A tool to check that your Cargo.toml dependencies are sorted alphabetically. Project created as a solution to @dtolnay's request for implementation #29. Cross platform implementation, windows compatible. Terminal coloring works on both cmd.exe and powershell. Checks/sorts by key in tables and also nested table headers (does not sort the items in a nested header, sorts the table itself). cargo sort
uses toml-edit to parse the toml file into something useful.
The --format
option may result in improperly formatted toml; please file an issue.
There are three modes cargo-sort can be used in:
- default
- No flags set cargo-sort will write the sorted result over the input Cargo.toml file.
- -c or --check
- Will fail with a non-zero exit code if the file is unsorted.
- -n or --no-format
- Will NOT format the sorted toml. This option only has an effect if writing or printing out.
- --check-format
- Checks that after sorting the original input file has not changed.
- -g or --grouped
- When sorting keep table key value spacing. If you have dependency groups they will stick but be sorted within the grouping.
The
key_value_newlines
config option needs to betrue
for this to have any effect.
- When sorting keep table key value spacing. If you have dependency groups they will stick but be sorted within the grouping.
The
- -p or --print
- Write the sorted toml file to stdout.
- -w or --workspace
- Checks every crate in the workspace based on flags. Only one root may be given.
- -o or --order
- Specify an ordering of tables. All nested tables will be sorted and appear after the specified table. Any unspecified table will be after specified.
cargo sort
uses a config file when formatting called tomlfmt.toml
. This is optional and defaults will
be used if not found in the current working dir.
Here are the defaults when no tomlfmt.toml
is found
# trailing comma in arrays
always_trailing_comma = false
# trailing comma when multi-line
multiline_trailing_comma = true
# the maximum length in bytes of the string of an array object
max_array_line_len = 80
# number of spaces to indent
indent_count = 4
# space around equal sign
space_around_eq = true
# remove all the spacing inside the array
compact_arrays = false
# remove all the spacing inside the object
compact_inline_tables = false
trailing_newline = true
# is it ok to have blank lines inside of a table
# this option needs to be true for the --grouped flag
key_value_newlines = true
allowed_blank_lines = 1
# windows style line endings
crlf = false
# The user specified ordering of tables in a document.
# All unspecified tables will come after these.
table_order = []
included in sort check is:
["dependencies"]
["dev-dependencies"]
["build-dependencies"]
["workspace.members"]
["workspace.exclude"]
If you have a header to add open a PR, they are welcome.
cargo install cargo-sort
If you use pre-commit in your project, you can add cargo-sort as hook by
adding the following entry to your .pre-commit-config.yaml
configuration:
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/DevinR528/cargo-sort
rev: v1.0.4
hooks:
- id: cargo-sort
Please make sure to set rev
to the latest tag of this repo as the tag shown here might not always
be updated to the latest version.
Thanks to dspicher for issue #4 you can now invoke cargo sort
check as a cargo subcommand
cargo sort [FLAGS] [path]
Wildcard expansion is supported so you can do this
cargo-sort [FLAGS] [path/to/*/Cargo.toml | path/to/*]
or any other pattern that is supported by your terminal. This also means multiple paths work.
cargo-sort [FLAGS] path/to/a path/to/b path/to/c/Cargo.toml
Finally cargo sort has the --workspace flag and will sort each Cargo.toml file in a workspace
cargo-sort -w/--workspace
These are all valid. File names and extensions can be used on some of the paths but not others, if left off the tool will default to Cargo.toml.
cargo sort 1.0.0
Devin R <devin.ragotzy@gmail.com>
Ensure Cargo.toml dependency tables are sorted.
USAGE:
cargo-sort [FLAGS] [CWD]
FLAGS:
-c, --check exit with non-zero if Cargo.toml is unsorted, overrides default behavior
-f, --format formats the given Cargo.toml according to tomlfmt.toml
-g, --grouped when sorting groups of key value pairs blank lines are kept
-h, --help Prints help information
-p, --print prints Cargo.toml, lexically sorted, to stdout
-V, --version Prints version information
-w, --workspace checks every crate in a workspace
ARGS:
<CWD>... sets cwd, must contain a Cargo.toml file
Build the image:
docker build -t cargo-sort .
Run the container:
docker run -it --rm -v "$(pwd)/Cargo.toml":/app/Cargo.toml cargo-sort
Image is also available on Docker Hub:
docker run -it --rm -v "$(pwd)/Cargo.toml":/app/Cargo.toml devinr528/cargo-sort:latest
[dependencies]
a="0.1.1"
# comments will stay with the item
c="0.1.1"
# If --grouped is used the blank line will stay.
b="0.1.1"
[dependencies.alpha]
version="0"
[build-dependencies]
foo="0"
bar="0"
# comments will also stay with header
[dependencies.zed]
version="0"
[dependencies.beta]
version="0"
[dev-dependencies]
bar="0"
foo="0"
Will sort to, or fail until organized like so
[dependencies]
a="0.1.1"
# If --grouped is used the blank line will stay
b="0.1.1"
# comments will stay with the item
c="0.1.1"
[dependencies.alpha]
version="0"
[dependencies.beta]
version="0"
# comments will also stay with header
[dependencies.zed]
version="0"
# Tables are ordered by their appearance so
# if dev-dependencies was before build it would be
# sorted that way unless --order is specified
[build-dependencies]
bar="0"
foo="0"
[dev-dependencies]
bar="0"
foo="0"
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this project by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.