies, so we can reuse
# all of that work (e.g. via cachix) when running in CI
cargoArtifacts = craneLib.buildDepsOnly (commonArgs // {
# Additional arguments specific to this derivation can be added here.
# Be warned that using `//` will not do a deep copy of nested
# structures
pname = "mycrate-deps";
});
# Run clippy (and deny all warnings) on the crate source,
# resuing the dependency artifacts (e.g. from build scripts or
# proc-macros) from above.
#
# Note that this is done as a separate derivation so it
# does not impact building just the crate by itself.
myCrateClippy = craneLib.cargoClippy (commonArgs // {
# Again we apply some extra arguments only to this derivation
# and not every where else. In this case we add some clippy flags
inherit cargoArtifacts;
cargoClippyExtraArgs = "--all-targets -- --deny warnings";
});
# Build the actual crate itself, reusing the dependency
# artifacts from above.
myCrate = craneLib.buildPackage (commonArgs // {
inherit cargoArtifacts;
});
# Also run the crate tests under cargo-tarpaulin so that we can keep
# track of code coverage
myCrateCoverage = craneLib.cargoTarpaulin (commonArgs // {
inherit cargoArtifacts;
});
in
{
packages.default = myCrate;
checks = {
inherit
# Build the crate as part of `nix flake check` for convenience
myCrate
myCrateClippy
myCrateCoverage;
};
});
}
When we run nix flake check
the following will happen:
- The sources for any dependency crates will be fetched
- They will be built without our crate's code and the artifacts propagated
- Our crate, the clippy checks, and code coverage collection will be built, each reusing the same set of artifacts from the initial source-free build. If enough cores are available to Nix it may build all three derivations completely in parallel, or schedule them in some arbitrary order.
Splitting up our builds like this also gives us the benefit of granular control over what is rebuilt. Suppose we change our mind and decide to adjust the clippy flags (e.g. to allow certain lints or forbid others). Doing so will only rebuild the clippy derivation, without having to rebuild and rerun any of our other tests!
Example Two
Let's take an alternative approach to the example above. Suppose instead that we care more about not wasting any resources building certain tests (even if they would succeed!) if another particular test fails. Perhaps binary substitutes are readily available so that we do not mind if anyone building from source is bound by our rules, and we can be sure that all tests have passed as part of the build.
{
inputs = {
nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixpkgs-unstable";
crane.url = "github:ipetkov/crane";
crane.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils";
};
outputs = { self, nixpkgs, crane, flake-utils, ... }:
flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system:
let
pkgs = import nixpkgs {
inherit system;
};
craneLib = crane.lib.${system};
# Common derivation arguments used for all builds
commonArgs = {
src = craneLib.cleanCargoSource ./.;
buildInputs = with pkgs; [
# Add extra build inputs here, etc.
# openssl
];
nativeBuildInputs = with pkgs; [
# Add extra native build inputs here, etc.
# pkg-config
];
};
# Build *just* the cargo dependencies, so we can reuse
# all of that work (e.g. via cachix) when running in CI
cargoArtifacts = craneLib.buildDepsOnly (commonArgs // {
# Additional arguments specific to this derivation can be added here.
# Be warned that using `//` will not do a deep copy of nested
# structures
pname = "mycrate-deps";
});
# First, run clippy (and deny all warnings) on the crate source.
myCrateClippy = craneLib.cargoClippy (commonArgs // {
# Again we apply some extra arguments only to this derivation
# and not every where else. In this case we add some clippy flags
inherit cargoArtifacts;
cargoClippyExtraArgs = "--all-targets -- --deny warnings";
});
# Next, we want to run the tests and collect code-coverage, _but only if
# the clippy checks pass_ so we do not waste any extra cycles.
myCrateCoverage = craneLib.cargoTarpaulin (commonArgs // {
cargoArtifacts = myCrateClippy;
});
# Build the actual crate itself, _but only if the previous tests pass_.
myCrate = craneLib.buildPackage (commonArgs // {
cargoArtifacts = myCrateCoverage;
});
in
{
packages.default = myCrate;
checks = {
inherit
# Build the crate as part of `nix flake check` for convenience
myCrate
myCrateCoverage;
};
});
}
When we run nix flake check
the following will happen:
- The sources for any dependency crates will be fetched
- They will be built without our crate's code and the artifacts propagated
- Next the clippy checks will run, reusing the dependency artifacts above.
- Next the code coverage tests will run, reusing the artifacts from the clippy run
- Finally the actual crate itself is built
In this case we lose the ability to build derivations independently, but we gain the ability to enforce a strict build order. However, we can easily change our mind, which would be much more difficult if we had written everything as one giant derivation.
Compatibility Policy
Breaking changes can land on the master
branch at any time, so it is
recommended you use a versioning strategy when consuming this library (for
example, using something like flakes or niv).
Tagged releases will be cut periodically and changes will be documented in the CHANGELOG. Release versions will follow Semantic Versioning.
The test suite is run against the latest stable nixpkgs release, as well as
nixpkgs-unstable
. Any breakage on those channels is considered a bug and
should be reported as such.
FAQs
I want to use a custom version of nixpkgs or another specific system
The crane library can be instantiated with a specific version of nixpkgs as
follows. For more information, see the API docs for mkLib
.
crane.mkLib (import nixpkgs { system = "armv7l-linux"; })
I want to override a particular package used by the crane library
Specific inputs can be overridden for the entire library via the
overrideScope'
API as follows. For more information, see the API docs for
mkLib
/overrideToolchain
, or checkout the custom-toolchain example.
crane.lib.${system}.overrideScope' (final: prev: {
cargo-tarpaulin = myCustomCargoTarpaulinVersion;
})
crane.lib.${system}.overrideToolchain myCustomToolchain
Nix is complaining about IFD (import from derivation)
If a derivation's pname
and version
attributes are not explicitly set,
crane will inspect the project's Cargo.toml
file to set them as a convenience
to avoid duplicating that information by hand. This works well when the source
is a local path, but can cause issues if the source is being fetched remotely,
or flakes are not being used (since flakes have IFD enabled on by default).
One easy workaround for this issue (besides enabling the
allow-import-from-derivation
option in Nix) is to explicitly set
{ pname = "..."; version = "..."; }
in the derivation.
You'll know you've run into this issue if you see error messages along the lines of:
cannot build '/nix/store/...-source.drv' during evaluation because the option 'allow-import-from-derivation' is disabled
a 'aarch64-darwin' with features {} is required to build '/nix/store/...', but I am a 'x86_64-linux' with features {}
I'm getting rebuilds all of the time, especially when I change flake.nix
Nix will rebuild a derivation if any of its inputs change, which includes any
file contained by the source that is passed in. For example, if the build
expression specifies src = ./.;
then the crate will be rebuilt when any file
changes (including "unrelated" changes to flake.nix
)!
There are two main ways to avoid unnecessary builds:
- Use a source cleaning function which can omit any files know to not be
needed while building the crate (for example, all
*.nix
sources,flake.lock
, and so on). For examplecleanCargoSource
(see API docs for details) implements some good defaults for ignoring irrelevant files which are not needed by cargo. - Another option is to put the crate's source files into its own subdirectory
(e.g.
./mycrate
) and then set the build expression's source to that subdirectory (e.g.src = ./mycrate;
). Then, changes to files outside of that directory will be ignored and will not cause a rebuild
I'm trying to build another cargo project from source which has no lock file
First consider if there is a release of this project available with a lock
file as it may be simpler and more consistent to use the exact dependencies
published by the project itself. Projects published on crates.io always come
with a lock file and nixpkgs
has a fetchCrate
fetcher which pulls straight
from crates.io.
If that is not an option, the next best thing is to generate your own
Cargo.lock
file and pass it in as an override by setting cargoLock = ./path/to/Cargo.lock
. If you are calling buildDepsOnly
or vendorCargoDeps
directly the value must be passed there; otherwise you can pass it into
buildPackage
or cargoBuild
and it will automatically passed through.
Note that the Cargo.lock
file must be accessible at evaluation time for the
dependency vendoring to work, meaning the file cannot be generated within the
same derivation that builds the project. It may come from another derivation,
but it may require enabling IFD if flakes are not used.
I need to patch Cargo.lock
but when I do the build fails
Dependency crates are vendored by reading Cargo.lock
at evaluation time and
not at build time. Thus using patches = [ ./patch-which-updates-lockfile.patch ];
may result in a situation where any new crates introduced by the patch cannot be
found by cargo.
It is possible to work around this limitation by patching Cargo.lock
in a
stand-alone derivation and passing that result to vendorCargoDeps
before
building the rest of the workspace.
let
patchedCargoLock = src = pkgs.stdenv.mkDerivation {
src = ./path/to/Cargo.lock;
patches = [
./update-cargo-lock.patch
];
installPhase = ''
runHook preInstall
mkdir -p $out
cp Cargo.lock $out
runHook postInstall
'';
};
in
craneLib.buildPackage {
cargoVendorDir = craneLib.vendorCargoDeps {
src = patchedCargoLock;
};
src = craneLib.cleanCargoSource ./.;
patches = [
./update-cargo-lock.patch
./some-other.patch
];
}
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion by you, shall be licensed as MIT, without any additional terms or conditions.