This repo contains a minimal reliable setup for compiling the most recent stable Rust compiler from source on Linux i.e. without downloading any already compiled Rust binaries from the internet.
The reason this is not straightforward is that the Rust compiler is written in Rust; the ordinary way to compile it involves downloading an older Rust compiler from the internet to build with.
This setup uses mrustc which is an alternative Rust compiler implemented in C++ able to compile certain old versions of rustc and cargo, running in a Debian chroot to achieve a consistent environment across host systems and firejail to lock down accidental network accesses during the build.
The hope is that once the reproducibility of the Rust compiler is in better shape (rust-lang/rust#34902) we can get this bootstrap chain to converge with the chain that underlies the official rustc releases. At that point we would have a way to verify no funny business in the official binary releases by comparing hashes against another chain.
Further, we could establish independent bootstrap chains at some number of reputable organizations (Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Amazon, ...) running in environments that are trusted by each of those organizations. After every release of Rust, those organizations could publish an attestation that the compiler resulting from their independent bootstrap chain matches the hash of the official release. With a diverse enough set of secure environments confirming the hash, users can feel 100% confident downloading and using the official release even in use cases where such a thing would ordinarily not be acceptable.
- Install dependencies: debootstrap and firejail.
- Clone this repo.
- Run
./download.sh
to download mrustc and all rustc sources required for the bootstrap chain. - Run
./init.sh
to initialize a chroot environment with the necessary dependencies for the bootstrap. - Run
firejail --chroot=./root --net=none --private-cwd=/build
to enter the chroot with networking blocked. - Run
./build.sh
from inside the chroot to kick off the bootstrap.
Be aware that the complete bootstrap uses a lot of disk space. Bootstrapping up through rustc 1.40 requires 120 GB.
All intellectual property in this repository is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.