Awesome
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-linkcheck 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-linkcheck
to validate URLs included in our documentation.
linkcheck
will be run automatically when you build with the instructions in the section above.
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.
How to fix toolstate failures
NOTE: Currently, we do not track the rustc-dev-guide toolstate due to spurious failures, but we leave these instructions for when we do it again in the future.
-
You will get a ping from the toolstate commit. e.g. https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/rust-toolstate/commit/8ffa0e4c30ac9ba8546b7046e5c4ccc2b96ebdd4
-
The commit contains a link to the PR that caused the breakage. e.g. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64321
-
If you go to that PR's thread, there is a post from bors with a link to the CI status: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64321#issuecomment-529763807
-
Follow the check-actions link to get to the Actions page for that build
-
There will be approximately 1 billion different jobs for the build. They are for different configurations and platforms. The rustc-dev-guide build only runs on the Linux x86_64-gnu-tools job. So click on that job in the list, which is about 60% down in the list.
-
Click the Run build step in the job to get the console log for the step.
-
Click on the log and Ctrl-f to get a search box in the log
-
Search for rustc-dev-guide. This gets you to the place where the links are checked. It is usually ~11K lines into the log.
-
Look at the links in the log near that point in the log
-
Fix those links in the rustc-dev-guide (by making a PR in the rustc-dev-guide repo)
-
Make a PR on the rust-lang/rust repo to update the rustc-dev-guide git submodule in src/docs/rustc-dev-guide. To make a PR, the following steps are useful.
# Assuming you already cloned the rust-lang/rust repo and you're in the correct directory
git submodule update --remote src/doc/rustc-dev-guide
git add -u
git commit -m "Update rustc-dev-guide"
# Note that you can use -i, which is short for --incremental, in the following command
./x test --incremental src/doc/rustc-dev-guide # This is optional and should succeed anyway
# Open a PR in rust-lang/rust
- Wait for PR to merge
VoilĂ !