Build rules
Rust code is usually built using cargo
. Chromium builds with gn
and ninja
for efficiency — its static rules allow maximum parallelism. Rust is no exception.
Adding Rust code to Chromium
In some existing Chromium BUILD.gn
file, declare a rust_static_library
:
import("//build/rust/rust_static_library.gni")
rust_static_library("my_rust_lib") {
crate_root = "lib.rs"
sources = [ "lib.rs" ]
}
You can also add deps
on other Rust targets. Later we’ll use this to
depend upon third party code.
You must specify both the crate root, and a full list of sources.
The crate_root
is the file given to the Rust compiler representing the root
file of the compilation unit — typically lib.rs
. sources
is a complete
list of all source files which ninja
needs in order to determine when rebuilds
are necessary.
(There’s no such thing as a Rust source_set
, because in Rust, an entire
crate is a compilation unit. A static_library
is the smallest unit.)
Students might be wondering why we need a gn template, rather than using gn’s built-in support for Rust static libraries. The answer is that this template provides support for CXX interop, Rust features, and unit tests, some of which we’ll use later.