CFG Aliases
CFG Aliases is a tiny utility to help save you a lot of effort with long winded #[cfg()]
checks. This crate provides a single [cfg_aliases!
] macro that doesn't have any dependencies and specifically avoids pulling in syn
or quote
so that the impact on your comile times should be negligible.
You use the the [cfg_aliases!
] macro in your build.rs
script to define aliases such as x11
that could then be used in the cfg
attribute or macro for conditional compilation: #[cfg(x11)]
.
Example
Cargo.toml:
[]
= "0.1.0"
build.rs:
use cfg_aliases;
Now that we have our aliases setup we can use them just like you would expect:
println!;
println!;
This greatly improves what would otherwise look like this without the aliases:
println!;
println!;
You can also use the cfg!
macro or combine your aliases with other checks using all()
, not()
, and any()
. Your aliases are genuine cfg
flags now!
if cfg! else
compile_error!;
Syntax and Error Messages
The aliase names are restricted to the same rules as rust identifiers which, for one, means that they cannot have dashes ( -
) in them. Additionally, if you get certain syntax elements wrong, such as the alias name, the macro will error saying that the recursion limit was reached instead of giving a clear indication of what actually went wrong. This is due to a nuance with the macro parser and it might be fixed in a later release of this crate. It is also possible that aliases with dashes in the name might be supported in a later release. Open an issue if that is something that you would like implemented.
Finally, you can also induce an infinite recursion by having rules that both reference each-other, but this isn't a real limitation because that doesn't make logical sense anyway:
// This causes an error!
cfg_aliases!
Attribution and Thanks
- Thanks to my God and Father who led me through figuring this out and to whome I owe everything.
- Thanks to @Yandros on the Rust forum for showing me some crazy macro hacks!
- Thanks to @sfackler for pointing out the way to make cargo add the cfg flags.
- Thanks to the authors of the
tectonic_cfg_support::target_cfg
macro from which most of the cfg attribute parsing logic is taken from. Also thanks to @ratmice for bringing it up on the Rust forum.