table of contents
CARGO-RUSTDOC(1) | General Commands Manual | CARGO-RUSTDOC(1) |
NAME¶
cargo-rustdoc — Build a package’s documentation, using specified custom flags
SYNOPSIS¶
cargo rustdoc [options] [-- args]
DESCRIPTION¶
The specified target for the current package (or package specified by -p if provided) will be documented with the specified args being passed to the final rustdoc invocation. Dependencies will not be documented as part of this command. Note that rustdoc will still unconditionally receive arguments such as -L, --extern, and --crate-type, and the specified args will simply be added to the rustdoc invocation.
See <https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustdoc/index.html> for documentation on rustdoc flags.
This command requires that only one target is being compiled when additional arguments are provided. If more than one target is available for the current package the filters of --lib, --bin, etc, must be used to select which target is compiled.
To pass flags to all rustdoc processes spawned by Cargo, use the RUSTDOCFLAGS environment variable <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/environment-variables.html> or the build.rustdocflags config value <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html>.
OPTIONS¶
Documentation Options¶
--open
Package Selection¶
By default, the package in the current working directory is selected. The -p flag can be used to choose a different package in a workspace.
-p spec, --package spec
Target Selection¶
When no target selection options are given, cargo rustdoc will document all binary and library targets of the selected package. The binary will be skipped if its name is the same as the lib target. Binaries are skipped if they have required-features that are missing.
Passing target selection flags will document only the specified targets.
Note that --bin, --example, --test and --bench flags also support common Unix glob patterns like *, ? and []. However, to avoid your shell accidentally expanding glob patterns before Cargo handles them, you must use single quotes or double quotes around each glob pattern.
--lib
--bin name…
--bins
--example name…
--examples
--test name…
--tests
--bench name…
--benches
--all-targets
Feature Selection¶
The feature flags allow you to control which features are enabled. When no feature options are given, the default feature is activated for every selected package.
See the features documentation <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/features.html#command-line-feature-options> for more details.
-F features, --features features
--all-features
--no-default-features
Compilation Options¶
--target triple
This may also be specified with the build.target config value <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html>.
Note that specifying this flag makes Cargo run in a different mode where the target artifacts are placed in a separate directory. See the build cache <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/guide/build-cache.html> documentation for more details.
-r, --release
--profile name
--ignore-rust-version
--timings=fmts
Output Options¶
--target-dir directory
Display Options¶
-v, --verbose
-q, --quiet
--color when
May also be specified with the term.color config value <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html>.
--message-format fmt
Manifest Options¶
--manifest-path path
--frozen, --locked
These may be used in environments where you want to assert that the Cargo.lock file is up-to-date (such as a CI build) or want to avoid network access.
--offline
Beware that this may result in different dependency resolution than online mode. Cargo will restrict itself to crates that are downloaded locally, even if there might be a newer version as indicated in the local copy of the index. See the cargo-fetch(1) command to download dependencies before going offline.
May also be specified with the net.offline config value <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html>.
Common Options¶
+toolchain
--config KEY=VALUE or PATH
-C PATH
This option is only available on the nightly channel <https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/appendix-07-nightly-rust.html> and requires the -Z unstable-options flag to enable (see #10098 <https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/10098>).
-h, --help
-Z flag
Miscellaneous Options¶
-j N, --jobs N
--keep-going
For example if the current package depends on dependencies fails and works, one of which fails to build, cargo rustdoc -j1 may or may not build the one that succeeds (depending on which one of the two builds Cargo picked to run first), whereas cargo rustdoc -j1 --keep-going would definitely run both builds, even if the one run first fails.
ENVIRONMENT¶
See the reference <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/environment-variables.html> for details on environment variables that Cargo reads.
EXIT STATUS¶
EXAMPLES¶
cargo rustdoc --lib -- --extend-css extra.css