/build_script

A wrapper for build.rs instructions

Primary LanguageRustMIT LicenseMIT

Build Script

A wrapper for build.rs instructions

Why?

I made this because I felt like the way you pass instructions to build.rs makes it very easy to make mistakes (especially when using strings) and it just felt odd that rust doesn't provide an api or an official external crate (like rand).

Installation

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[build-dependencies]
build_script = "0.2.0"

Examples

use build_script::{cargo_rustc_link_lib, cargo_rustc_link_search, BuildScript, Instruction, Value};

fn main() {
    // basic instructions    
    build_script::cargo_rerun_if_changed("something.txt");
    build_script::cargo_rerun_if_env_changed("PKG_CONFIG");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_link_lib("somelibrary");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_link_lib_mapping(cargo_rustc_link_lib::Kind::DynamicLibrary, "somelibrary");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_link_search("something-else.txt");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_link_search_mapping(cargo_rustc_link_search::Kind::Crate, "something-else.txt");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_flags("-l ffi");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_cfg("key");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_cfg_mapping("key", "value");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_env("var", "value");
    build_script::cargo_rustc_cdylib_link_arg("flag");
    build_script::cargo_mapping("key", "value");

    // other, advanced instructions    
    let mut build_script = BuildScript::default();
    let instruction = {
        let value = Value::Singular("something".into());
        Instruction::new("instruction", value)
    };

    // add a custom instruction to the instruction stack    
    build_script.custom_instruction(instruction);

    // write all instructions to something (for this scenario, and also usually, its stdout)    
    build_script.build();
}

For more information see the documentation.

Terminology

Instruction

The instruction is what is passed to cargo. An example would be cargo:rerun-if-env-changed=ENV. This example will also be dissected below.

The instruction is split into three parts:

Prefix

The prefix is the string before the delimiter :: cargo.

Usually the prefix is cargo, however in this crate other, custom prefixes can be used for future compatibility in case another prefix is added.

Name

The name is the string in between the delimiters : and =: rerun-if-env-changed.

If the name is unknown, the instruction will automatically be a mapping (see below).

Value

The value is the string after the delimiter =: ENV.

This represents the value of the instruction.

Mapping

There is a type of instruction which is a mapping: cargo:KEY=VALUE.

This is, verbatim:

Metadata, used by links scripts.

The source can be found here.

This is used when an instruction name is unknown.