A cargo subcommand for displaying when Rust dependencies are out of date
cargo-outdated
is for displaying when dependencies have newer versions available.
Once installed (see below) running cargo outdated
in a project directory looks like the following:
``` $ cargo outdated Checking for SemVer compatible updates...Done Checking for the latest updates...Done The following dependencies have newer versions available:
Name Project Ver SemVer Compat Latest Ver
regex->regex-syntax 0.2.1 0.2.2 0.2.2
regex->memchr 0.1.5 0.1.6 0.1.6
clap 1.2.3 1.2.5 1.4.7
tabwriter 0.1.23 0.1.24 0.1.24
clippy 0.0.11 0.0.22 0.0.22
clap->ansi_term 0.6.3 -- 0.7.0
regex->aho-corasick 0.3.0 0.3.4 0.4.0
ansi_term 0.6.3 -- 0.7.0
```
cargo-outdated
can be installed with cargo install
$ cargo install cargo-outdated
Follow these instructions to compile cargo-outdated
, then skip down to Installation.
cargo
and Rust installed$ git clone https://github.com/kbknapp/cargo-outdated && cd cargo-outdated
$ cargo build --release
target/release/cargo-outdated
All you need to do is place cargo-outdated
somewhere in your $PATH
. Then run cargo outdated
anywhere in your project directory. For full details see below.
You have two options, place cargo-outdated
into a directory that is already located in your $PATH
variable (To see which directories those are, open a terminal and type echo "${PATH//:/\n}"
, the quotation marks are important), or you can add a custom directory to your $PATH
Option 1
If you have write permission to a directory listed in your $PATH
or you have root permission (or via sudo
), simply copy the cargo-outdated
to that directory # sudo cp cargo-outdated /usr/local/bin
Option 2
If you do not have root, sudo
, or write permission to any directory already in $PATH
you can create a directory inside your home directory, and add that. Many people use $HOME/.bin
to keep it hidden (and not clutter your home directory), or $HOME/bin
if you want it to be always visible. Here is an example to make the directory, add it to $PATH
, and copy cargo-outdated
there.
Simply change bin
to whatever you'd like to name the directory, and .bashrc
to whatever your shell startup file is (usually .bashrc
, .bash_profile
, or .zshrc
)
sh
$ mkdir ~/bin
$ echo "export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin" >> ~/.bashrc
$ cp cargo-outdated ~/bin
$ source ~/.bashrc
On Windows 7/8 you can add directory to the PATH
variable by opening a command line as an administrator and running
sh
C:\> setx path "%path%;C:\path\to\cargo-outdated\binary"
Otherwise, ensure you have the cargo-outdated
binary in the directory which you operating in the command line from, because Windows automatically adds your current directory to PATH (i.e. if you open a command line to C:\my_project\
to use cargo-outdated
ensure cargo-outdated.exe
is inside that directory as well).
There are a few options for using cargo-outdated
which should be somewhat self explanitory.
``` cargo-outdated v0.3.0 Displays information about project dependency versions
USAGE: cargo outdated [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS: -h, --help Prints help information -R, --root-deps-only Only check root dependencies (Equivalent to --depth=1) -V, --version Prints version information -v, --verbose Print verbose output
OPTIONS:
-d, --depth
cargo-outdated
is released under the terms of either the MIT or Apache 2.0 license. See the LICENSE-MIT or LICENSE-APACHE file for the details.