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Debian packages from Cargo projects Build Status

This is a Cargo helper command which automatically creates binary Debian packages (.deb) from Cargo projects.

Installation

cargo install cargo-deb

Requires Rust 1.31+, and optionally dpkg, ldd and liblzma-dev.

Usage

cargo deb

Upon running cargo deb from the base directory of your Rust project, the Debian package will be created in target/debian/<project_name>_<version>_<arch>.deb (or you can change the location with the --output option). This package can be installed with dpkg -i target/debian/*.deb.

Debug symbols are stripped from the main binary by default, unless [profile.release] debug = true is set in Cargo.toml. If cargo deb --separate-debug-symbols is run, the debug symbols will be packaged as a separate file installed at /usr/lib/debug/<path-to-binary>.debug.

cargo deb --install builds and installs the project system-wide.

Configuration

No configuration is necessary to make a basic package from a Cargo project with a binary. This command obtains basic information it needs from the Cargo.toml file. It uses Cargo fields: name, version, license, license-file, description, readme, homepage, and repository.

For a more complete Debian package, you may also define a new table, [package.metadata.deb] that contains maintainer, copyright, license-file, changelog, depends, conflicts, breaks, replaces, provides, extended-description, section, priority, and assets.

[package.metadata.deb] options

Everything is optional:

  • maintainer: The person maintaining the Debian packaging. If not present, the first author is used.
  • copyright: To whom and when the copyright of the software is granted. If not present, the list of authors is used.
  • license-file: The location of the license and the amount of lines to skip at the top. If not present, package-level license-file is used.
  • depends: The runtime dependencies of the project, which are automatically generated with the $auto keyword.
  • conflicts, breaks, replaces, providespackage transition control.
  • extended-description: An extended description of the project — the more detailed the better. Package's readme file is used as a fallback.
  • revision: Version of the Debian package (when the package is updated more often than the project).
  • section: The application category that the software belongs to.
  • priority: Defines if the package is required or optional.
  • assets: Files to be included in the package and the permissions to assign them. If assets are not specified, then defaults are taken from binaries explicitly listed in [[bin]] (copied to /usr/bin/) and package readme (copied to usr/share/doc/…).
    1. The first argument of each asset is the location of that asset in the Rust project. Glob patterns are allowed. You can use target/release/ in asset paths, even if Cargo is configured to cross-compile or use custom CARGO_TARGET_DIR. The target dir paths will be automatically corrected.
    2. The second argument is where the file will be copied.
      • If is argument ends with / it will be inferred that the target is the directory where the file will be copied.
      • Otherwise, it will be inferred that the source argument will be renamed when copied.
    3. The third argument is the permissions (octal string) to assign that file.
  • maintainer-scripts - directory containing preinst, postinst, prerm, or postrm scripts.
  • conf-files - List of configuration files that the package management system will not overwrite when the package is upgraded.
  • changelog: Path to Debian-formatted changelog file.
  • features: List of Cargo features to use when building the package.
  • default-features: whether to use default crate features in addition to the features list (default true).

Example of custom Cargo.toml additions

[package.metadata.deb]
maintainer = "Michael Aaron Murphy <mmstickman@gmail.com>"
copyright = "2017, Michael Aaron Murphy <mmstickman@gmail.com>"
license-file = ["LICENSE", "4"]
extended-description = """\
A simple subcommand for the Cargo package manager for \
building Debian packages from Rust projects."""
depends = "$auto"
section = "utility"
priority = "optional"
assets = [
    ["target/release/cargo-deb", "usr/bin/", "755"],
    ["README.md", "usr/share/doc/cargo-deb/README", "644"],
]

Systemd Manager:

[package.metadata.deb]
maintainer = "Michael Aaron Murphy <mmstickman@gmail.com>"
copyright = "2015-2016, Michael Aaron Murphy <mmstickman@gmail.com>"
license-file = ["LICENSE", "3"]
depends = "$auto, systemd"
extended-description = """\
Written safely in Rust, this systemd manager provides a simple GTK3 GUI interface \
that allows you to enable/disable/start/stop services, monitor service logs, and \
edit unit files without ever using the terminal."""
section = "admin"
priority = "optional"
assets = [
    ["assets/org.freedesktop.policykit.systemd-manager.policy", "usr/share/polkit-1/actions/", "644"],
    ["assets/systemd-manager.desktop", "usr/share/applications/", "644"],
    ["assets/systemd-manager-pkexec", "usr/bin/", "755"],
    ["target/release/systemd-manager", "usr/bin/", "755"]
]

Advanced usage

[package.metadata.deb.variants.$name]

There can be multiple variants of the metadata in one Cargo.toml file. --variant=name selects the variant to use. Options set in a variant override [package.metadata.deb] options.

Cross-compilation

cargo deb supports a --target flag, which takes Rust target triple. See rustc --print target-list for the list of supported values.

Cross-compilation can be run from any host, including macOS and Windows, provided that Debian-compatible linker and system libraries are available to Rust. The target has to be installed for Rust (e.g. rustup target add i686-unknown-linux-gnu) and has to be installed for the host system (e.g. Debian) (e.g. apt-get install libc6-dev-i386). Note that Rust's and Debian's architecture names are different.

cargo deb --target=i686-unknown-linux-gnu

Cross-compiled archives are saved in target/<target triple>/debian/*.deb. The actual archive path is printed on success.

In .cargo/config you can add [target.<target triple>] strip = { path = "…" } to specify a path to the architecture-specific strip command, or use --no-strip.

Custom build flags

If you would like to handle the build process yourself, you can use cargo deb --no-build so that the cargo-deb command will not attempt to rebuild your project.

cargo deb -- <cargo build flags>

Flags after -- are passed to cargo build, so you can use options such as -Z, --frozen, and --locked. Please use that only for features that cargo-deb doesn't support natively.

Workspaces

Workspaces are not fully supported yet. Please leave feedback if you're interested in workspace support.

It's possible to build a project in another directory with cargo deb --manifest-path=<path/to/Cargo.toml>.