--- short-description: Rust language integration module authors: - name: Dylan Baker email: dylan@pnwbakers.com years: [2020, 2021, 2022] ... # Rust module *(new in 0.57.0)* *(Stable since 1.0.0)* The rust module provides helper to integrate rust code into Meson. The goal is to make using rust in Meson more pleasant, while still remaining mesonic, this means that it attempts to make Rust work more like Meson, rather than Meson work more like rust. ## Functions ### test() ```meson rustmod.test(name, target, ...) ``` This function creates a new rust unittest target from an existing rust based target, which may be a library or executable. It does this by copying the sources and arguments passed to the original target and adding the `--test` argument to the compilation, then creates a new test target which calls that executable, using the rust test protocol. This function takes two positional arguments, the first is the name of the test and the second is the library or executable that is the rust based target. It also takes the following keyword arguments: - `dependencies`: a list of test-only Dependencies - `link_with`: a list of additional build Targets to link with (*since 1.2.0*) - `rust_args`: a list of extra arguments passed to the Rust compiler (*since 1.2.0*) This function also accepts all of the keyword arguments accepted by the [[test]] function except `protocol`, it will set that automatically. ### bindgen() This function wraps bindgen to simplify creating rust bindings around C libraries. This has two advantages over invoking bindgen with a `generator` or `custom_target`: - It handles `include_directories`, so one doesn't have to manually convert them to `-I...` - It automatically sets up a depfile, making the results more reliable - It automatically handles assertions, synchronizing Rust and C/C++ to have the same behavior It takes the following keyword arguments - `input`: a list of Files, Strings, or CustomTargets. The first element is the header bindgen will parse, additional elements are dependencies. - `output`: the name of the output rust file - `include_directories`: A list of `include_directories` or `string` objects, these are passed to clang as `-I` arguments *(string since 1.0.0)* - `c_args`: a list of string arguments to pass to clang untouched - `args`: a list of string arguments to pass to `bindgen` untouched. - `dependencies`: a list of `Dependency` objects to pass to the underlying clang call (*since 1.0.0*) ```meson rust = import('unstable-rust') inc = include_directories('..'ΒΈ '../../foo') generated = rust.bindgen( input : 'myheader.h', output : 'generated.rs', include_directories : [inc, include_directories('foo')], args : ['--no-rustfmt-bindings'], c_args : ['-DFOO=1'], ) ``` If the header depends on generated headers, those headers must be passed to `bindgen` as well to ensure proper dependency ordering, static headers do not need to be passed, as a proper depfile is generated: ```meson h1 = custom_target(...) h2 = custom_target(...) r1 = rust.bindgen( input : [h1, h2], # h1 includes h2, output : 'out.rs', ) ``` *Since 1.1.0* Meson will synchronize assertions for Rust and C/C++ when the `b_ndebug` option is set (via `-DNDEBUG` for C/C++, and `-C debug-assertions=on` for Rust), and will pass `-DNDEBUG` as an extra argument to clang. This allows for reliable wrapping of `-DNDEBUG` controlled behavior with `#[cfg(debug_asserions)]` and or `cfg!()`. Before 1.1.0, assertions for Rust were never turned on by Meson. *Since 1.2.0* Additional arguments to pass to clang may be specified in a *machine file in the properties section: ```ini [properties] bindgen_clang_arguments = ['--target', 'x86_64-linux-gnu'] ```