Aquascope is a tool that generates interactive visualizations of Rust programs. These visualizations show how Rust's borrow checker "thinks" about a program, and how a Rust program actually executes. Here is a sample output of Aquascope:
Click here for a live demo. Want to learn more about what the diagram means? Read the new ownership chapter in our Rust Book Experiment.
We provide an mdBook preprocessor that embeds Aquascope diagrams into an mdBook. To use it, you need to install the mdbook-aquascope
and cargo-aquascope
binaries as follows.
cargo install mdbook-aquascope --locked --version 0.3.4
rustup toolchain install nightly-2023-08-25 -c rust-src rustc-dev llvm-tools-preview miri
cargo +nightly-2023-08-25 install aquascope_front --git https://github.com/cognitive-engineering-lab/aquascope --tag v0.3.4 --locked
cargo +nightly-2023-08-25 miri setup
Note that cargo-aquascope
is installed via aquascope_front
and must be installed via git and with a specific nightly toolchain. The miri setup
command is a necessary prerequisite to running the Aquascope interpreter.
If you want to install from source, you first need to install cargo-make, a Rust build tool, like this:
cargo install cargo-make --locked
Then you need to install Depot, a Javascript build tool, like this:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cognitive-engineering-lab/depot/main/scripts/install.sh | sh
Then you can install Aquascope from source like this:
git clone https://github.com/cognitive-engineering-lab/aquascope.git
cd aquascope
cargo make install-mdbook
First, enable mdbook-aquascope
in your mdBook's book.toml
like so:
# book.toml
[preprocessor.aquascope]
Then add an Aquascope code block to one of your Markdown source files like this:
```aquascope,interpreter
#fn main() {
let mut s = String::from("hello ");`[]`
s.push_str("world");`[]`
#}
```
Further documentation on the syntax and configuration of Aquascope blocks will be provided once the interface is more stable.
Running the provided playground locally is also easy. First, you'll need to follow the above from source installation instructions. Then, you can launch the server by running cargo make playground
and navigate to localhost:5173
to explore.
Note, the local playground does not run the tool within a sandbox. This makes the local version quicker, but don't run any malicious programs.
If you want to use Aquascope but are having trouble finding the relevant information, please leave an issue or email us at wcrichto@brown.edu and gavinleroy@brown.edu.
Aquascope was developed as a part of our academic research on how people learn Rust. If you use Aquascope as a part of your research, please cite this paper:
@article{cgk:aquascope,
author = {Crichton, Will and Gray, Gavin and Krishnamurthi, Shriram},
title = {A Grounded Conceptual Model for Ownership Types in Rust},
year = {2023},
issue_date = {October 2023},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
volume = {7},
number = {OOPSLA2},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3622841},
doi = {10.1145/3622841},
journal = {Proc. ACM Program. Lang.},
month = {oct},
articleno = {265},
numpages = {29},
keywords = {Rust, concept inventory, ownership types, program state visualization}
}