cargo-generate-rpm

Cargo helper command to generate a binary RPM package (.rpm) from Cargo project.

This command does not depend on rpmbuild and generates an RPM package file without a spec file by using rpm-rs.

Rust cargo-generate-rpm at crates.io

Install

sh cargo install cargo-generate-rpm

Usage

sh cargo build --release strip -s target/release/XXX cargo generate-rpm

Upon run cargo generate-rpm on your cargo project, a binary RPM package file will be created in target/generate-rpm/XXX.rpm. You can change the RPM package file location using -o option.

In advance, run cargo run --release and strip the debug symbols (strip -s target/release/XXX), because these are not run upon cargo generate-rpm as of now.

Configuration

This command obtains RPM metadata from the Cargo.toml file:

[package.metadata.generate-rpm] options

[package.metadata.generate-rpm.{requires,obsoletes,conflicts,provides}] options

Dependencies such as "requires", "obsoletes", "conflicts", and "provides" shall be written in similar way as dependencies in Cargo.toml.

toml [package.metadata.generate-rpm.requires] alternative = "*" filesystem = ">= 3"

This example states that the package requires with any versions of alternative and all versions of filesystem 3.0 or higher.

Following table lists the version comparisons:

|Comparison|Meaning| |----------|-------| |package = "*"|A package at any version number| |package = "< version"|A package with a version number less than version| |package = "<= version"| A package with a version number less than or equal to version| |package = "= version"| A package with a version number equal to version| |package = "> version"|A package with a version number greater than version| |package = ">= version"| A package with a version number greater than or equal to version|

It is necessary to place a space between version and symbols such as <, <=, etc... package = "version" is not accepted, instead use package = "= version".

This command automatically determines what shared libraries a package requires. There may be times when the automatic dependency processing is not desired. In this case, the package author may set package.metadata.generate-rpm.auto-req to "no" or the user who executes this command may specify command line option --auto-req no.

Advanced Usage

Workspace

To generate an RPM package from a member of a workspace, execute cargo generate-rpm in the workspace directory with specifying the package (directory path) with option -p:

sh cargo build --release strip -s target/release/XXX cargo generate-rpm -p XXX

[package.metadata.generate-rpm] options should be written in XXX/Cargo.toml.

When the option -p specified, first, the asset file source shall be treated as a relative path from the current directory. If not found, it shall be treated as a relative path from the directory of the package. If both not found, cargo generate-rpm shall fail with an error.

For example, source = target/bin/XXX would usually be treated as a relative path from the current directory. Because all packages in the workspace share a common output directory that is located target in workspace directory.

Cross compilation

This command supports --target-dir and --target option like cargo build. Depending on these options, this command changes the RPM package file location and replaces target/release/ of the source locations of the assets.

sh cargo build --release --target x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu cargo generate-rpm --target x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu

When --target-dir TARGET-DIR and --target x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu are specified, a binary RPM file will be created at TARGET-DIR/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/generate-rpm/XXX.rpm instead of target/generate-rpm/XXX.rpm. In this case, the source of the asset { source = "target/release/XXX", dest = "/usr/bin/XXX" } will be treated as TARGET-DIR/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/XXX instead of target/release/XXX.

You can use CARGO_BUILD_TARGET environment variable instead of --target option and CARGO_BUILD_TARGET_DIR or CARGO_TARGET_DIR instead of --target-dir.

Payload compress type

The default payload compress type of the generated RPM file is zstd. You can specify the payload compress type with --payload-compress TYPE: none, gzip, or zstd.

For the legacy system (e.g. centos7), specify legacy compress type explicitly e.g. --payload-compress none.