Expand description
A Rust library for build scripts to automatically configure code based on
compiler support. Code snippets are dynamically tested to see if the rustc
will accept them, rather than hard-coding specific version support.
§Usage
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[build-dependencies]
autocfg = "1"
Then use it in your build.rs
script to detect compiler features. For
example, to test for 128-bit integer support, it might look like:
extern crate autocfg;
fn main() {
let ac = autocfg::new();
ac.emit_has_type("i128");
// (optional) We don't need to rerun for anything external.
autocfg::rerun_path("build.rs");
}
If the type test succeeds, this will write a cargo:rustc-cfg=has_i128
line
for Cargo, which translates to Rust arguments --cfg has_i128
. Then in the
rest of your Rust code, you can add #[cfg(has_i128)]
conditions on code that
should only be used when the compiler supports it.
§Caution
Many of the probing methods of AutoCfg
document the particular template they
use, subject to change. The inputs are not validated to make sure they are
semantically correct for their expected use, so it’s possible to escape and
inject something unintended. However, such abuse is unsupported and will not
be considered when making changes to the templates.
Structs§
- Helper to detect compiler features for
cfg
output in build scripts. - A common error type for the
autocfg
crate.
Functions§
- Writes a config flag for rustc on standard out.
- Indicates to rustc that a config flag should not generate an
unexpected_cfgs
warning - Creates a new
AutoCfg
instance. - Writes a line telling Cargo to rerun the build script if the environment variable
var
changes. - Writes a line telling Cargo to rerun the build script if
path
changes.