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dist (formerly known as cargo-dist)

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crates.io docs Rust CI

dist distributes your binaries

The TL;DR is that with dist set up, just doing this:

git commit -am "release: 0.2.0"
git tag "v0.2.0"
git push
git push --tags

Will make this Github Release:

Or if you're using oranda, you'll get this website.

Plan, Build, Host, Publish, Announce

Cutting releases of your apps and distributing binaries for them has a lot of steps, and cargo-dist is quickly growing to try to cover them all!

To accomplish this, dist functionality can be broken up into two parts:

The build functionality can be used on its own if you just want some tarballs and installers, but everything really comes together when you use the distribution functionality too.

Building

As a build tool, dist can do the following:

That's a short list because "we make installers" is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Each installer could be (and sometimes is!) an entire standalone tool with its own documentation and ecosystem.

Distributing

As a distribution tool, dist gets to flex its biggest superpower: it generates its own CI scripts. For instance, enabling GitHub CI with dist init will generate release.yml, which implements the full pipeline of plan, build, host, publish, announce:

Read The Book!

We've got all the docs you need over at the dist book!

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Contributing

Updating Snapshots

dist's tests rely on cargo-insta for snapshot testing various outputs. This allows us to both catch regressions and also more easily review UI/output changes. If a snapshot test fails, you will need to use the cargo insta CLI tool to update them:

cargo install cargo-insta

Once installed, you can review and accept the changes with:

cargo insta review

If you know you like the changes, just use cargo insta accept to auto-apply all changes.

(If you introduced brand-new snapshot tests you will also have to git add them!)

NOTE: when it succeeds, cargo-dist-schema's emit test will actually commit the results back to disk to cargo-dist-schema/cargo-dist-schema.json as a side-effect. This is a janky hack to make sure we have that stored and up to date at all times (the test also uses an insta snapshot but insta snapshots include an extra gunk header so it's not something we'd want to link end users). The file isn't even used for anything yet, I just want it to Exist because it seems useful and important. In the future we might properly host it and have our outputs link it via a $schema field.

Cutting Releases

dist is self-hosting, so you just need to push a git-tag with the right format to "do" a release. Of course there's lots of other tedious tasks that come with updating a release, and we use cargo-release to handle all those mechanical details of updating versions/headings/tags. See these sections of the docs for the release workflow we use.

TL;DR:

Note that we've wired up dist and cargo-release to understand the "Unreleased" heading so you should never edit that name, the tools will update it as needed.

If that releases succeeds, we recommend updating the bootstrap version of dist as a follow up:

Note that as a consequence of the way we self-host, dist's published artifacts will always be built/generated by a previous version of itself. This can be problematic if you make breaking changes to cargo-dist-schema's format... so don't! Many things in the schema are intentionally optional to enable forward and backward compatibility, so this should hopefully work well!

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