forked from rust-lang/rust
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
config.toml.example
587 lines (470 loc) · 23.4 KB
/
config.toml.example
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
# Sample TOML configuration file for building Rust.
#
# To configure rustbuild, copy this file to the directory from which you will be
# running the build, and name it config.toml.
#
# All options are commented out by default in this file, and they're commented
# out with their default values. The build system by default looks for
# `config.toml` in the current directory of a build for build configuration, but
# a custom configuration file can also be specified with `--config` to the build
# system.
# =============================================================================
# Tweaking how LLVM is compiled
# =============================================================================
[llvm]
# Indicates whether LLVM rebuild should be skipped when running bootstrap. If
# this is `false` then the compiler's LLVM will be rebuilt whenever the built
# version doesn't have the correct hash. If it is `true` then LLVM will never
# be rebuilt. The default value is `false`.
#skip-rebuild = false
# Indicates whether the LLVM build is a Release or Debug build
#optimize = true
# Indicates whether LLVM should be built with ThinLTO. Note that this will
# only succeed if you use clang, lld, llvm-ar, and llvm-ranlib in your C/C++
# toolchain (see the `cc`, `cxx`, `linker`, `ar`, and `ranlib` options below).
# More info at: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ThinLTO.html#clang-bootstrap
#thin-lto = false
# Indicates whether an LLVM Release build should include debug info
#release-debuginfo = false
# Indicates whether the LLVM assertions are enabled or not
#assertions = false
# Indicates whether ccache is used when building LLVM
#ccache = false
# or alternatively ...
#ccache = "/path/to/ccache"
# If an external LLVM root is specified, we automatically check the version by
# default to make sure it's within the range that we're expecting, but setting
# this flag will indicate that this version check should not be done.
#version-check = true
# Link libstdc++ statically into the librustc_llvm instead of relying on a
# dynamic version to be available.
#static-libstdcpp = false
# Tell the LLVM build system to use Ninja instead of the platform default for
# the generated build system. This can sometimes be faster than make, for
# example.
#ninja = false
# LLVM targets to build support for.
# Note: this is NOT related to Rust compilation targets. However, as Rust is
# dependent on LLVM for code generation, turning targets off here WILL lead to
# the resulting rustc being unable to compile for the disabled architectures.
# Also worth pointing out is that, in case support for new targets are added to
# LLVM, enabling them here doesn't mean Rust is automatically gaining said
# support. You'll need to write a target specification at least, and most
# likely, teach rustc about the C ABI of the target. Get in touch with the
# Rust team and file an issue if you need assistance in porting!
#targets = "AArch64;ARM;Hexagon;MSP430;Mips;NVPTX;PowerPC;RISCV;Sparc;SystemZ;WebAssembly;X86"
# LLVM experimental targets to build support for. These targets are specified in
# the same format as above, but since these targets are experimental, they are
# not built by default and the experimental Rust compilation targets that depend
# on them will not work unless the user opts in to building them.
#experimental-targets = "AVR"
# Cap the number of parallel linker invocations when compiling LLVM.
# This can be useful when building LLVM with debug info, which significantly
# increases the size of binaries and consequently the memory required by
# each linker process.
# If absent or 0, linker invocations are treated like any other job and
# controlled by rustbuild's -j parameter.
#link-jobs = 0
# When invoking `llvm-config` this configures whether the `--shared` argument is
# passed to prefer linking to shared libraries.
#link-shared = false
# When building llvm, this configures what is being appended to the version.
# The default is "-rust-$version-$channel", except for dev channel where rustc
# version number is omitted. To use LLVM version as is, provide an empty string.
#version-suffix = "-rust-dev"
# On MSVC you can compile LLVM with clang-cl, but the test suite doesn't pass
# with clang-cl, so this is special in that it only compiles LLVM with clang-cl
#clang-cl = '/path/to/clang-cl.exe'
# Pass extra compiler and linker flags to the LLVM CMake build.
#cflags = "-fextra-flag"
#cxxflags = "-fextra-flag"
#ldflags = "-Wl,extra-flag"
# Use libc++ when building LLVM instead of libstdc++. This is the default on
# platforms already use libc++ as the default C++ library, but this option
# allows you to use libc++ even on platforms when it's not. You need to ensure
# that your host compiler ships with libc++.
#use-libcxx = true
# The value specified here will be passed as `-DLLVM_USE_LINKER` to CMake.
#use-linker = "lld"
# Whether or not to specify `-DLLVM_TEMPORARILY_ALLOW_OLD_TOOLCHAIN=YES`
#allow-old-toolchain = false
# =============================================================================
# General build configuration options
# =============================================================================
[build]
# Build triple for the original snapshot compiler. This must be a compiler that
# nightlies are already produced for. The current platform must be able to run
# binaries of this build triple and the nightly will be used to bootstrap the
# first compiler.
#
# Defaults to host platform
#build = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
# In addition to the build triple, other triples to produce full compiler
# toolchains for. Each of these triples will be bootstrapped from the build
# triple and then will continue to bootstrap themselves. This platform must
# currently be able to run all of the triples provided here.
#
# Defaults to just the build triple
#host = ["x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"]
# In addition to all host triples, other triples to produce the standard library
# for. Each host triple will be used to produce a copy of the standard library
# for each target triple.
#
# Defaults to just the build triple
#target = ["x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"]
# Use this directory to store build artifacts.
# You can use "$ROOT" to indicate the root of the git repository.
#build-dir = "build"
# Instead of downloading the src/stage0.txt version of Cargo specified, use
# this Cargo binary instead to build all Rust code
#cargo = "/path/to/bin/cargo"
# Instead of downloading the src/stage0.txt version of the compiler
# specified, use this rustc binary instead as the stage0 snapshot compiler.
#rustc = "/path/to/bin/rustc"
# Instead of download the src/stage0.txt version of rustfmt specified,
# use this rustfmt binary instead as the stage0 snapshot rustfmt.
#rustfmt = "/path/to/bin/rustfmt"
# Flag to specify whether any documentation is built. If false, rustdoc and
# friends will still be compiled but they will not be used to generate any
# documentation.
#docs = true
# Indicate whether the compiler should be documented in addition to the standard
# library and facade crates.
#compiler-docs = false
# Indicate whether git submodules are managed and updated automatically.
#submodules = true
# Update git submodules only when the checked out commit in the submodules differs
# from what is committed in the main rustc repo.
#fast-submodules = true
# The path to (or name of) the GDB executable to use. This is only used for
# executing the debuginfo test suite.
#gdb = "gdb"
# The node.js executable to use. Note that this is only used for the emscripten
# target when running tests, otherwise this can be omitted.
#nodejs = "node"
# Python interpreter to use for various tasks throughout the build, notably
# rustdoc tests, the lldb python interpreter, and some dist bits and pieces.
#
# Defaults to the Python interpreter used to execute x.py
#python = "python"
# Force Cargo to check that Cargo.lock describes the precise dependency
# set that all the Cargo.toml files create, instead of updating it.
#locked-deps = false
# Indicate whether the vendored sources are used for Rust dependencies or not
#vendor = false
# Typically the build system will build the Rust compiler twice. The second
# compiler, however, will simply use its own libraries to link against. If you
# would rather to perform a full bootstrap, compiling the compiler three times,
# then you can set this option to true. You shouldn't ever need to set this
# option to true.
#full-bootstrap = false
# Enable a build of the extended Rust tool set which is not only the compiler
# but also tools such as Cargo. This will also produce "combined installers"
# which are used to install Rust and Cargo together. This is disabled by
# default. The `tools` option (immediately below) specifies which tools should
# be built if `extended = true`.
#extended = false
# Installs chosen set of extended tools if `extended = true`. By default builds all.
# If chosen tool failed to build the installation fails. If `extended = false`, this
# option is ignored.
#tools = ["cargo", "rls", "clippy", "rustfmt", "analysis", "src"]
# Verbosity level: 0 == not verbose, 1 == verbose, 2 == very verbose
#verbose = 0
# Build the sanitizer runtimes
#sanitizers = false
# Build the profiler runtime (required when compiling with options that depend
# on this runtime, such as `-C profile-generate` or `-Z instrument-coverage`).
#profiler = false
# Indicates whether the native libraries linked into Cargo will be statically
# linked or not.
#cargo-native-static = false
# Run the build with low priority, by setting the process group's "nice" value
# to +10 on Unix platforms, and by using a "low priority" job object on Windows.
#low-priority = false
# Arguments passed to the `./configure` script, used during distcheck. You
# probably won't fill this in but rather it's filled in by the `./configure`
# script.
#configure-args = []
# Indicates that a local rebuild is occurring instead of a full bootstrap,
# essentially skipping stage0 as the local compiler is recompiling itself again.
#local-rebuild = false
# Print out how long each rustbuild step took (mostly intended for CI and
# tracking over time)
#print-step-timings = false
# =============================================================================
# General install configuration options
# =============================================================================
[install]
# Instead of installing to /usr/local, install to this path instead.
#prefix = "/usr/local"
# Where to install system configuration files
# If this is a relative path, it will get installed in `prefix` above
#sysconfdir = "/etc"
# Where to install documentation in `prefix` above
#docdir = "share/doc/rust"
# Where to install binaries in `prefix` above
#bindir = "bin"
# Where to install libraries in `prefix` above
#libdir = "lib"
# Where to install man pages in `prefix` above
#mandir = "share/man"
# Where to install data in `prefix` above (currently unused)
#datadir = "share"
# Where to install additional info in `prefix` above (currently unused)
#infodir = "share/info"
# Where to install local state (currently unused)
# If this is a relative path, it will get installed in `prefix` above
#localstatedir = "/var/lib"
# =============================================================================
# Options for compiling Rust code itself
# =============================================================================
[rust]
# Whether or not to optimize the compiler and standard library.
# WARNING: Building with optimize = false is NOT SUPPORTED. Due to bootstrapping,
# building without optimizations takes much longer than optimizing. Further, some platforms
# fail to build without this optimization (c.f. #65352).
#optimize = true
# Indicates that the build should be configured for debugging Rust. A
# `debug`-enabled compiler and standard library will be somewhat
# slower (due to e.g. checking of debug assertions) but should remain
# usable.
#
# Note: If this value is set to `true`, it will affect a number of
# configuration options below as well, if they have been left
# unconfigured in this file.
#
# Note: changes to the `debug` setting do *not* affect `optimize`
# above. In theory, a "maximally debuggable" environment would
# set `optimize` to `false` above to assist the introspection
# facilities of debuggers like lldb and gdb. To recreate such an
# environment, explicitly set `optimize` to `false` and `debug`
# to `true`. In practice, everyone leaves `optimize` set to
# `true`, because an unoptimized rustc with debugging
# enabled becomes *unusably slow* (e.g. rust-lang/rust#24840
# reported a 25x slowdown) and bootstrapping the supposed
# "maximally debuggable" environment (notably libstd) takes
# hours to build.
#
#debug = false
# Number of codegen units to use for each compiler invocation. A value of 0
# means "the number of cores on this machine", and 1+ is passed through to the
# compiler.
#codegen-units = 1
# Sets the number of codegen units to build the standard library with,
# regardless of what the codegen-unit setting for the rest of the compiler is.
#codegen-units-std = 1
# Whether or not debug assertions are enabled for the compiler and standard
# library. Debug assertions control the maximum log level used by rustc. When
# enabled calls to `trace!` and `debug!` macros are preserved in the compiled
# binary, otherwise they are omitted.
#
# Defaults to rust.debug value
#debug-assertions = false
# Whether or not debug assertions are enabled for the standard library.
# Overrides the `debug-assertions` option, if defined.
#
# Defaults to rust.debug-assertions value
#debug-assertions-std = false
# Debuginfo level for most of Rust code, corresponds to the `-C debuginfo=N` option of `rustc`.
# `0` - no debug info
# `1` - line tables only - sufficient to generate backtraces that include line
# information and inlined functions, set breakpoints at source code
# locations, and step through execution in a debugger.
# `2` - full debug info with variable and type information
# Can be overridden for specific subsets of Rust code (rustc, std or tools).
# Debuginfo for tests run with compiletest is not controlled by this option
# and needs to be enabled separately with `debuginfo-level-tests`.
#
# Note that debuginfo-level = 2 generates several gigabytes of debuginfo
# and will slow down the linking process significantly.
#
# Defaults to 1 if debug is true
#debuginfo-level = 0
# Debuginfo level for the compiler.
#
# Defaults to rust.debuginfo-level value
#debuginfo-level-rustc = 0
# Debuginfo level for the standard library.
#
# Defaults to rust.debuginfo-level value
#debuginfo-level-std = 0
# Debuginfo level for the tools.
#
# Defaults to rust.debuginfo-level value
#debuginfo-level-tools = 0
# Debuginfo level for the test suites run with compiletest.
# FIXME(#61117): Some tests fail when this option is enabled.
#debuginfo-level-tests = 0
# Whether or not `panic!`s generate backtraces (RUST_BACKTRACE)
#backtrace = true
# Whether to always use incremental compilation when building rustc
#incremental = false
# Build a multi-threaded rustc
#parallel-compiler = false
# The default linker that will be hard-coded into the generated compiler for
# targets that don't specify linker explicitly in their target specifications.
# Note that this is not the linker used to link said compiler.
#default-linker = "cc"
# The "channel" for the Rust build to produce. The stable/beta channels only
# allow using stable features, whereas the nightly and dev channels allow using
# nightly features
#channel = "dev"
# The root location of the musl installation directory.
#musl-root = "..."
# By default the `rustc` executable is built with `-Wl,-rpath` flags on Unix
# platforms to ensure that the compiler is usable by default from the build
# directory (as it links to a number of dynamic libraries). This may not be
# desired in distributions, for example.
#rpath = true
# Emits extra output from tests so test failures are debuggable just from logfiles.
#verbose-tests = false
# Flag indicating whether tests are compiled with optimizations (the -O flag).
#optimize-tests = true
# Flag indicating whether codegen tests will be run or not. If you get an error
# saying that the FileCheck executable is missing, you may want to disable this.
# Also see the target's llvm-filecheck option.
#codegen-tests = true
# Flag indicating whether git info will be retrieved from .git automatically.
# Having the git information can cause a lot of rebuilds during development.
# Note: If this attribute is not explicitly set (e.g. if left commented out) it
# will default to true if channel = "dev", but will default to false otherwise.
#ignore-git = true
# When creating source tarballs whether or not to create a source tarball.
#dist-src = false
# After building or testing extended tools (e.g. clippy and rustfmt), append the
# result (broken, compiling, testing) into this JSON file.
#save-toolstates = "/path/to/toolstates.json"
# This is an array of the codegen backends that will be compiled for the rustc
# that's being compiled. The default is to only build the LLVM codegen backend,
# and currently the only standard option supported is `"llvm"`
#codegen-backends = ["llvm"]
# Indicates whether LLD will be compiled and made available in the sysroot for
# rustc to execute.
#lld = false
# Indicates whether LLD will be used to link Rust crates during bootstrap on
# supported platforms. The LLD from the bootstrap distribution will be used
# and not the LLD compiled during the bootstrap.
#
# LLD will not be used if we're cross linking or running tests.
#
# Explicitly setting the linker for a target will override this option when targeting MSVC.
#use-lld = false
# Indicates whether some LLVM tools, like llvm-objdump, will be made available in the
# sysroot.
#llvm-tools = false
# Whether to deny warnings in crates
#deny-warnings = true
# Print backtrace on internal compiler errors during bootstrap
#backtrace-on-ice = false
# Whether to verify generated LLVM IR
#verify-llvm-ir = false
# Compile the compiler with a non-default ThinLTO import limit. This import
# limit controls the maximum size of functions imported by ThinLTO. Decreasing
# will make code compile faster at the expense of lower runtime performance.
# If `incremental` is set to true above, the import limit will default to 10
# instead of LLVM's default of 100.
#thin-lto-import-instr-limit = 100
# Map debuginfo paths to `/rust/$sha/...`, generally only set for releases
#remap-debuginfo = false
# Link the compiler against `jemalloc`, where on Linux and OSX it should
# override the default allocator for rustc and LLVM.
#jemalloc = false
# Run tests in various test suites with the "nll compare mode" in addition to
# running the tests in normal mode. Largely only used on CI and during local
# development of NLL
#test-compare-mode = false
# Use LLVM libunwind as the implementation for Rust's unwinder.
#llvm-libunwind = false
# Enable Windows Control Flow Guard checks in the standard library.
# This only applies from stage 1 onwards, and only for Windows targets.
#control-flow-guard = false
# Enable symbol-mangling-version v0. This can be helpful when profiling rustc,
# as generics will be preserved in symbols (rather than erased into opaque T).
#new-symbol-mangling = false
# =============================================================================
# Options for specific targets
#
# Each of the following options is scoped to the specific target triple in
# question and is used for determining how to compile each target.
# =============================================================================
[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
# C compiler to be used to compiler C code. Note that the
# default value is platform specific, and if not specified it may also depend on
# what platform is crossing to what platform.
#cc = "cc"
# C++ compiler to be used to compiler C++ code (e.g. LLVM and our LLVM shims).
# This is only used for host targets.
#cxx = "c++"
# Archiver to be used to assemble static libraries compiled from C/C++ code.
# Note: an absolute path should be used, otherwise LLVM build will break.
#ar = "ar"
# Ranlib to be used to assemble static libraries compiled from C/C++ code.
# Note: an absolute path should be used, otherwise LLVM build will break.
#ranlib = "ranlib"
# Linker to be used to link Rust code. Note that the
# default value is platform specific, and if not specified it may also depend on
# what platform is crossing to what platform.
# Setting this will override the `use-lld` option for Rust code when targeting MSVC.
#linker = "cc"
# Path to the `llvm-config` binary of the installation of a custom LLVM to link
# against. Note that if this is specified we don't compile LLVM at all for this
# target.
#llvm-config = "../path/to/llvm/root/bin/llvm-config"
# Normally the build system can find LLVM's FileCheck utility, but if
# not, you can specify an explicit file name for it.
#llvm-filecheck = "/path/to/FileCheck"
# If this target is for Android, this option will be required to specify where
# the NDK for the target lives. This is used to find the C compiler to link and
# build native code.
#android-ndk = "/path/to/ndk"
# Force static or dynamic linkage of the standard library for this target. If
# this target is a host for rustc, this will also affect the linkage of the
# compiler itself. This is useful for building rustc on targets that normally
# only use static libraries. If unset, the target's default linkage is used.
#crt-static = false
# The root location of the musl installation directory. The library directory
# will also need to contain libunwind.a for an unwinding implementation. Note
# that this option only makes sense for musl targets that produce statically
# linked binaries
#musl-root = "..."
# The full path to the musl libdir.
#musl-libdir = musl-root/lib
# The root location of the `wasm32-wasi` sysroot.
#wasi-root = "..."
# Used in testing for configuring where the QEMU images are located, you
# probably don't want to use this.
#qemu-rootfs = "..."
# =============================================================================
# Distribution options
#
# These options are related to distribution, mostly for the Rust project itself.
# You probably won't need to concern yourself with any of these options
# =============================================================================
[dist]
# This is the folder of artifacts that the build system will sign. All files in
# this directory will be signed with the default gpg key using the system `gpg`
# binary. The `asc` and `sha256` files will all be output into the standard dist
# output folder (currently `build/dist`)
#
# This folder should be populated ahead of time before the build system is
# invoked.
#sign-folder = "path/to/folder/to/sign"
# This is a file which contains the password of the default gpg key. This will
# be passed to `gpg` down the road when signing all files in `sign-folder`
# above. This should be stored in plaintext.
#gpg-password-file = "path/to/gpg/password"
# The remote address that all artifacts will eventually be uploaded to. The
# build system generates manifests which will point to these urls, and for the
# manifests to be correct they'll have to have the right URLs encoded.
#
# Note that this address should not contain a trailing slash as file names will
# be appended to it.
#upload-addr = "https://example.com/folder"
# Whether to build a plain source tarball to upload
# We disable that on Windows not to override the one already uploaded on S3
# as the one built on Windows will contain backslashes in paths causing problems
# on linux
#src-tarball = true
#
# Whether to allow failures when building tools
#missing-tools = false