Rust
This article is about the Rust programming language. There are 3 methods to use the Rust compiler and toolchain in Nix/NixOS:
- via nixpkgs,
- via rustup,
- or with unofficial overlays on nixpkgs.
Installing via nixpkgs is the nix-iest way to use Rust, but there are valid reasons to use any approach.
Installing via nixpkgs
The cargo
and rustc
derivations provide the Rust toolchain in nixpkgs. An advantage of using nixpkgs is that it's dead simple and you get pinned versions, deterministic builds in nix-shell, etc. However, nixpkgs only maintains a single version of the Rust stable toolchain, so if you require a nightly toolchain or require switching between multiple toolchains then this approach may not be for you.
Here's an example shell.nix
:
let
# Pinned nixpkgs, deterministic. Last updated: 2/12/21.
pkgs = import (fetchTarball("https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/a58a0b5098f0c2a389ee70eb69422a052982d990.tar.gz")) {};
# Rolling updates, not deterministic.
# pkgs = import (fetchTarball("channel:nixpkgs-unstable")) {};
in pkgs.mkShell {
buildInputs = [ pkgs.cargo pkgs.rustc ];
}
Installation via rustup
The rustup tool is maintained by the Rust community and offers and interface to install and switch between Rust toolchains. In this scenario, rustup handles the "package management" of Rust toolchains and places them in $PATH
. Nixpkgs offers rustup via the rustup
derivation. More info on using rustup can be found on their official website: https://rustup.rs/.
If you want to have the most "normal" Rust experience I recommend using rustup with the following example shell.nix:
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
pkgs.mkShell rec {
buildInputs = with pkgs; [
clang
# Replace llvmPackages with llvmPackages_X, where X is the latest LLVM version (at the time of writing, 16)
llvmPackages.bintools
rustup
];
RUSTC_VERSION = pkgs.lib.readFile ./rust-toolchain;
# https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-bindgen#environment-variables
LIBCLANG_PATH = pkgs.lib.makeLibraryPath [ pkgs.llvmPackages_latest.libclang.lib ];
shellHook = ''
export PATH=$PATH:''${CARGO_HOME:-~/.cargo}/bin
export PATH=$PATH:''${RUSTUP_HOME:-~/.rustup}/toolchains/$RUSTC_VERSION-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/bin/
'';
# Add precompiled library to rustc search path
RUSTFLAGS = (builtins.map (a: ''-L ${a}/lib'') [
# add libraries here (e.g. pkgs.libvmi)
]);
# Add glibc, clang, glib and other headers to bindgen search path
BINDGEN_EXTRA_CLANG_ARGS =
# Includes with normal include path
(builtins.map (a: ''-I"${a}/include"'') [
# add dev libraries here (e.g. pkgs.libvmi.dev)
pkgs.glibc.dev
])
# Includes with special directory paths
++ [
''-I"${pkgs.llvmPackages_latest.libclang.lib}/lib/clang/${pkgs.llvmPackages_latest.libclang.version}/include"''
''-I"${pkgs.glib.dev}/include/glib-2.0"''
''-I${pkgs.glib.out}/lib/glib-2.0/include/''
];
}
It's important to have a file named rust-toolchain
lying in the same directory as the shell.nix.
Its purpose is to pin the version of the used Rust compiler.
$ cat rust-toolchain
nightly-2021-09-19
The important part is that this also works with complex setups using bindgen and precompiled C libraries. To add a new C library in the search path of bindgen and rustc edit the variables BINDGEN_EXTRA_CLANG_ARGS
and RUSTFLAGS
Cross-compiling
To Windows via rustup
Unofficial overlays
- https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay (Flake support, Nightly & Stable)
- https://github.com/nix-community/fenix (Flake support, Nightly & Stable)
- https://github.com/mozilla/nixpkgs-mozilla (Flake support, Nightly & Stable)
devenv.sh support
- https://github.com/cachix/devenv/blob/main/examples/rust/devenv.nix and [code]devenv shell[/code]
Rust Nightlies
- Use one of the overlays above,
- Or, use rustup
Developing Rust projects using Nix
The Nixpkgs manual uses buildRustPackage
.
This blog post shows how to do it using dream2nix
. A template repo is available here: https://github.com/srid/rust-nix-template
Using overrideAttrs with Rust Packages
Using overrideArgs with Rust Packages
This is a bit tricky, you can't just use overrideArgs
. Here is one example of how to do it. The trick is to use two nested calls to overrideAttrs
; the outer call overrides the cargoDeps
attribute, the inner call rebuilds the vendored tarball and provides the updated hash:
overlays = [
(final: prev: {
some-nixpkgs-package = prev.some-nixpkgs-package.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: {
cargoDeps = oldAttrs.cargoDeps.overrideAttrs (_: {
# ...
});
});
})
];
Packaging Rust projects with nix
At the time of writing, there are now no less than 8 different solutions for building Rust code with Nix. In the following table they are compared:
Name | Cargo.lock solution | Derivations | Build logic | Supports cross | Notes |
buildRustPackage
|
Checksum | 1 | cargo | Yes | Built into nixpkgs |
crate2nix
|
Codegen (with optional IFD) | Many | buildRustCrate
|
experimental | Spiritual successor to carnix |
naersk
|
Import | 2 | cargo | Yes | Seems to only support building on x86 |
cargo2nix
|
Codegen | Many | cargo + custom | Yes | Defaults to the oxalica Rust overlay but this can be overridden with rustToolchain
|
import-cargo
|
Import | 1 | cargo | Unclear | More of a proof of concept than a full working solution |
crane
|
Import | 2 | cargo | Yes | Inspired by naersk, with better support for composing Cargo invocations as completely separate derivations |
dream2nix
|
Codegen | 1 or 2 | cargo (via buildRustPackage or crane )
|
Yes | A framework for unifying 2nix converters across languages |
Explanation for the columns
- Cargo.lock solution: How does this solution handle reproducibly determining what crates need to be downloaded from the Cargo.lock file? “Checksum” means it requires you to specify the checksum of all the downloaded dependencies. “Import” means it dynamically imports and parses Cargo.lock from a Nix expression, which means Cargo.lock needs to be present in the same repository as the nix expressions (or IFD must be used). “Codegen” means it generates a .nix file from the Cargo.lock, which is then committed to source control.
- Derivations: How many derivations does this solution use to compile Rust code? “1” means the project and all its dependencies are compiled in one derivation. “2” means all dependencies are moved into a separate derivation, so the project can be updated independently, but any change to the set of dependencies rebuilds everything. “Many” means each dependency is built in its own derivation, so changes to dependencies only do the minimal amount of rebuilding necessary (and, ideally, different projects can share dependencies, although I haven’t checked if this works in practice).
- Build logic: How does this solution orchestrate building of crates? “Cargo” means it relies on Cargo;
buildRustCrate
means it uses Nixpkgs’buildRustCrate
; “custom” means it uses its own custom logic.buildRustPackage
means it uses Nixpkgs'buildRustPackage
, which in turn uses Cargo. - Supports cross: Does the solution allow for cross-compilation of crates?
Shell.nix example
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
pkgs.mkShell {
nativeBuildInputs = with pkgs; [ rustc cargo gcc rustfmt clippy ];
# Certain Rust tools won't work without this
# This can also be fixed by using oxalica/rust-overlay and specifying the rust-src extension
# See https://discourse.nixos.org/t/rust-src-not-found-and-other-misadventures-of-developing-rust-on-nixos/11570/3?u=samuela. for more details.
RUST_SRC_PATH = "${pkgs.rust.packages.stable.rustPlatform.rustLibSrc}";
}
This will have the stable Rust compiler + the official formatter and linter inside the ephemeral shell. It'll also set the RUST_SRC_PATH environment variable to point to the right location, which tools, such as rust-analyzer, require to be set.
Custom Rust version
/*
based on
https://discourse.nixos.org/t/how-can-i-set-up-my-rust-programming-environment/4501/9
*/
let
rust_overlay = import (builtins.fetchTarball "https://github.com/oxalica/rust-overlay/archive/master.tar.gz");
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> { overlays = [ rust_overlay ]; };
rustVersion = "latest";
#rustVersion = "1.62.0";
rust = pkgs.rust-bin.stable.${rustVersion}.default.override {
extensions = [
"rust-src" # for rust-analyzer
];
};
in
pkgs.mkShell {
buildInputs = [
rust
] ++ (with pkgs; [
rust-analyzer
pkg-config
# other dependencies
#gtk3
#wrapGAppsHook
]);
RUST_BACKTRACE = 1;
}
VSCode integration
The rust-lang.rust and rust-lang.rust-analyzer VSCode extensions offer Rust support.
You can use the arrterian.nix-env-selector extension to enable your nix-shell inside VSCode and have these settings picked up by other extensions.
Neovim Completion
Racer completion can be configured using the following snippet:
(neovim.override {
configure = {
customRC = ''
if filereadable($HOME . "/.vimrc")
source ~/.vimrc
endif
let $RUST_SRC_PATH = '${stdenv.mkDerivation {
inherit (rustc) src;
inherit (rustc.src) name;
phases = ["unpackPhase" "installPhase"];
installPhase = ''cp -r library $out'';
}}'
'';
packages.nixbundle.start = with vimPlugins; [
nvim-completion-manager
nvim-cm-racer
];
};
})
FAQ
Building Rust crates that require external system libraries
For example, the openssl-sys
crate needs the OpenSSL static libraries and searches for the library path with pkg-config
. That's why you need to have the Nix derivatives openssl
and pkg-config
in order to build that crate. You'll need to start a shell providing these packages:
$ nix-shell -p pkg-config openssl
In some cases (eg here) you may also need
PKG_CONFIG_PATH = "${pkgs.openssl.dev}/lib/pkgconfig";
Similarly, the crate libsqlite3-sys
, e.g. to use and compile the database ORM tool diesel-cli
with Sqlite support, needs
$ nix-shell -p pkg-config sqlite
Otherwise the following error occurs:
error: linking with `cc` failed: exit status: 1
...
= note: /nix/store/kmqs0wll31ylwbqkpmlgbjrn6ny3myik-binutils-2.35.1/bin/ld: cannot find -lsqlite3
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Note that you need to use a nix-shell
environment. Installing the Nix packages openssl
or sqlite
globally under systemPackages
in NixOS or in nix-env
is discouraged and doesn't always work (pkg-config
may not be able to locate the libraries).
Building with a different Rust version than the one in Nixpkgs
The following uses the fenix overlay and makeRustPlatform
to build a crate with Rust nightly:
{
inputs = {
fenix = {
url = "github:nix-community/fenix";
inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};
flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils";
nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
};
outputs = { self, fenix, flake-utils, nixpkgs }:
flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (system:
let pkgs = nixpkgs.legacyPackages.${system}; in
{
defaultPackage = (pkgs.makeRustPlatform {
inherit (fenix.packages.${system}.minimal) cargo rustc;
}).buildRustPackage {
pname = "hello";
version = "0.1.0";
src = ./.;
cargoSha256 = nixpkgs.lib.fakeSha256;
};
});
}
Using LDD instead of LD
If you want to use ldd
, then the correct way to do this is to use pkgs.llvmPackages.bintools
, not pkgs.ldd
. This is because the former uses a wrapper script that correctly sets rpath
. You can find more information about this here.