This documentation is for anyone managing the repo to remember how to do occasional maintenance tasks.
- Delete your
target
directory, you're about to recompile everything anyway - Change the version number in
.github/workflows/main.yml
- Change the version number in
rust-toolchain
, which should change the version you're using locally withrustup
- Change the version number in
src/title-page.md
- Run
./tools/update-rustc.sh
(see its commented code for details on what it does) - Inspect the changes (by looking at the files changed according to git) and
their effects (by looking at the files in
tmp/book-before
andtmp/book-after
) and commit them if they look good - Grep for
manual-regeneration
and follow the instructions in those places to update output that cannot be generated by a script
To update the edition = "[year]"
metadata in all the listings' Cargo.toml
s,
run the ./tools/update-editions.sh
script and commit the changes.
We now make .tar
files of complete projects containing every listing
available as GitHub Releases. To
create a new release artifact, for example if there have been code changes due
to edits or due to updating Rust and rustfmt
, do the following:
- Create a git tag for the release and push it to GitHub, or create a new tag by going to the GitHub UI, drafting a new release, and entering a new tag instead of selecting an existing tag
- Run
cargo run --bin release_listings
, which will generatetmp/listings.tar.gz
- Upload
tmp/listings.tar.gz
in the GitHub UI for the draft release - Publish the release
To facilitate the scripts that run rustfmt
on all the listings, update the
output when the compiler is updated, and produce release artifacts containing
full projects for the listings, any listing beyond the most trivial should be
extracted into a file. To do that:
- Find where the new listing should go in the
listings
directory.- There is one subdirectory for each chapter
- Numbered listings should use
listing-[chapter num]-[listing num]
for their directory names. - Listings without a number should start with
no-listing-
followed by a number that indicates its position in the chapter relative to the other listings without numbers in the chapter, then a short description that someone could read to find the code they're looking for. - Listings used only for displaying the output of the code (for example, when
we say "if we had written x instead of y, we would get this compiler
error:" but we don't actually show code x) should be named with
output-only-
followed by a number that indicates its position in the chapter relative to the other listings used only for output, then a short description that authors or contributors could read to find the code they're looking for. - Remember to adjust surrounding listing numbers as appropriate!
- Create a full Cargo project in that directory, either by using
cargo new
or copying another listing as a starting point. - Add the code and any surrounding code needed to create a full working example.
- If you only want to show part of the code in the file, use anchor comments
(
// ANCHOR: some_tag
and// ANCHOR_END: some_tag
) to mark the parts of the file you want to show. - For Rust code, use the
{{#rustdoc_include [filename:some_tag]}}
directive within the code blocks in the text. Therustdoc_include
directive gives the code that doesn't get displayed torustdoc
formdbook test
purposes. - For anything else, use the
{{#include [filename:some_tag]}}
directive. - If you want to display the output of a command in the text as well, create an
output.txt
file in the listing's directory as follows:- Run the command, like
cargo run
orcargo test
, and copy all of the output. - Create a new
output.txt
file with the first line$ [the command you ran]
. - Paste the output you just copied.
- Run
./tools/update-rustc.sh
, which should perform some normalization on the compiler output. - Include the output in the text with the
{{#include [filename]}}
directive. - Add and commit output.txt.
- Run the command, like
- If you want to display output but for some reason it can't be generated by a
script (say, because of user input or external events like making a web
request), keep the output inline but make a comment that contains
manual-regeneration
and instructions for manually updating the inline output. - If you don't want this example to even be attempted to be formatted by
rustfmt
(for example because the example doesn't parse on purpose), add arustfmt-ignore
file in the listing's directory and the reason it's not being formatted as the contents of that file (in case it's a rustfmt bug that might get fixed someday).
To check, say, updating mdbook
or changing the way files get included:
- Generate a built book before the change you want to test by running
mdbook build -d tmp/book-before
- Apply the changes you want to test and run
mdbook build -d tmp/book-after
- Run
./tools/megadiff.sh
- Files remaining in
tmp/book-before
andtmp/book-after
have differences you can manually inspect with your favorite diff viewing mechanism
- Run
./tools/nostarch.sh
- Spot check the files that script created in the
nostarch
directory - Check them into git if you're starting a round of edits
- Save the docx file to
tmp/chapterXX.docx
. - In Word, go to the review tab, choose "Accept all changes and stop tracking"
- Save the docx again and close Word
- Run
./tools/doc-to-md.sh
- This should write
nostarch/chapterXX.md
. Adjust the XSL intools/doc-to-md.xsl
and run./tools/doc-to-md.sh
again if needed.
We're using Graphviz for some of the diagrams in the
book. The source for those files live in the dot
directory. To turn a dot
file, for example, dot/trpl04-01.dot
into an svg
, run:
$ dot dot/trpl04-01.dot -Tsvg > src/img/trpl04-01.svg
In the generated SVG, remove the width and the height attributes from the svg
element and set the viewBox
attribute to 0.00 0.00 1000.00 1000.00
or other
values that don't cut off the image.