Specifying Dependencies
Your crates can depend on other libraries from crates.io or other
registries, git
repositories, or subdirectories on your local file system.
You can also temporarily override the location of a dependency — for example,
to be able to test out a bug fix in the dependency that you are working on
locally. You can have different dependencies for different platforms, and
dependencies that are only used during development. Let's take a look at how
to do each of these.
Specifying dependencies from crates.io
Cargo is configured to look for dependencies on crates.io by default. Only
the name and a version string are required in this case. In the cargo
guide, we specified a dependency on the time
crate:
[dependencies]
time = "0.1.12"
The string "0.1.12"
is a semver version requirement. Since this
string does not have any operators in it, it is interpreted the same way as
if we had specified "^0.1.12"
, which is called a caret requirement.
Caret requirements
Caret requirements allow SemVer compatible updates to a specified version.
An update is allowed if the new version number does not modify the left-most
non-zero digit in the major, minor, patch grouping. In this case, if we ran
cargo update -p time
, cargo should update us to version 0.1.13
if it is the
latest 0.1.z
release, but would not update us to 0.2.0
. If instead we had
specified the version string as ^1.0
, cargo should update to 1.1
if it is
the latest 1.y
release, but not 2.0
. The version 0.0.x
is not considered
compatible with any other version.
Here are some more examples of caret requirements and the versions that would be allowed with them:
^1.2.3 := >=1.2.3, <2.0.0
^1.2 := >=1.2.0, <2.0.0
^1 := >=1.0.0, <2.0.0
^0.2.3 := >=0.2.3, <0.3.0
^0.2 := >=0.2.0, <0.3.0
^0.0.3 := >=0.0.3, <0.0.4
^0.0 := >=0.0.0, <0.1.0
^0 := >=0.0.0, <1.0.0
This compatibility convention is different from SemVer in the way it treats
versions before 1.0.0. While SemVer says there is no compatibility before
1.0.0, Cargo considers 0.x.y
to be compatible with 0.x.z
, where y ≥ z
and x > 0
.
Tilde requirements
Tilde requirements specify a minimal version with some ability to update. If you specify a major, minor, and patch version or only a major and minor version, only patch-level changes are allowed. If you only specify a major version, then minor- and patch-level changes are allowed.
~1.2.3
is an example of a tilde requirement.
~1.2.3 := >=1.2.3, <1.3.0
~1.2 := >=1.2.0, <1.3.0
~1 := >=1.0.0, <2.0.0
Wildcard requirements
Wildcard requirements allow for any version where the wildcard is positioned.
*
, 1.*
and 1.2.*
are examples of wildcard requirements.
* := >=0.0.0
1.* := >=1.0.0, <2.0.0
1.2.* := >=1.2.0, <1.3.0
Note: crates.io does not allow bare
*
versions.
Comparison requirements
Comparison requirements allow manually specifying a version range or an exact version to depend on.
Here are some examples of comparison requirements:
>= 1.2.0
> 1
< 2
= 1.2.3
Multiple requirements
As shown in the examples above, multiple version requirements can be
separated with a comma, e.g., >= 1.2, < 1.5
.
Specifying dependencies from other registries
To specify a dependency from a registry other than crates.io, first the
registry must be configured in a .cargo/config.toml
file. See the registries
documentation for more information. In the dependency, set the registry
key
to the name of the registry to use.
[dependencies]
some-crate = { version = "1.0", registry = "my-registry" }
Note: crates.io does not allow packages to be published with dependencies on other registries.
Specifying dependencies from git
repositories
To depend on a library located in a git
repository, the minimum information
you need to specify is the location of the repository with the git
key:
[dependencies]
rand = { git = "https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/rand" }
Cargo will fetch the git
repository at this location then look for a
Cargo.toml
for the requested crate anywhere inside the git
repository
(not necessarily at the root - for example, specifying a member crate name
of a workspace and setting git
to the repository containing the workspace).
Since we haven’t specified any other information, Cargo assumes that
we intend to use the latest commit on the main branch to build our package.
You can combine the git
key with the rev
, tag
, or branch
keys to
specify something else. Here's an example of specifying that you want to use
the latest commit on a branch named next
:
[dependencies]
rand = { git = "https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/rand", branch = "next" }
Once a git
dependency has been added, Cargo will lock that dependency to the
latest commit at the time. New commits will not be pulled down automatically
once the lock is in place. However, they can be pulled down manually with
cargo update
.
See Git Authentication for help with git authentication for private repos.
Note: crates.io does not allow packages to be published with
git
dependencies (git
dev-dependencies are ignored). See the Multiple locations section for a fallback alternative.
Specifying path dependencies
Over time, our hello_world
package from the guide has
grown significantly in size! It’s gotten to the point that we probably want to
split out a separate crate for others to use. To do this Cargo supports path
dependencies which are typically sub-crates that live within one repository.
Let’s start off by making a new crate inside of our hello_world
package:
# inside of hello_world/
$ cargo new hello_utils
This will create a new folder hello_utils
inside of which a Cargo.toml
and
src
folder are ready to be configured. In order to tell Cargo about this, open
up hello_world/Cargo.toml
and add hello_utils
to your dependencies:
[dependencies]
hello_utils = { path = "hello_utils" }
This tells Cargo that we depend on a crate called hello_utils
which is found
in the hello_utils
folder (relative to the Cargo.toml
it’s written in).
And that’s it! The next cargo build
will automatically build hello_utils
and
all of its own dependencies, and others can also start using the crate as well.
However, crates that use dependencies specified with only a path are not
permitted on crates.io. If we wanted to publish our hello_world
crate, we
would need to publish a version of hello_utils
to crates.io
and specify its version in the dependencies line as well:
[dependencies]
hello_utils = { path = "hello_utils", version = "0.1.0" }
Note: crates.io does not allow packages to be published with
path
dependencies (path
dev-dependencies are ignored). See the Multiple locations section for a fallback alternative.
Multiple locations
It is possible to specify both a registry version and a git
or path
location. The git
or path
dependency will be used locally (in which case
the version
is ignored), and when published to a registry like crates.io,
it will use the registry version. Other combinations are not allowed.
Examples:
[dependencies]
# Uses `my-bitflags` when used locally, and uses
# version 1.0 from crates.io when published.
bitflags = { path = "my-bitflags", version = "1.0" }
# Uses the given git repo when used locally, and uses
# version 1.0 from crates.io when published.
smallvec = { git = "https://github.com/servo/rust-smallvec", version = "1.0" }
One example where this can be useful is when you have split up a library into
multiple packages within the same workspace. You can then use path
dependencies to point to the local packages within the workspace to use the
local version during development, and then use the crates.io version once it
is published. This is similar to specifying an
override, but only applies to this one
dependency declaration.
Platform specific dependencies
Platform-specific dependencies take the same format, but are listed under a
target
section. Normally Rust-like #[cfg]
syntax will be used to define
these sections:
[target.'cfg(windows)'.dependencies]
winhttp = "0.4.0"
[target.'cfg(unix)'.dependencies]
openssl = "1.0.1"
[target.'cfg(target_arch = "x86")'.dependencies]
native = { path = "native/i686" }
[target.'cfg(target_arch = "x86_64")'.dependencies]
native = { path = "native/x86_64" }
Like with Rust, the syntax here supports the not
, any
, and all
operators
to combine various cfg name/value pairs.
If you want to know which cfg targets are available on your platform, run
rustc --print=cfg
from the command line. If you want to know which cfg
targets are available for another platform, such as 64-bit Windows,
run rustc --print=cfg --target=x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
.
Unlike in your Rust source code, you cannot use
[target.'cfg(feature = "fancy-feature")'.dependencies]
to add dependencies
based on optional features. Use the [features]
section
instead:
[dependencies]
foo = { version = "1.0", optional = true }
bar = { version = "1.0", optional = true }
[features]
fancy-feature = ["foo", "bar"]
The same applies to cfg(debug_assertions)
, cfg(test)
and cfg(proc_macro)
.
These values will not work as expected and will always have the default value
returned by rustc --print=cfg
.
There is currently no way to add dependencies based on these configuration values.
In addition to #[cfg]
syntax, Cargo also supports listing out the full target
the dependencies would apply to:
[target.x86_64-pc-windows-gnu.dependencies]
winhttp = "0.4.0"
[target.i686-unknown-linux-gnu.dependencies]
openssl = "1.0.1"
Custom target specifications
If you’re using a custom target specification (such as --target foo/bar.json
), use the base filename without the .json
extension:
[target.bar.dependencies]
winhttp = "0.4.0"
[target.my-special-i686-platform.dependencies]
openssl = "1.0.1"
native = { path = "native/i686" }
Note: Custom target specifications are not usable on the stable channel.
Development dependencies
You can add a [dev-dependencies]
section to your Cargo.toml
whose format
is equivalent to [dependencies]
:
[dev-dependencies]
tempdir = "0.3"
Dev-dependencies are not used when compiling a package for building, but are used for compiling tests, examples, and benchmarks.
These dependencies are not propagated to other packages which depend on this package.
You can also have target-specific development dependencies by using
dev-dependencies
in the target section header instead of dependencies
. For
example:
[target.'cfg(unix)'.dev-dependencies]
mio = "0.0.1"
Note: When a package is published, only dev-dependencies that specify a
version
will be included in the published crate. For most use cases, dev-dependencies are not needed when published, though some users (like OS packagers) may want to run tests within a crate, so providing aversion
if possible can still be beneficial.
Build dependencies
You can depend on other Cargo-based crates for use in your build scripts.
Dependencies are declared through the build-dependencies
section of the
manifest:
[build-dependencies]
cc = "1.0.3"
The build script does not have access to the dependencies listed
in the dependencies
or dev-dependencies
section. Build
dependencies will likewise not be available to the package itself
unless listed under the dependencies
section as well. A package
itself and its build script are built separately, so their
dependencies need not coincide. Cargo is kept simpler and cleaner by
using independent dependencies for independent purposes.
Choosing features
If a package you depend on offers conditional features, you can specify which to use:
[dependencies.awesome]
version = "1.3.5"
default-features = false # do not include the default features, and optionally
# cherry-pick individual features
features = ["secure-password", "civet"]
More information about features can be found in the features chapter.
Renaming dependencies in Cargo.toml
When writing a [dependencies]
section in Cargo.toml
the key you write for a
dependency typically matches up to the name of the crate you import from in the
code. For some projects, though, you may wish to reference the crate with a
different name in the code regardless of how it's published on crates.io. For
example you may wish to:
- Avoid the need to
use foo as bar
in Rust source. - Depend on multiple versions of a crate.
- Depend on crates with the same name from different registries.
To support this Cargo supports a package
key in the [dependencies]
section
of which package should be depended on:
[package]
name = "mypackage"
version = "0.0.1"
[dependencies]
foo = "0.1"
bar = { git = "https://github.com/example/project", package = "foo" }
baz = { version = "0.1", registry = "custom", package = "foo" }
In this example, three crates are now available in your Rust code:
extern crate foo; // crates.io
extern crate bar; // git repository
extern crate baz; // registry `custom`
All three of these crates have the package name of foo
in their own
Cargo.toml
, so we're explicitly using the package
key to inform Cargo that
we want the foo
package even though we're calling it something else locally.
The package
key, if not specified, defaults to the name of the dependency
being requested.
Note that if you have an optional dependency like:
[dependencies]
foo = { version = "0.1", package = 'bar', optional = true }
you're depending on the crate bar
from crates.io, but your crate has a foo
feature instead of a bar
feature. That is, names of features take after the
name of the dependency, not the package name, when renamed.
Enabling transitive dependencies works similarly, for example we could add the following to the above manifest:
[features]
log-debug = ['foo/log-debug'] # using 'bar/log-debug' would be an error!