# rust-overlay ![CI](https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay/workflows/CI/badge.svg) ![sync-channels](https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay/workflows/sync-channels/badge.svg) *Pure and reproducible* overlay for binary distributed rust toolchains. A compatible but better replacement for rust overlay of [mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla][mozilla]. Hashes of toolchain components are pre-fetched (and compressed) in tree (`manifests` directory), so the evaluation is *pure* and no need to have network (but [nixpkgs-mozilla][mozilla] does). It also works well with [Nix Flakes](https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Flakes). - The toolchain hashes are auto-updated daily using GitHub Actions. - Current oldest supported version is stable 1.29.0 and beta/nightly 2018-09-13 (which are randomly chosen). ## Use as a classic Nix overlay You can put the code below into your `~/.config/nixpkgs/overlays.nix`. ```nix [ (import (builtins.fetchTarball "https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay/archive/master.tar.gz")) ] ``` Then the provided attribute paths are available in nix command. ```bash $ nix-env -iA rust-bin.stable.latest.default # Do anything you like. ``` Alternatively, you can install it into nix channels. ```bash $ nix-channel --add https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay/archive/master.tar.gz rust-overlay $ nix-channel --update ``` And then feel free to use it anywhere like `import { overlays = [ (import ) ]; }` in your nix shell environment. ## Use with Nix Flakes This repository already has flake support. NOTE: **Only the output `overlay` is stable and preferred to be used in your flake.** Other outputs like `packages` and `defaultPackage` are for human try and are subject to change. For a quick play, just use `nix shell` to bring the latest stable rust toolchain into scope. (All commands below requires preview version of Nix with flake support.) ```shell $ nix shell github:oxalica/rust-overlay $ rustc --version rustc 1.49.0 (e1884a8e3 2020-12-29) $ cargo --version cargo 1.49.0 (d00d64df9 2020-12-05) ``` ### Flake example: NixOS Configuration Here's an example of using it in nixos configuration. ```nix { description = "My configuration"; inputs = { nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable"; rust-overlay.url = "github:oxalica/rust-overlay"; }; outputs = { nixpkgs, rust-overlay, ... }: { nixosConfigurations = { hostname = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem { system = "x86_64-linux"; modules = [ ./configuration.nix # Your system configuration. ({ pkgs, ... }: { nixpkgs.overlays = [ rust-overlay.overlay ]; environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.rust-bin.stable.latest.default ]; }) ]; }; }; }; } ``` ### Flake example: Using `devShell` and `nix develop` Running `nix develop` will create a shell with the default nightly Rust toolchain installed: ```nix { description = "A devShell example"; inputs = { nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable"; rust-overlay.url = "github:oxalica/rust-overlay"; flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils"; }; outputs = { self, nixpkgs, rust-overlay, flake-utils, ... }: flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system: let overlays = [ (import rust-overlay) ]; pkgs = import nixpkgs { inherit system overlays; }; in with pkgs; { devShell = mkShell { buildInputs = [ openssl pkgconfig exa fd rust-bin.nightly.latest.default ]; shellHook = '' alias ls=exa alias find=fd ''; }; } ); } ``` ## Usage Examples - Latest stable or beta rust profile. ```nix rust-bin.stable.latest.default # Stable rust, default profile. If not sure, always choose this. rust-bin.beta.latest.default # Wanna test beta compiler. rust-bin.stable.latest.minimal # I don't need anything other than rustc, cargo, rust-std. Bye rustfmt, clippy, etc. rust-bin.beta.latest.minimal ``` It provices the same components as which installed by `rustup install`'s `default` or `minimal` profiles. Almost always, `default` is what you want for development. *Note: For difference between `default` and `minimal` profiles, see [rustup - Profiles][rust-profiles]* - Latest stable or beta rust profile, **with extra components or target support**. ```nix rust-bin.stable.latest.default.override { extensions = [ "rust-src" ]; targets = [ "arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf" ]; } ``` - Latest **nightly** rust profile. ```nix rust-bin.selectLatestNightlyWith (toolchain: toolchain.default) # or `toolchain.minimal` ``` *Note: Don't use `rust-bin.nightly.latest`. Your build would fail when some components missing on some days. Always use `selectLatestNightlyWith` instead.* - Latest **nightly** rust profile, **with extra components or target support**. ```nix rust-bin.selectLatestNightlyWith (toolchain: toolchain.default.override { extensions = [ "rust-src" ]; targets = [ "arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf" ]; }) ``` - A specific version of rust: ```nix rust-bin.stable."1.48.0".default rust-bin.beta."2021-01-01".default rust-bin.nightly."2020-12-31".default ``` *Note: All of them are `override`-able like examples above.* - If you already have a [`rust-toolchain` file for rustup][rust-toolchain], you can simply use `fromRustupToolchainFile` to get the customized toolchain derivation. ```nix rust-bin.fromRustupToolchainFile ./rust-toolchain ``` - Toolchain with specific rustc git revision. **Warning: This may not always work (including the example below) since upstream CI periodly purges old artifacts.** This is useful for development of rust components like [MIRI][miri], which requires a specific revision of rust. ```nix rust-bin.fromRustcRev { rev = "a2cd91ceb0f156cb442d75e12dc77c3d064cdde4"; components = { rustc = "sha256-x+OkPVStX00AiC3GupIdGzWluIK1BnI4ZCBbg72+ZuI="; rust-src = "sha256-13PpzzYtd769Xkb0QzHpNfYCOnLMWFolc9QyYq98z2k="; }; } ``` - There also an cross-compilation example in [`examples/cross-aarch64`]. ## Reference: All attributes provided by the overlay ```nix { rust-bin = { # The default dist url for fetching. # Override it if you want to use a mirror server. distRoot = "https://static.rust-lang.org/dist"; # Select a toolchain and aggregate components by rustup's `rust-toolchain` file format. # See: https://rust-lang.github.io/rustup/overrides.html#the-toolchain-file fromRustupToolchain = { channel, components ? [], targets ? [] }: «derivation»; # Same as `fromRustupToolchain` but read from a `rust-toolchain` file (legacy one-line string or in TOML). fromRustupToolchainFile = rust-toolchain-file-path: «derivation»; # Select the latest nightly toolchain which have specific components or profile available. # This helps nightly users in case of latest nightly may not contains all components they want. # # `selectLatestNightlyWith (toolchain: toolchain.default)` selects the latest nightly toolchain # with all `default` components (rustc, cargo, rustfmt, ...) available. selectLatestNightlyWith = selector: «derivation»; # Custom toolchain from a specific rustc git revision. # This does almost the same thing as `rustup-toolchain-install-master`. (https://crates.io/crates/rustup-toolchain-install-master) # Parameter `components` should be an attrset with component name as key and its SRI hash as value. fromRustcRev = { pname ? …, rev, components, target ? … }: «derivation»; stable = { # The latest stable toolchain. latest = { # Profiles, predefined component sets. # See: https://rust-lang.github.io/rustup/concepts/profiles.html minimal = «derivation»; # Only `cargo`, `rustc` and `rust-std`. default = «derivation»; # The default profile of `rustup`. Good for general use. complete = «derivation»; # Do not use it. It almost always fails. # Pre-aggregated package provided by upstream, the most commonly used package in `mozilla-overlay`. # It consists of an uncertain number of components, usually more than the `default` profile of `rustup` # but less than `complete` profile. rust = «derivation»; # Individial components. rustc = «derivation»; cargo = «derivation»; rust-std = «derivation»; # ... other components }; "1.49.0" = { /* toolchain */ }; "1.48.0" = { /* toolchain */ }; # ... other versions. }; beta = { # The latest beta toolchain. latest = { /* toolchain */ }; "2021-01-01" = { /* toolchain */ }; "2020-12-30" = { /* toolchain */ }; # ... other versions. }; nightly = { # The latest nightly toolchain. # It is preferred to use `selectLatestNightlyWith` instead of this since # nightly toolchain may have components (like `rustfmt` or `rls`) missing, # making `default` profile unusable. latest = { /* toolchain */ }; "2020-12-31" = { /* toolchain */ }; "2020-12-30" = { /* toolchain */ }; # ... other versions. }; # ... Some internal attributes omitted. }; # These are for compatibility with nixpkgs-mozilla and # provide same toolchains as `rust-bin.*`. latest.rustChannels = /* ... */; rustChannelOf = /* ... */; rustChannelOfTargets = /* ... */; rustChannels = /* ... */; } ``` For more details, see also the source code of `./rust-overlay.nix`. [mozilla]: https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla [rust-toolchain]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rustup/overrides.html#the-toolchain-file [rust-profiles]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rustup/concepts/profiles.html [miri]: https://github.com/rust-lang/miri [`examples/cross-aarch64`]: https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay/tree/master/examples/cross-aarch64