cross
Rustup
cross | Rustup | |
---|---|---|
118 | 58 | |
5,965 | 5,892 | |
2.2% | 1.0% | |
9.2 | 9.6 | |
5 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
cross
-
Is statically compiling against glibc possible?
To compile a program with musl on a glibc system you can use cross-rs!
-
How to cross Compile on Debian for: Mac / FreeBSD / OpenBSD / Android ... ?
I cross compile to Mac, bsd, windows, etc cross ... Works great for me with either docker or podman.
-
Compiling against specific version glibc
If docker is available for you, https://github.com/cross-rs/cross is another and reliable way to solve this kind of problem. I do use it regularly.
-
Transitioning to Rust as a company
We are using https://github.com/cross-rs/cross.
-
A guide to cross-compilation in Rust
There is some built-in support in rustc for cross-compiling, but getting the build to actually work can be tricky due to the need for an appropriate linker. Instead, we’re going to use the Cross crate, which used to be maintained by the Rust Embedded Working Group Tools group.
-
Is there a definitive guide on cross-compiling with OpenSSL?
I have used cross before to cross compile from Linux to other Linux. It has a section on it's wiki about this. Maybe that could be of help.
-
Docker ARMv7 Alpine Rust builder
You can use cross to build your application and copy the artifacts into an alpine armv7 container. It would also build faster due to using cross compilation rather than QEMU.
-
Compiling Linux to Mac in CI/CD
Looks like cross is the easiest way to get something cross-compiled but its Mac support is blocked behind building your own build image. Even that repo says that it might be broken.
-
How to you develop in containers?
Bonus: if you’re working with Rust and doing a lot of cross platform stuff, check out cross. It runs QEMU in docker so you can run tests on a bunch of different emulated targets easily- literally a one line setup, it’s kind of magical.
-
What are some stuff that Rust isn't good at?
It's also not as naturally cross-compilable as Go, though that's partly a side-effect of not accepting being a semi-closed ecosystem to achieve that and cross exists as a stop-gap while things like cargo-zigbuild explore less drastic options.
Rustup
-
Problem with rust-analyzer in helix
I got it to finally work by following this
-
Do you use relative toolchain paths with rustup? Let us know!
If you are someone actively using such relative-path toolchains, please contact us (Discord / Github issues).
-
Canonical hiring Rust toolchain dev
We had a snap package; we removed it in mid 2022
-
Announcing Rustup 1.26.0 | Rust Blog
I don't know. The PR references prior discussion without a link, so it may have been private.
- Foundation - Open Membership
-
Telemetry really goes into Go toolchain, no matter what
As long as he doesn't put hidden folders in your root like rust. https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/issues/341
-
telemetry in the go toolchain? just say no...
I think you're being upvoted by folks who don't know better, which is a shame because you're making things up :/. The telemetry feature in rustup kept everything local and never "pinged home". And you had to enable it with a command `rustup telemetry enable`. And it just logged JSON files at the path you mentioned. By 2019, the feature was disabled (see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/issues/341 ) because no one worked on it and it just gathered bugs.
-
Go claims telemetry objectors arguing in bad faith and violating Code of Conduct
FWIW, there is a proposal to add telemetry to LLVM [0] and Rust used to have telemetry [1], both off by default. Some things in the node.js world have telemetry enabled by default, like Next.js [3].
Some people are posting here as if this as already decided -- AFIACT, that's not the case. It's not even a formal proposal yet, and the stated intent was to start a conversation around something concrete. (For context, this is standard for how I've seen the Go project approaches large topics, including for example I think there were something like ~8 very detailed generics design drafts from the core Go team over ~10 years).
It sounds like the Go team is going to take some time to look into some of the alternative approaches suggested in the feedback collected so far.
In any event, this is obviously a topic people are very passionate about, especially opt-in vs. opt-out, but I guess I would suggest not giving up hope quite yet.
[0] https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-lldb-telemetry-metrics/6458...
[1] https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/issues/341
[2] https://nextjs.org/telemetry
-
Google's Go may add telemetry reporting that's on by default
Rust (Specifically Rust Up) seems to have planned to include telemetry but they paused and cancelled the decision, possibly after implementing it initially.
-
Who "owns" Rust ?
https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/issues/341 and rust installation uses telemetry
What are some alternatives?
dockcross - Cross compiling toolchains in Docker images
rust - Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
termux-adb-fastboot - android adb-fastboot tools for termux
rust-mode - Emacs configuration for Rust
opencv-rust - Rust bindings for OpenCV 3 & 4
rust-on-raspberry-pi
rusqlite - Ergonomic bindings to SQLite for Rust
Rust for Visual Studio Code
plotters - A rust drawing library for high quality data plotting for both WASM and native, statically and realtimely 🦀 📈🚀
Rust Language Server - Repository for the Rust Language Server (aka RLS)
homebrew-macos-cross-toolchains - macOS cross compiler toolchains
cargo-modules - Visualize/analyze a Rust crate's internal structure