Configuration
This document explains how Cargo’s configuration system works, as well as available keys or configuration. For configuration of a package through its manifest, see the manifest format.
Hierarchical structure
Cargo allows local configuration for a particular package as well as global
configuration. It looks for configuration files in the current directory and
all parent directories. If, for example, Cargo were invoked in
/projects/foo/bar/baz
, then the following configuration files would be
probed for and unified in this order:
/projects/foo/bar/baz/.cargo/config.toml
/projects/foo/bar/.cargo/config.toml
/projects/foo/.cargo/config.toml
/projects/.cargo/config.toml
/.cargo/config.toml
$CARGO_HOME/config.toml
which defaults to:- Windows:
%USERPROFILE%\.cargo\config.toml
- Unix:
$HOME/.cargo/config.toml
- Windows:
With this structure, you can specify configuration per-package, and even possibly check it into version control. You can also specify personal defaults with a configuration file in your home directory.
If a key is specified in multiple config files, the values will get merged together. Numbers, strings, and booleans will use the value in the deeper config directory taking precedence over ancestor directories, where the home directory is the lowest priority. Arrays will be joined together.
At present, when being invoked from a workspace, Cargo does not read config
files from crates within the workspace. i.e. if a workspace has two crates in
it, named /projects/foo/bar/baz/mylib
and /projects/foo/bar/baz/mybin
, and
there are Cargo configs at /projects/foo/bar/baz/mylib/.cargo/config.toml
and /projects/foo/bar/baz/mybin/.cargo/config.toml
, Cargo does not read
those configuration files if it is invoked from the workspace root
(/projects/foo/bar/baz/
).
Note: Cargo also reads config files without the
.toml
extension, such as.cargo/config
. Support for the.toml
extension was added in version 1.39 and is the preferred form. If both files exist, Cargo will use the file without the extension.
Configuration format
Configuration files are written in the TOML format (like the manifest), with simple key-value pairs inside of sections (tables). The following is a quick overview of all settings, with detailed descriptions found below.
paths = ["/path/to/override"] # path dependency overrides
[alias] # command aliases
b = "build"
c = "check"
t = "test"
r = "run"
rr = "run --release"
recursive_example = "rr --example recursions"
space_example = ["run", "--release", "--", "\"command list\""]
[build]
jobs = 1 # number of parallel jobs, defaults to # of CPUs
rustc = "rustc" # the rust compiler tool
rustc-wrapper = "…" # run this wrapper instead of `rustc`
rustc-workspace-wrapper = "…" # run this wrapper instead of `rustc` for workspace members
rustdoc = "rustdoc" # the doc generator tool
target = "triple" # build for the target triple (ignored by `cargo install`)
target-dir = "target" # path of where to place all generated artifacts
rustflags = ["…", "…"] # custom flags to pass to all compiler invocations
rustdocflags = ["…", "…"] # custom flags to pass to rustdoc
incremental = true # whether or not to enable incremental compilation
dep-info-basedir = "…" # path for the base directory for targets in depfiles
[doc]
browser = "chromium" # browser to use with `cargo doc --open`,
# overrides the `BROWSER` environment variable
[env]
# Set ENV_VAR_NAME=value for any process run by Cargo
ENV_VAR_NAME = "value"
# Set even if already present in environment
ENV_VAR_NAME_2 = { value = "value", force = true }
# Value is relative to .cargo directory containing `config.toml`, make absolute
ENV_VAR_NAME_3 = { value = "relative/path", relative = true }
[future-incompat-report]
frequency = 'always' # when to display a notification about a future incompat report
[cargo-new]
vcs = "none" # VCS to use ('git', 'hg', 'pijul', 'fossil', 'none')
[http]
debug = false # HTTP debugging
proxy = "host:port" # HTTP proxy in libcurl format
ssl-version = "tlsv1.3" # TLS version to use
ssl-version.max = "tlsv1.3" # maximum TLS version
ssl-version.min = "tlsv1.1" # minimum TLS version
timeout = 30 # timeout for each HTTP request, in seconds
low-speed-limit = 10 # network timeout threshold (bytes/sec)
cainfo = "cert.pem" # path to Certificate Authority (CA) bundle
check-revoke = true # check for SSL certificate revocation
multiplexing = true # HTTP/2 multiplexing
user-agent = "…" # the user-agent header
[install]
root = "/some/path" # `cargo install` destination directory
[net]
retry = 2 # network retries
git-fetch-with-cli = true # use the `git` executable for git operations
offline = true # do not access the network
[patch.<registry>]
# Same keys as for [patch] in Cargo.toml
[profile.<name>] # Modify profile settings via config.
opt-level = 0 # Optimization level.
debug = true # Include debug info.
split-debuginfo = '...' # Debug info splitting behavior.
debug-assertions = true # Enables debug assertions.
overflow-checks = true # Enables runtime integer overflow checks.
lto = false # Sets link-time optimization.
panic = 'unwind' # The panic strategy.
incremental = true # Incremental compilation.
codegen-units = 16 # Number of code generation units.
rpath = false # Sets the rpath linking option.
[profile.<name>.build-override] # Overrides build-script settings.
# Same keys for a normal profile.
[profile.<name>.package.<name>] # Override profile for a package.
# Same keys for a normal profile (minus `panic`, `lto`, and `rpath`).
[registries.<name>] # registries other than crates.io
index = "…" # URL of the registry index
token = "…" # authentication token for the registry
[registry]
default = "…" # name of the default registry
token = "…" # authentication token for crates.io
[source.<name>] # source definition and replacement
replace-with = "…" # replace this source with the given named source
directory = "…" # path to a directory source
registry = "…" # URL to a registry source
local-registry = "…" # path to a local registry source
git = "…" # URL of a git repository source
branch = "…" # branch name for the git repository
tag = "…" # tag name for the git repository
rev = "…" # revision for the git repository
[target.<triple>]
linker = "…" # linker to use
runner = "…" # wrapper to run executables
rustflags = ["…", "…"] # custom flags for `rustc`
[target.<cfg>]
runner = "…" # wrapper to run executables
rustflags = ["…", "…"] # custom flags for `rustc`
[target.<triple>.<links>] # `links` build script override
rustc-link-lib = ["foo"]
rustc-link-search = ["/path/to/foo"]
rustc-flags = ["-L", "/some/path"]
rustc-cfg = ['key="value"']
rustc-env = {key = "value"}
rustc-cdylib-link-arg = ["…"]
metadata_key1 = "value"
metadata_key2 = "value"
[term]
quiet = false # whether cargo output is quiet
verbose = false # whether cargo provides verbose output
color = 'auto' # whether cargo colorizes output
progress.when = 'auto' # whether cargo shows progress bar
progress.width = 80 # width of progress bar
Environment variables
Cargo can also be configured through environment variables in addition to the
TOML configuration files. For each configuration key of the form foo.bar
the
environment variable CARGO_FOO_BAR
can also be used to define the value.
Keys are converted to uppercase, dots and dashes are converted to underscores.
For example the target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.runner
key can also be
defined by the CARGO_TARGET_X86_64_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNU_RUNNER
environment
variable.
Environment variables will take precedence over TOML configuration files. Currently only integer, boolean, string and some array values are supported to be defined by environment variables. Descriptions below indicate which keys support environment variables and otherwise they are not supported due to technicial issues.
In addition to the system above, Cargo recognizes a few other specific environment variables.
Command-line overrides
Cargo also accepts arbitrary configuration overrides through the
--config
command-line option. The argument should be in TOML syntax of
KEY=VALUE
:
cargo --config net.git-fetch-with-cli=true fetch
The --config
option may be specified multiple times, in which case the
values are merged in left-to-right order, using the same merging logic
that is used when multiple configuration files apply. Configuration
values specified this way take precedence over environment variables,
which take precedence over configuration files.
Some examples of what it looks like using Bourne shell syntax:
# Most shells will require escaping.
cargo --config http.proxy=\"http://example.com\" …
# Spaces may be used.
cargo --config "net.git-fetch-with-cli = true" …
# TOML array example. Single quotes make it easier to read and write.
cargo --config 'build.rustdocflags = ["--html-in-header", "header.html"]' …
# Example of a complex TOML key.
cargo --config "target.'cfg(all(target_arch = \"arm\", target_os = \"none\"))'.runner = 'my-runner'" …
# Example of overriding a profile setting.
cargo --config profile.dev.package.image.opt-level=3 …
The --config
option can also be used to pass paths to extra
configuration files that Cargo should use for a specific invocation.
Options from configuration files loaded this way follow the same
precedence rules as other options specified directly with --config
.
Config-relative paths
Paths in config files may be absolute, relative, or a bare name without any path separators.
Paths for executables without a path separator will use the PATH
environment variable to search for the executable.
Paths for non-executables will be relative to where the config value is defined.
In particular, rules are:
- For environment variables, paths are relative to the current working directory.
- For config values loaded directly from the
--config KEY=VALUE
option, paths are relative to the current working directory. - For config files, paths are relative to the parent directory of the directory where the config files were defined,
no matter those files are from either the hierarchical probing
or the
--config <path>
option.
Note: To maintain consistency with existing
.cargo/config.toml
probing behavior, it is by design that a path in a config file passed via--config <path>
is also relative to two levels up from the config file itself.To avoid unexpected results, the rule of thumb is putting your extra config files at the same level of discovered
.cargo/config.toml
in your porject. For instance, given a project/my/project
, it is recommended to put config files under/my/project/.cargo
or a new directory at the same level, such as/my/project/.config
.
# Relative path examples.
[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
runner = "foo" # Searches `PATH` for `foo`.
[source.vendored-sources]
# Directory is relative to the parent where `.cargo/config.toml` is located.
# For example, `/my/project/.cargo/config.toml` would result in `/my/project/vendor`.
directory = "vendor"
Executable paths with arguments
Some Cargo commands invoke external programs, which can be configured as a path and some number of arguments.
The value may be an array of strings like ['/path/to/program', 'somearg']
or
a space-separated string like '/path/to/program somearg'
. If the path to the
executable contains a space, the list form must be used.
If Cargo is passing other arguments to the program such as a path to open or
run, they will be passed after the last specified argument in the value of an
option of this format. If the specified program does not have path separators,
Cargo will search PATH
for its executable.
Credentials
Configuration values with sensitive information are stored in the
$CARGO_HOME/credentials.toml
file. This file is automatically created and updated
by cargo login
. It follows the same format as Cargo config files.
[registry]
token = "…" # Access token for crates.io
[registries.<name>]
token = "…" # Access token for the named registry
Tokens are used by some Cargo commands such as cargo publish
for
authenticating with remote registries. Care should be taken to protect the
tokens and to keep them secret.
As with most other config values, tokens may be specified with environment
variables. The token for crates.io may be specified with the
CARGO_REGISTRY_TOKEN
environment variable. Tokens for other registries may
be specified with environment variables of the form
CARGO_REGISTRIES_<name>_TOKEN
where <name>
is the name of the registry in
all capital letters.
Configuration keys
This section documents all configuration keys. The description for keys with
variable parts are annotated with angled brackets like target.<triple>
where
the <triple>
part can be any target triple like
target.x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
.
paths
- Type: array of strings (paths)
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
An array of paths to local packages which are to be used as overrides for dependencies. For more information see the Overriding Dependencies guide.
[alias]
- Type: string or array of strings
- Default: see below
- Environment:
CARGO_ALIAS_<name>
The [alias]
table defines CLI command aliases. For example, running cargo b
is an alias for running cargo build
. Each key in the table is the
subcommand, and the value is the actual command to run. The value may be an
array of strings, where the first element is the command and the following are
arguments. It may also be a string, which will be split on spaces into
subcommand and arguments. The following aliases are built-in to Cargo:
[alias]
b = "build"
c = "check"
d = "doc"
t = "test"
r = "run"
rm = "remove"
Aliases are not allowed to redefine existing built-in commands.
Aliases are recursive:
[alias]
rr = "run --release"
recursive_example = "rr --example recursions"
[build]
The [build]
table controls build-time operations and compiler settings.
build.jobs
- Type: integer
- Default: number of logical CPUs
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_JOBS
Sets the maximum number of compiler processes to run in parallel. If negative, it sets the maximum number of compiler processes to the number of logical CPUs plus provided value. Should not be 0.
Can be overridden with the --jobs
CLI option.
build.rustc
- Type: string (program path)
- Default: "rustc"
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC
orRUSTC
Sets the executable to use for rustc
.
build.rustc-wrapper
- Type: string (program path)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WRAPPER
orRUSTC_WRAPPER
Sets a wrapper to execute instead of rustc
. The first argument passed to the
wrapper is the path to the actual executable to use
(i.e., build.rustc
, if that is set, or "rustc"
otherwise).
build.rustc-workspace-wrapper
- Type: string (program path)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_RUSTC_WORKSPACE_WRAPPER
orRUSTC_WORKSPACE_WRAPPER
Sets a wrapper to execute instead of rustc
, for workspace members only.
The first argument passed to the wrapper is the path to the actual
executable to use (i.e., build.rustc
, if that is set, or "rustc"
otherwise).
It affects the filename hash so that artifacts produced by the wrapper are cached separately.
build.rustdoc
- Type: string (program path)
- Default: "rustdoc"
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_RUSTDOC
orRUSTDOC
Sets the executable to use for rustdoc
.
build.target
- Type: string or array of strings
- Default: host platform
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_TARGET
The default target platform triples to compile to.
This allows passing either a string or an array of strings. Each string value is a target platform triple. The selected build targets will be built for each of the selected architectures.
The string value may also be a relative path to a .json
target spec file.
Can be overridden with the --target
CLI option.
[build]
target = ["x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu", "i686-unknown-linux-gnu"]
build.target-dir
- Type: string (path)
- Default: "target"
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_TARGET_DIR
orCARGO_TARGET_DIR
The path to where all compiler output is placed. The default if not specified
is a directory named target
located at the root of the workspace.
Can be overridden with the --target-dir
CLI option.
build.rustflags
- Type: string or array of strings
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_RUSTFLAGS
orCARGO_ENCODED_RUSTFLAGS
orRUSTFLAGS
Extra command-line flags to pass to rustc
. The value may be an array of
strings or a space-separated string.
There are four mutually exclusive sources of extra flags. They are checked in order, with the first one being used:
CARGO_ENCODED_RUSTFLAGS
environment variable.RUSTFLAGS
environment variable.- All matching
target.<triple>.rustflags
andtarget.<cfg>.rustflags
config entries joined together. build.rustflags
config value.
Additional flags may also be passed with the cargo rustc
command.
If the --target
flag (or build.target
) is used, then the
flags will only be passed to the compiler for the target. Things being built
for the host, such as build scripts or proc macros, will not receive the args.
Without --target
, the flags will be passed to all compiler invocations
(including build scripts and proc macros) because dependencies are shared. If
you have args that you do not want to pass to build scripts or proc macros and
are building for the host, pass --target
with the host triple.
It is not recommended to pass in flags that Cargo itself usually manages. For example, the flags driven by profiles are best handled by setting the appropriate profile setting.
Caution: Due to the low-level nature of passing flags directly to the compiler, this may cause a conflict with future versions of Cargo which may issue the same or similar flags on its own which may interfere with the flags you specify. This is an area where Cargo may not always be backwards compatible.
build.rustdocflags
- Type: string or array of strings
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_RUSTDOCFLAGS
orCARGO_ENCODED_RUSTDOCFLAGS
orRUSTDOCFLAGS
Extra command-line flags to pass to rustdoc
. The value may be an array of
strings or a space-separated string.
There are three mutually exclusive sources of extra flags. They are checked in order, with the first one being used:
CARGO_ENCODED_RUSTDOCFLAGS
environment variable.RUSTDOCFLAGS
environment variable.build.rustdocflags
config value.
Additional flags may also be passed with the cargo rustdoc
command.
build.incremental
- Type: bool
- Default: from profile
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_INCREMENTAL
orCARGO_INCREMENTAL
Whether or not to perform incremental compilation. The default if not set is to use the value from the profile. Otherwise this overrides the setting of all profiles.
The CARGO_INCREMENTAL
environment variable can be set to 1
to force enable
incremental compilation for all profiles, or 0
to disable it. This env var
overrides the config setting.
build.dep-info-basedir
- Type: string (path)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_BUILD_DEP_INFO_BASEDIR
Strips the given path prefix from dep info file paths. This config setting is intended to convert absolute paths to relative paths for tools that require relative paths.
The setting itself is a config-relative path. So, for example, a value of
"."
would strip all paths starting with the parent directory of the .cargo
directory.
build.pipelining
This option is deprecated and unused. Cargo always has pipelining enabled.
[doc]
The [doc]
table defines options for the cargo doc
command.
doc.browser
- Type: string or array of strings (program path with args)
- Default:
BROWSER
environment variable, or, if that is missing, opening the link in a system specific way
This option sets the browser to be used by cargo doc
, overriding the
BROWSER
environment variable when opening documentation with the --open
option.
[cargo-new]
The [cargo-new]
table defines defaults for the cargo new
command.
cargo-new.name
This option is deprecated and unused.
cargo-new.email
This option is deprecated and unused.
cargo-new.vcs
- Type: string
- Default: "git" or "none"
- Environment:
CARGO_CARGO_NEW_VCS
Specifies the source control system to use for initializing a new repository.
Valid values are git
, hg
(for Mercurial), pijul
, fossil
or none
to
disable this behavior. Defaults to git
, or none
if already inside a VCS
repository. Can be overridden with the --vcs
CLI option.
[env]
The [env]
section allows you to set additional environment variables for
build scripts, rustc invocations, cargo run
and cargo build
.
[env]
OPENSSL_DIR = "/opt/openssl"
By default, the variables specified will not override values that already exist
in the environment. This behavior can be changed by setting the force
flag.
Setting the relative
flag evaluates the value as a config-relative path that
is relative to the parent directory of the .cargo
directory that contains the
config.toml
file. The value of the environment variable will be the full
absolute path.
[env]
TMPDIR = { value = "/home/tmp", force = true }
OPENSSL_DIR = { value = "vendor/openssl", relative = true }
[future-incompat-report]
The [future-incompat-report]
table controls setting for future incompat reporting
future-incompat-report.frequency
- Type: string
- Default: "always"
- Environment:
CARGO_FUTURE_INCOMPAT_REPORT_FREQUENCY
Controls how often we display a notification to the terminal when a future incompat report is available. Possible values:
always
(default): Always display a notification when a command (e.g.cargo build
) produces a future incompat reportnever
: Never display a notification
[http]
The [http]
table defines settings for HTTP behavior. This includes fetching
crate dependencies and accessing remote git repositories.
http.debug
- Type: boolean
- Default: false
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_DEBUG
If true
, enables debugging of HTTP requests. The debug information can be
seen by setting the CARGO_LOG=cargo::ops::registry=debug
environment
variable (or use trace
for even more information).
Be wary when posting logs from this output in a public location. The output may include headers with authentication tokens which you don't want to leak! Be sure to review logs before posting them.
http.proxy
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_PROXY
orHTTPS_PROXY
orhttps_proxy
orhttp_proxy
Sets an HTTP and HTTPS proxy to use. The format is in libcurl format as in
[protocol://]host[:port]
. If not set, Cargo will also check the http.proxy
setting in your global git configuration. If none of those are set, the
HTTPS_PROXY
or https_proxy
environment variables set the proxy for HTTPS
requests, and http_proxy
sets it for HTTP requests.
http.timeout
- Type: integer
- Default: 30
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_TIMEOUT
orHTTP_TIMEOUT
Sets the timeout for each HTTP request, in seconds.
http.cainfo
- Type: string (path)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_CAINFO
Path to a Certificate Authority (CA) bundle file, used to verify TLS certificates. If not specified, Cargo attempts to use the system certificates.
http.check-revoke
- Type: boolean
- Default: true (Windows) false (all others)
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_CHECK_REVOKE
This determines whether or not TLS certificate revocation checks should be performed. This only works on Windows.
http.ssl-version
- Type: string or min/max table
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_SSL_VERSION
This sets the minimum TLS version to use. It takes a string, with one of the possible values of "default", "tlsv1", "tlsv1.0", "tlsv1.1", "tlsv1.2", or "tlsv1.3".
This may alternatively take a table with two keys, min
and max
, which each
take a string value of the same kind that specifies the minimum and maximum
range of TLS versions to use.
The default is a minimum version of "tlsv1.0" and a max of the newest version supported on your platform, typically "tlsv1.3".
http.low-speed-limit
- Type: integer
- Default: 10
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT
This setting controls timeout behavior for slow connections. If the average
transfer speed in bytes per second is below the given value for
http.timeout
seconds (default 30 seconds), then the
connection is considered too slow and Cargo will abort and retry.
http.multiplexing
- Type: boolean
- Default: true
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_MULTIPLEXING
When true
, Cargo will attempt to use the HTTP2 protocol with multiplexing.
This allows multiple requests to use the same connection, usually improving
performance when fetching multiple files. If false
, Cargo will use HTTP 1.1
without pipelining.
http.user-agent
- Type: string
- Default: Cargo's version
- Environment:
CARGO_HTTP_USER_AGENT
Specifies a custom user-agent header to use. The default if not specified is a string that includes Cargo's version.
[install]
The [install]
table defines defaults for the cargo install
command.
install.root
- Type: string (path)
- Default: Cargo's home directory
- Environment:
CARGO_INSTALL_ROOT
Sets the path to the root directory for installing executables for cargo install
. Executables go into a bin
directory underneath the root.
To track information of installed executables, some extra files, such as
.crates.toml
and .crates2.json
, are also created under this root.
The default if not specified is Cargo's home directory (default .cargo
in
your home directory).
Can be overridden with the --root
command-line option.
[net]
The [net]
table controls networking configuration.
net.retry
- Type: integer
- Default: 2
- Environment:
CARGO_NET_RETRY
Number of times to retry possibly spurious network errors.
net.git-fetch-with-cli
- Type: boolean
- Default: false
- Environment:
CARGO_NET_GIT_FETCH_WITH_CLI
If this is true
, then Cargo will use the git
executable to fetch registry
indexes and git dependencies. If false
, then it uses a built-in git
library.
Setting this to true
can be helpful if you have special authentication
requirements that Cargo does not support. See Git
Authentication for more information about
setting up git authentication.
net.offline
- Type: boolean
- Default: false
- Environment:
CARGO_NET_OFFLINE
If this is true
, then Cargo will avoid accessing the network, and attempt to
proceed with locally cached data. If false
, Cargo will access the network as
needed, and generate an error if it encounters a network error.
Can be overridden with the --offline
command-line option.
[patch]
Just as you can override dependencies using [patch]
in
Cargo.toml
, you can
override them in the cargo configuration file to apply those patches to
any affected build. The format is identical to the one used in
Cargo.toml
.
Since .cargo/config.toml
files are not usually checked into source
control, you should prefer patching using Cargo.toml
where possible to
ensure that other developers can compile your crate in their own
environments. Patching through cargo configuration files is generally
only appropriate when the patch section is automatically generated by an
external build tool.
If a given dependency is patched both in a cargo configuration file and
a Cargo.toml
file, the patch in the configuration file is used. If
multiple configuration files patch the same dependency, standard cargo
configuration merging is used, which prefers the value defined closest
to the current directory, with $HOME/.cargo/config.toml
taking the
lowest precedence.
Relative path
dependencies in such a [patch]
section are resolved
relative to the configuration file they appear in.
[profile]
The [profile]
table can be used to globally change profile settings, and
override settings specified in Cargo.toml
. It has the same syntax and
options as profiles specified in Cargo.toml
. See the Profiles chapter for
details about the options.
[profile.<name>.build-override]
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_BUILD_OVERRIDE_<key>
The build-override table overrides settings for build scripts, proc macros, and their dependencies. It has the same keys as a normal profile. See the overrides section for more details.
[profile.<name>.package.<name>]
- Environment: not supported
The package table overrides settings for specific packages. It has the same
keys as a normal profile, minus the panic
, lto
, and rpath
settings. See
the overrides section for more details.
profile.<name>.codegen-units
- Type: integer
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_CODEGEN_UNITS
See codegen-units.
profile.<name>.debug
- Type: integer or boolean
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_DEBUG
See debug.
profile.<name>.split-debuginfo
- Type: string
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_SPLIT_DEBUGINFO
See split-debuginfo.
profile.<name>.debug-assertions
- Type: boolean
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_DEBUG_ASSERTIONS
See debug-assertions.
profile.<name>.incremental
- Type: boolean
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_INCREMENTAL
See incremental.
profile.<name>.lto
- Type: string or boolean
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_LTO
See lto.
profile.<name>.overflow-checks
- Type: boolean
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_OVERFLOW_CHECKS
See overflow-checks.
profile.<name>.opt-level
- Type: integer or string
- Default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_OPT_LEVEL
See opt-level.
profile.<name>.panic
- Type: string
- default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_PANIC
See panic.
profile.<name>.rpath
- Type: boolean
- default: See profile docs.
- Environment:
CARGO_PROFILE_<name>_RPATH
See rpath.
[registries]
The [registries]
table is used for specifying additional registries. It
consists of a sub-table for each named registry.
registries.<name>.index
- Type: string (url)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_REGISTRIES_<name>_INDEX
Specifies the URL of the git index for the registry.
registries.<name>.token
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_REGISTRIES_<name>_TOKEN
Specifies the authentication token for the given registry. This value should
only appear in the credentials file. This is used for registry
commands like cargo publish
that require authentication.
Can be overridden with the --token
command-line option.
[registry]
The [registry]
table controls the default registry used when one is not
specified.
registry.index
This value is no longer accepted and should not be used.
registry.default
- Type: string
- Default:
"crates-io"
- Environment:
CARGO_REGISTRY_DEFAULT
The name of the registry (from the registries
table) to use
by default for registry commands like cargo publish
.
Can be overridden with the --registry
command-line option.
registry.token
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_REGISTRY_TOKEN
Specifies the authentication token for crates.io. This value should only
appear in the credentials file. This is used for registry
commands like cargo publish
that require authentication.
Can be overridden with the --token
command-line option.
[source]
The [source]
table defines the registry sources available. See Source
Replacement for more information. It consists of a sub-table for each named
source. A source should only define one kind (directory, registry,
local-registry, or git).
source.<name>.replace-with
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
If set, replace this source with the given named source or named registry.
source.<name>.directory
- Type: string (path)
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the path to a directory to use as a directory source.
source.<name>.registry
- Type: string (url)
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the URL to use for a registry source.
source.<name>.local-registry
- Type: string (path)
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the path to a directory to use as a local registry source.
source.<name>.git
- Type: string (url)
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the URL to use for a git repository source.
source.<name>.branch
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the branch name to use for a git repository.
If none of branch
, tag
, or rev
is set, defaults to the master
branch.
source.<name>.tag
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the tag name to use for a git repository.
If none of branch
, tag
, or rev
is set, defaults to the master
branch.
source.<name>.rev
- Type: string
- Default: none
- Environment: not supported
Sets the revision to use for a git repository.
If none of branch
, tag
, or rev
is set, defaults to the master
branch.
[target]
The [target]
table is used for specifying settings for specific platform
targets. It consists of a sub-table which is either a platform triple or a
cfg()
expression. The given values will be used if the target platform
matches either the <triple>
value or the <cfg>
expression.
[target.thumbv7m-none-eabi]
linker = "arm-none-eabi-gcc"
runner = "my-emulator"
rustflags = ["…", "…"]
[target.'cfg(all(target_arch = "arm", target_os = "none"))']
runner = "my-arm-wrapper"
rustflags = ["…", "…"]
cfg
values come from those built-in to the compiler (run rustc --print=cfg
to view), values set by build scripts, and extra --cfg
flags passed to
rustc
(such as those defined in RUSTFLAGS
). Do not try to match on
debug_assertions
or Cargo features like feature="foo"
.
If using a target spec JSON file, the <triple>
value is the filename stem.
For example --target foo/bar.json
would match [target.bar]
.
target.<triple>.ar
This option is deprecated and unused.
target.<triple>.linker
- Type: string (program path)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_TARGET_<triple>_LINKER
Specifies the linker which is passed to rustc
(via -C linker
) when the
<triple>
is being compiled for. By default, the linker is not overridden.
target.<triple>.runner
- Type: string or array of strings (program path with args)
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_TARGET_<triple>_RUNNER
If a runner is provided, executables for the target <triple>
will be
executed by invoking the specified runner with the actual executable passed as
an argument. This applies to cargo run
, cargo test
and cargo bench
commands. By default, compiled executables are executed directly.
target.<cfg>.runner
This is similar to the target runner, but using
a cfg()
expression. If both a <triple>
and <cfg>
runner match,
the <triple>
will take precedence. It is an error if more than one
<cfg>
runner matches the current target.
target.<triple>.rustflags
- Type: string or array of strings
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_TARGET_<triple>_RUSTFLAGS
Passes a set of custom flags to the compiler for this <triple>
. The value
may be an array of strings or a space-separated string.
See build.rustflags
for more details on the different
ways to specific extra flags.
target.<cfg>.rustflags
This is similar to the target rustflags, but
using a cfg()
expression. If several <cfg>
and <triple>
entries
match the current target, the flags are joined together.
target.<triple>.<links>
The links sub-table provides a way to override a build script. When
specified, the build script for the given links
library will not be
run, and the given values will be used instead.
[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.foo]
rustc-link-lib = ["foo"]
rustc-link-search = ["/path/to/foo"]
rustc-flags = "-L /some/path"
rustc-cfg = ['key="value"']
rustc-env = {key = "value"}
rustc-cdylib-link-arg = ["…"]
metadata_key1 = "value"
metadata_key2 = "value"
[term]
The [term]
table controls terminal output and interaction.
term.quiet
- Type: boolean
- Default: false
- Environment:
CARGO_TERM_QUIET
Controls whether or not log messages are displayed by Cargo.
Specifying the --quiet
flag will override and force quiet output.
Specifying the --verbose
flag will override and disable quiet output.
term.verbose
- Type: boolean
- Default: false
- Environment:
CARGO_TERM_VERBOSE
Controls whether or not extra detailed messages are displayed by Cargo.
Specifying the --quiet
flag will override and disable verbose output.
Specifying the --verbose
flag will override and force verbose output.
term.color
- Type: string
- Default: "auto"
- Environment:
CARGO_TERM_COLOR
Controls whether or not colored output is used in the terminal. Possible values:
auto
(default): Automatically detect if color support is available on the terminal.always
: Always display colors.never
: Never display colors.
Can be overridden with the --color
command-line option.
term.progress.when
- Type: string
- Default: "auto"
- Environment:
CARGO_TERM_PROGRESS_WHEN
Controls whether or not progress bar is shown in the terminal. Possible values:
auto
(default): Intelligently guess whether to show progress bar.always
: Always show progress bar.never
: Never show progress bar.
term.progress.width
- Type: integer
- Default: none
- Environment:
CARGO_TERM_PROGRESS_WIDTH
Sets the width for progress bar.