cargo-cp-artifact
cargo-cp-artifact
is a small command line utility for parsing cargo metadata output and copying a compiler artifact to a desired location.
Installation
npm install -g cargo-cp-artifact
Usage
cargo-cp-artifact --artifact artifact-kind crate-name output-file -- wrapped-command
cargo-cp-artifact
accepts a list of crate name and artifact kind to output file mappings and a command to wrap.cargo-cp-artifact
will read stdout
of the wrapped command and parse it as cargo metadata. Compiler artifacts that match arguments provided will be copied to the target destination.
When wrapping a cargo
command, it is necessary to include a json
format to --message-format
.
Arguments
Multiple arguments are allowed to copy multiple build artifacts.
--artifact
Alias: -a
Followed by three arguments: artifact-kind crate-name output-file
--npm
Alias: -n
Followed by two arguments: artifact-kind output-file
The crate name will be read from the npm_package_name
environment variable. If the package name includes a namespace (@namespace/package
), the namespace will be removed when matching the crate name (package
).
Artifact Kind
Valid artifact kinds are bin
, cdylib
, and dylib
. They may be abbreviated as b
, c
, and d
respectively.
For example, -ac
is the equivalent of --artifact cdylib
.
Examples
Wrapping cargo
cargo-cp-artifact -a cdylib my-crate lib/index.node -- cargo build --message-format=json-render-diagnostics
Parsing a file
cargo-cp-artifact -a cdylib my-crate lib/index.node -- cat build-output.txt
npm
script
package.json
{
"name": "my-crate",
"scripts": {
"build": "cargo-cp-artifact -nc lib/index.node -- cargo build --message-format=json-render-diagnostics"
}
}
npm run build
npm run build -- --feature=serde
Why does this exist?
At the time of writing, cargo
does not include a configuration for outputting a library or binary to a specified location. An --out-dir
option exists on nightly, but does not allow specifying the name of the file.
It surprisingly difficult to reliably find the location of a cargo compiler artifact. It is impacted by many parameters, including:
- Build profile
- Target, default or specified
- Crate name and name transforms
However, cargo
can emit metadata on stdout
while continuing to provide human readable diagnostics on stderr
. The metadata may be parsed to more easily and reliably find the location of compiler artifacts.
cargo-cp-artifact
chooses to wrap a command as a child process instead of reading stdin
for two reasons:
- Removes the need for
-o pipefile
when integrating with build tooling which may need to be platform agnostic. - Allows additional arguments to be provided when used in an
npm
script.