Command-line Arguments
Here's a list of command-line arguments to rustc
and what they do.
-h
/--help
: get help
This flag will print out help information for rustc
.
--cfg
: configure the compilation environment
This flag can turn on or off various #[cfg]
settings for conditional
compilation.
The value can either be a single identifier or two identifiers separated by =
.
For examples, --cfg 'verbose'
or --cfg 'feature="serde"'
. These correspond
to #[cfg(verbose)]
and #[cfg(feature = "serde")]
respectively.
-L
: add a directory to the library search path
The -L
flag adds a path to search for external crates and libraries.
The kind of search path can optionally be specified with the form -L KIND=PATH
where KIND
may be one of:
dependency
— Only search for transitive dependencies in this directory.crate
— Only search for this crate's direct dependencies in this directory.native
— Only search for native libraries in this directory.framework
— Only search for macOS frameworks in this directory.all
— Search for all library kinds in this directory. This is the default ifKIND
is not specified.
-l
: link the generated crate to a native library
Syntax: -l [KIND[:MODIFIERS]=]NAME[:RENAME]
.
This flag allows you to specify linking to a specific native library when building a crate.
The kind of library can optionally be specified with the form -l KIND=lib
where KIND
may be one of:
dylib
— A native dynamic library.static
— A native static library (such as a.a
archive).framework
— A macOS framework.
If the kind is specified, then linking modifiers can be attached to it.
Modifiers are specified as a comma-delimited string with each modifier prefixed with
either a +
or -
to indicate that the modifier is enabled or disabled, respectively.
Specifying multiple modifiers
arguments in a single link
attribute,
or multiple identical modifiers in the same modifiers
argument is not currently supported.
Example: -l static:+whole-archive=mylib
.
The kind of library and the modifiers can also be specified in a #[link]
attribute. If the kind is not specified in the link
attribute or on the command-line, it will link a dynamic library if available,
otherwise it will use a static library. If the kind is specified on the
command-line, it will override the kind specified in a link
attribute.
The name used in a link
attribute may be overridden using the form -l ATTR_NAME:LINK_NAME
where ATTR_NAME
is the name in the link
attribute,
and LINK_NAME
is the name of the actual library that will be linked.
Linking modifiers: whole-archive
This modifier is only compatible with the static
linking kind.
Using any other kind will result in a compiler error.
+whole-archive
means that the static library is linked as a whole archive
without throwing any object files away.
This modifier translates to --whole-archive
for ld
-like linkers,
to /WHOLEARCHIVE
for link.exe
, and to -force_load
for ld64
.
The modifier does nothing for linkers that don't support it.
The default for this modifier is -whole-archive
.
NOTE: The default may currently be different in some cases for backward compatibility,
but it is not guaranteed. If you need whole archive semantics use +whole-archive
explicitly.
Linking modifiers: bundle
This modifier is only compatible with the static
linking kind.
Using any other kind will result in a compiler error.
When building a rlib or staticlib +bundle
means that the native static library
will be packed into the rlib or staticlib archive, and then retrieved from there
during linking of the final binary.
When building a rlib -bundle
means that the native static library is registered as a dependency
of that rlib "by name", and object files from it are included only during linking of the final
binary, the file search by that name is also performed during final linking.
When building a staticlib -bundle
means that the native static library is simply not included
into the archive and some higher level build system will need to add it later during linking of
the final binary.
This modifier has no effect when building other targets like executables or dynamic libraries.
The default for this modifier is +bundle
.
Linking modifiers: verbatim
This modifier is compatible with all linking kinds.
+verbatim
means that rustc itself won't add any target-specified library prefixes or suffixes
(like lib
or .a
) to the library name, and will try its best to ask for the same thing from the
linker.
For ld
-like linkers supporting GNU extensions rustc will use the -l:filename
syntax (note the
colon) when passing the library, so the linker won't add any prefixes or suffixes to it.
See -l namespec
in ld documentation for
more details.
For linkers not supporting any verbatim modifiers (e.g. link.exe
or ld64
) the library name will
be passed as is. So the most reliable cross-platform use scenarios for this option are when no
linker is involved, for example bundling native libraries into rlibs.
-verbatim
means that rustc will either add a target-specific prefix and suffix to the library
name before passing it to linker, or won't prevent linker from implicitly adding it.
In case of raw-dylib
kind in particular .dll
will be added to the library name on Windows.
The default for this modifier is -verbatim
.
NOTE: Even with +verbatim
and -l:filename
syntax ld
-like linkers do not typically support
passing absolute paths to libraries. Usually such paths need to be passed as input files without
using any options like -l
, e.g. ld /my/absolute/path
.
-Clink-arg=/my/absolute/path
can be used for doing this from stable rustc
.
--crate-type
: a list of types of crates for the compiler to emit
This instructs rustc
on which crate type to build. This flag accepts a
comma-separated list of values, and may be specified multiple times. The valid
crate types are:
lib
— Generates a library kind preferred by the compiler, currently defaults torlib
.rlib
— A Rust static library.staticlib
— A native static library.dylib
— A Rust dynamic library.cdylib
— A native dynamic library.bin
— A runnable executable program.proc-macro
— Generates a format suitable for a procedural macro library that may be loaded by the compiler.
The crate type may be specified with the crate_type
attribute.
The --crate-type
command-line value will override the crate_type
attribute.
More details may be found in the linkage chapter of the reference.
--crate-name
: specify the name of the crate being built
This informs rustc
of the name of your crate.
--edition
: specify the edition to use
This flag takes a value of 2015
, 2018
or 2021
. The default is 2015
. More
information about editions may be found in the edition guide.
--emit
: specifies the types of output files to generate
This flag controls the types of output files generated by the compiler. It accepts a comma-separated list of values, and may be specified multiple times. The valid emit kinds are:
asm
— Generates a file with the crate's assembly code. The default output filename isCRATE_NAME.s
.dep-info
— Generates a file with Makefile syntax that indicates all the source files that were loaded to generate the crate. The default output filename isCRATE_NAME.d
.link
— Generates the crates specified by--crate-type
. The default output filenames depend on the crate type and platform. This is the default if--emit
is not specified.llvm-bc
— Generates a binary file containing the LLVM bitcode. The default output filename isCRATE_NAME.bc
.llvm-ir
— Generates a file containing LLVM IR. The default output filename isCRATE_NAME.ll
.metadata
— Generates a file containing metadata about the crate. The default output filename islibCRATE_NAME.rmeta
.mir
— Generates a file containing rustc's mid-level intermediate representation. The default output filename isCRATE_NAME.mir
.obj
— Generates a native object file. The default output filename isCRATE_NAME.o
.
The output filename can be set with the -o
flag. A
suffix may be added to the filename with the -C extra-filename
flag. The files are written to the
current directory unless the --out-dir
flag is used. Each
emission type may also specify the output filename with the form KIND=PATH
,
which takes precedence over the -o
flag.
--print
: print compiler information
This flag prints out various information about the compiler. This flag may be
specified multiple times, and the information is printed in the order the
flags are specified. Specifying a --print
flag will usually disable the
--emit
step and will only print the requested information.
The valid types of print values are:
crate-name
— The name of the crate.file-names
— The names of the files created by thelink
emit kind.sysroot
— Path to the sysroot.target-libdir
- Path to the target libdir.cfg
— List of cfg values. See conditional compilation for more information about cfg values.target-list
— List of known targets. The target may be selected with the--target
flag.target-cpus
— List of available CPU values for the current target. The target CPU may be selected with the-C target-cpu=val
flag.target-features
— List of available target features for the current target. Target features may be enabled with the-C target-feature=val
flag. This flag is unsafe. See known issues for more details.relocation-models
— List of relocation models. Relocation models may be selected with the-C relocation-model=val
flag.code-models
— List of code models. Code models may be selected with the-C code-model=val
flag.tls-models
— List of Thread Local Storage models supported. The model may be selected with the-Z tls-model=val
flag.native-static-libs
— This may be used when creating astaticlib
crate type. If this is the only flag, it will perform a full compilation and include a diagnostic note that indicates the linker flags to use when linking the resulting static library. The note starts with the textnative-static-libs:
to make it easier to fetch the output.link-args
— This flag does not disable the--emit
step. When linking, this flag causesrustc
to print the full linker invocation in a human-readable form. This can be useful when debugging linker options. The exact format of this debugging output is not a stable guarantee, other than that it will include the linker executable and the text of each command-line argument passed to the linker.deployment-target
- The currently selected deployment target (or minimum OS version) for the selected Apple platform target. This value can be used or passed along to other components alongside a Rust build that need this information, such as C compilers. This returns rustc's minimum supported deployment target if no*_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET
variable is present in the environment, or otherwise returns the variable's parsed value.
-g
: include debug information
A synonym for -C debuginfo=2
.
-O
: optimize your code
A synonym for -C opt-level=2
.
-o
: filename of the output
This flag controls the output filename.
--out-dir
: directory to write the output in
The outputted crate will be written to this directory. This flag is ignored if
the -o
flag is used.
--explain
: provide a detailed explanation of an error message
Each error of rustc
's comes with an error code; this will print
out a longer explanation of a given error.
--test
: build a test harness
When compiling this crate, rustc
will ignore your main
function
and instead produce a test harness. See the Tests chapter
for more information about tests.
--target
: select a target triple to build
This controls which target to produce.
-W
: set lint warnings
This flag will set which lints should be set to the warn level.
Note: The order of these lint level arguments is taken into account, see lint level via compiler flag for more information.
--force-warn
: force a lint to warn
This flag sets the given lint to the forced warn level and the level cannot be overridden, even ignoring the lint caps.
-A
: set lint allowed
This flag will set which lints should be set to the allow level.
Note: The order of these lint level arguments is taken into account, see lint level via compiler flag for more information.
-D
: set lint denied
This flag will set which lints should be set to the deny level.
Note: The order of these lint level arguments is taken into account, see lint level via compiler flag for more information.
-F
: set lint forbidden
This flag will set which lints should be set to the forbid level.
Note: The order of these lint level arguments is taken into account, see lint level via compiler flag for more information.
-Z
: set unstable options
This flag will allow you to set unstable options of rustc. In order to set multiple options,
the -Z flag can be used multiple times. For example: rustc -Z verbose -Z time-passes
.
Specifying options with -Z is only available on nightly. To view all available options
run: rustc -Z help
, or see The Unstable Book.
--cap-lints
: set the most restrictive lint level
This flag lets you 'cap' lints, for more, see here.
-C
/--codegen
: code generation options
This flag will allow you to set codegen options.
-V
/--version
: print a version
This flag will print out rustc
's version.
-v
/--verbose
: use verbose output
This flag, when combined with other flags, makes them produce extra output.
--extern
: specify where an external library is located
This flag allows you to pass the name and location for an external crate of a
direct dependency. Indirect dependencies (dependencies of dependencies) are
located using the -L
flag. The given crate name is
added to the extern prelude, similar to specifying extern crate
within the
root module. The given crate name does not need to match the name
the library was built with.
Specifying --extern
has one behavior difference from extern crate
:
--extern
merely makes the crate a candidate for being linked; it does not
actually link it unless it's actively used. In rare occasions you may wish
to ensure a crate is linked even if you don't actively use it from your
code: for example, if it changes the global allocator or if it contains
#[no_mangle]
symbols for use by other programming languages. In such
cases you'll need to use extern crate
.
This flag may be specified multiple times. This flag takes an argument with either of the following formats:
CRATENAME=PATH
— Indicates the given crate is found at the given path.CRATENAME
— Indicates the given crate may be found in the search path, such as within the sysroot or via the-L
flag.
The same crate name may be specified multiple times for different crate types.
If both an rlib
and dylib
are found, an internal algorithm is used to
decide which to use for linking. The -C prefer-dynamic
flag may be used to influence which is used.
If the same crate name is specified with and without a path, the one with the path is used and the pathless flag has no effect.
--sysroot
: Override the system root
The "sysroot" is where rustc
looks for the crates that come with the Rust
distribution; this flag allows that to be overridden.
--error-format
: control how errors are produced
This flag lets you control the format of messages. Messages are printed to stderr. The valid options are:
human
— Human-readable output. This is the default.json
— Structured JSON output. See the JSON chapter for more detail.short
— Short, one-line messages.
--color
: configure coloring of output
This flag lets you control color settings of the output. The valid options are:
auto
— Use colors if output goes to a tty. This is the default.always
— Always use colors.never
— Never colorize output.
--diagnostic-width
: specify the terminal width for diagnostics
This flag takes a number that specifies the width of the terminal in characters. Formatting of diagnostics will take the width into consideration to make them better fit on the screen.
--remap-path-prefix
: remap source names in output
Remap source path prefixes in all output, including compiler diagnostics,
debug information, macro expansions, etc. It takes a value of the form
FROM=TO
where a path prefix equal to FROM
is rewritten to the value TO
.
The FROM
may itself contain an =
symbol, but the TO
value may not. This
flag may be specified multiple times.
This is useful for normalizing build products, for example by removing the
current directory out of pathnames emitted into the object files. The
replacement is purely textual, with no consideration of the current system's
pathname syntax. For example --remap-path-prefix foo=bar
will match
foo/lib.rs
but not ./foo/lib.rs
.
When multiple remappings are given and several of them match, the last matching one is applied.
--json
: configure json messages printed by the compiler
When the --error-format=json
option is passed to
rustc then all of the compiler's diagnostic output will be emitted in the form
of JSON blobs. The --json
argument can be used in conjunction with
--error-format=json
to configure what the JSON blobs contain as well as
which ones are emitted.
With --error-format=json
the compiler will always emit any compiler errors as
a JSON blob, but the following options are also available to the --json
flag
to customize the output:
-
diagnostic-short
- json blobs for diagnostic messages should use the "short" rendering instead of the normal "human" default. This means that the output of--error-format=short
will be embedded into the JSON diagnostics instead of the default--error-format=human
. -
diagnostic-rendered-ansi
- by default JSON blobs in theirrendered
field will contain a plain text rendering of the diagnostic. This option instead indicates that the diagnostic should have embedded ANSI color codes intended to be used to colorize the message in the manner rustc typically already does for terminal outputs. Note that this is usefully combined with crates likefwdansi
to translate these ANSI codes on Windows to console commands orstrip-ansi-escapes
if you'd like to optionally remove the ansi colors afterwards. -
artifacts
- this instructs rustc to emit a JSON blob for each artifact that is emitted. An artifact corresponds to a request from the--emit
CLI argument, and as soon as the artifact is available on the filesystem a notification will be emitted. -
future-incompat
- includes a JSON message that contains a report if the crate contains any code that may fail to compile in the future.
Note that it is invalid to combine the --json
argument with the
--color
argument, and it is required to combine --json
with --error-format=json
.
See the JSON chapter for more detail.
@path
: load command-line flags from a path
If you specify @path
on the command-line, then it will open path
and read
command line options from it. These options are one per line; a blank line indicates
an empty option. The file can use Unix or Windows style line endings, and must be
encoded as UTF-8.