compiler-dev-guide
Clear Crab Compiler Developer Guide
Science Score: 44.0%
This score indicates how likely this project is to be science-related based on various indicators:
-
✓CITATION.cff file
Found CITATION.cff file -
✓codemeta.json file
Found codemeta.json file -
✓.zenodo.json file
Found .zenodo.json file -
○DOI references
-
○Academic publication links
-
○Academic email domains
-
○Institutional organization owner
-
○JOSS paper metadata
-
○Scientific vocabulary similarity
Low similarity (15.0%) to scientific vocabulary
Repository
Clear Crab Compiler Developer Guide
Basic Info
Statistics
- Stars: 0
- Watchers: 0
- Forks: 0
- Open Issues: 0
- Releases: 0
Metadata Files
README.md
This is a collaborative effort to build a guide that explains how rustc works. The aim of the guide is to help new contributors get oriented to rustc, as well as to help more experienced folks in figuring out some new part of the compiler that they haven't worked on before.
You can read the latest version of the guide here.
You may also find the rustdocs for the compiler itself useful. Note that these are not intended as a guide; it's recommended that you search for the docs you're looking for instead of reading them top to bottom.
For documentation on developing the standard library, see
std-dev-guide.
Contributing to the guide
The guide is useful today, but it has a lot of work still to go.
If you'd like to help improve the guide, we'd love to have you! You can find plenty of issues on the issue tracker. Just post a comment on the issue you would like to work on to make sure that we don't accidentally duplicate work. If you think something is missing, please open an issue about it!
In general, if you don't know how the compiler works, that is not a problem! In that case, what we will do is to schedule a bit of time for you to talk with someone who does know the code, or who wants to pair with you and figure it out. Then you can work on writing up what you learned.
In general, when writing about a particular part of the compiler's code, we recommend that you link to the relevant parts of the rustc rustdocs.
Build Instructions
To build a local static HTML site, install mdbook with:
```
cargo install mdbook mdbook-linkcheck2 mdbook-toc mdbook-mermaid ```
and execute the following command in the root of the repository:
```
mdbook build --open ```
The build files are found in the book/html directory.
Link Validations
We use mdbook-linkcheck2 to validate URLs included in our documentation. Link
checking is not run by default locally, though it is in CI. To enable it
locally, set the environment variable ENABLE_LINKCHECK=1 like in the
following example.
console
$ ENABLE_LINKCHECK=1 mdbook serve
Table of Contents
We use mdbook-toc to auto-generate TOCs for long sections. You can invoke the preprocessor by
including the <!-- toc --> marker at the place where you want the TOC.
Synchronizing josh subtree with rustc
This repository is linked to rust-lang/rust as a josh subtree. You can use the following commands to synchronize the subtree in both directions.
Pull changes from rust-lang/rust into this repository
1) Checkout a new branch that will be used to create a PR into rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide
2) Run the pull command
$ cargo run --manifest-path josh-sync/Cargo.toml rustc-pull
3) Push the branch to your fork and create a PR into rustc-dev-guide
Push changes from this repository into rust-lang/rust
1) Run the push command to create a branch named <branch-name> in a rustc fork under the <gh-username> account
$ cargo run --manifest-path josh-sync/Cargo.toml rustc-push <branch-name> <gh-username>
2) Create a PR from <branch-name> into rust-lang/rust
Citation (CITATION.cff)
cff-version: 1.2.0 message: If you use this guide, please cite it using these metadata. title: Rust Compiler Development Guide (rustc-dev-guide) abstract: A guide to developing the Rust compiler (rustc) authors: - name: "The Rust Project Developers" date-released: "2018-01-16" license: "MIT OR Apache-2.0" repository-code: "https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide"