4 releases
0.2.1 | Jun 8, 2020 |
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0.2.0 | Jun 8, 2020 |
0.1.1 | Jun 7, 2020 |
0.1.0 | Jun 7, 2020 |
#2044 in Rust patterns
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13KB
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proc_use
proc_use
is a Rust crate to help semi-dynamically import crates and modules.
All logic is ran at compile time, mostly contained in build.rs
.
Use case
In what scenario is this crate useful? Say you have the following directory structure:
project
├─Cargo.toml
├─build.rs
└─src
├─main.rs
├─core
│ └─core.rs
└─util
├─foo.rs
├─bar.rs
└─baz.rs
You find yourself often adding new files to util
and including them in core.rs
.
The way to do this under vanilla Rust is like this:
// main.rs
#[path = "util/foo.rs"]
mod foo;
#[path = "util/bar.rs"]
mod bar;
#[path = "util/baz.rs"]
mod baz;
// core.rs
use foo::*;
use bar::*;
use baz::*;
Of course there are slightly cleaner ways to do this to avoid #[path]
but that's more
work. And you need to edit multiple files every time you add a new util.
Annoying! This is where proc_use
comes in. The above can be replaced with:
// core.rs
include!(concat!(env!("OUT_DIR"), "/proc_use.rs"));
// build.rs
use proc_use::UseBuilder;
use std::env;
use std::path::PathBuf;
fn main() {
let out_path = PathBuf::from(env::var("OUT_DIR").unwrap());
UseBuilder::new()
.use_glob("src/util/*.rs", "*".into())
.write_to_file_all(out_path.join("proc_use.rs"));
}
That's more code up front, but now the mod and use process is automatic.
Add as many Rust files to util
as you desire; the use_glob
method will
pick up and import all of them.
To see an example using this directory structure, see
globbing.
Dependencies
~510KB