A collection of cargo subcommands for use while working on Rust source code and projects. This repository and package aims to make it easy to install all the additional commands at once.
You can install all of the subcommands included in cargo-extras
with a single cargo install
.
Because one of the subcommands requires cmake
to build, you must have cmake
installed on your system. Follow your operating system's guidance for installing this package.
To install from crates.io simply run
$ cargo install cargo-extras
Alternatively you can track the latest on the master branch in this repo (if the version badges above are different, the master branch here may contain bleeding edge updates that haven't been released to the crates.io version):
$ cargo install --git https://github.com/kbknapp/cargo-extras
To see all the commands that are now installed (to include standard cargo
commands):
$ cargo --list
If you get an error about the install
command not being found, or are using multirust
1,2 you could run:
$ multirust run nightly cargo install cargo-extras
Note: As of Rust 1.5 the cargo install
command is included, no more requirement to use a nightly compiler. So if you are receiving the above error, and using a stable compiler version, ensure that you have at least Rust 1.5
You may also, instead compile and install the traditional way by following the instructions below.
On El Capitan there is an issue with openssl-sys
(see the related issue) which can be solved by running these two commands (assuming you have Homebrew)
$ brew install openssl
$ OPENSSL_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/local/opt/openssl/include cargo install cargo-extras
Follow these instructions to compile cargo-extras
, then skip down to Installation.
- Ensure you have current version of
cargo
and Rust installed - Clone the project
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/kbknapp/cargo-extras && cd cargo-extras
- Build the project
$ cargo build --release
(NOTE: There is a large performance difference when compiling without optimizations, so I recommend always using--release
to enable to them) - Once complete, all the binaries will be located at
target/release/
All you need to do is place the binary subcommands somewhere in your $PATH
. Then run cargo <command>
anywhere in your project directory. Example:
$ cp target/release/cargo-* ~/.bin
In the above example, the .bin
directory inside my home directory is inside my $PATH
You have two options, place cargo-count
into a directory that is already located in your $PATH
variable (To see which directories those are, open a terminal and type echo "${PATH//:/\n}"
, the quotation marks are important), or you can add a custom directory to your $PATH
Option 1
If you have write permission to a directory listed in your $PATH
or you have root permission (or via sudo
), simply copy the binaries $ cp target/release/cargo-*
to that directory # sudo cp target/release/cargo-* /usr/local/bin
Option 2
If you do not have root, sudo
, or write permission to any directory already in $PATH
you can create a directory inside your home directory, and add that. Many people use $HOME/.bin
to keep it hidden (and not clutter your home directory), or $HOME/bin
if you want it to be always visible. Here is an example to make the directory, add it to $PATH
, and copy the binaries there.
Simply change bin
to whatever you'd like to name the directory, and .bashrc
to whatever your shell startup file is (usually .bashrc
, .bash_profile
, or .zshrc
)
$ mkdir ~/bin
$ echo "export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin" >> ~/.bashrc
$ cp target/release/cargo-* ~/bin
$ source ~/.bashrc
On Windows 7/8 you can add directory to the PATH
variable by opening a command line as an administrator and running
C:\> setx path "%path%;C:\path\to\cargo\binaries"
Otherwise, ensure you have the binaries in the directory which you operating in the command line from, because Windows automatically adds your current directory to PATH
(i.e. if you open a command line to C:\my_project\\
to use cargo-count
ensure cargo-count.exe
is inside that directory as well).
cargo-extras
currently includes the following subcommands (commits listed for subcommands not using git tag
s):
- cargo-check - a wrapper around
cargo rustc -- -Zno-trans
which can be helpful for running a faster compile if you only need correctness checks - cargo-clone
- cargo-config - prints info about the current crate
- cargo-count - lists source code counts and details about cargo projects, including unsafe statistics
- cargo-do - run multiple
cargo
commands in a row - cargo-edit - allows you to add and remove dependencies from the command line. Installs
cargo-add
,cargo-rm
, andcargo-list
. - cargo-graph - builds dependency graphs using GraphViz
dot
and is an updated fork of cargo-dot with additional features - cargo-open - quickly open a crate in your
$EDITOR
- cargo-outdated - displays when newer versions of Rust dependencies are available, or out of date
- cargo-script - lets people quickly and easily run Rust "scripts" which can make use of Cargo's package ecosystem
- cargo-vendor - a proof-of-concept Cargo subcommand which is used to vendor all crates.io dependencies into a local directory.
- cargo-watch - utility for
cargo
to compile projects when sources change
cargo-extras
is released under the terms of the MIT. See the LICENSE-MIT file for the details. The subcommands themselves may be released under different licenes, see the src and the binary in question, most commands have a license file included with them.