A cargo plugin for showing an overview of a crate's modules.
With time, as your Rust projects grow bigger and bigger, it gets more and more important to properly structure your code. Fortunately Rust provides us with a quite sophisticated module system, allowing us to neatly split up our crates into arbitrarily small sub-modules of types and functions. While this helps to avoid monolithic and unstructured chunks of code, it can also make it hard at times to still mentally stay on top of the over-all high-level structure of the project at hand.
This is where cargo-modules
comes into play:
Install cargo-modules
via:
cargo install cargo-modules
cargo modules generate tree <OPTIONS>
USAGE:
cargo-modules generate tree [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
--all-features Activate all available features
-h, --help Prints help information
--lib Process only this package's library
--no-default-features Do not activate the `default` feature
-V, --version Prints version information
--verbose Enable verbose messages during command execution
--with-orphans Include orphaned modules (i.e. unused files in /src)
--with-tests Include tests (e.g. `#[cfg(test)] mod tests { … }`)
--with-types Include types (e.g. structs, enums)
OPTIONS:
--bin <bin> Process only the specified binary
--features <features>... List of features to activate. This will be ignored if `--cargo-all-features`
is provided
--focus-on <focus-on> Focus the graph on a particular path's environment
--manifest-path <manifest-path> [default: ./Cargo.toml]
--max-depth <max-depth> The maximum depth of the generated graph relative to the node selected by
'--focus-on'
-p, --package <package> Package to process (see `cargo help pkgid`)
--target <target> rustc target
The following image is the result of using the following command to generate a tree of the smoke
test project within its own repo:
cd ./tests/projects/smoke
cargo-modules generate tree --with-types --with-tests --with-orphans
The individual lines are structured as follows:
└── <keyword> <name>: <visibility> <test-attributes>
The <keyword>
is highlighted in 🔵 blue to visually separate it from the name.
Test modules and functions have their corresponding <test-attributes>
(i.e. #[cfg(test)]
/ #[test]
) printed next to them in gray and cyan.
The <visibility>
(more info) is further more highlighted by the following colors:
Color | Meaning |
---|---|
🟢 green | Items visible to all and everything (i.e. pub ) |
🟡 yellow | Items visible to the current crate (i.e. pub(crate) ) |
🟠 orange | Items visible to a certain parent module (i.e. pub(in path) ) |
🔴 red | Items visible to the current module (i.e. pub(self) , implied by lack of pub … ) |
🟣 purple | Orphaned modules (i.e. a file exists on disk but no corresponding mod … ) |
cargo modules generate graph <OPTIONS>
USAGE:
cargo-modules generate graph [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
--all-features Activate all available features
-h, --help Prints help information
--lib Process only this package's library
--no-default-features Do not activate the `default` feature
-V, --version Prints version information
--verbose Enable verbose messages during command execution
--with-externs Include used modules and types from extern crates
--with-orphans Include orphaned modules (i.e. unused files in /src)
--with-tests Include tests (e.g. `#[cfg(test)] mod tests { … }`)
--with-types Include types (e.g. structs, enums)
--with-uses Include used modules and types
OPTIONS:
--bin <bin> Process only the specified binary
--features <features>... List of features to activate. This will be ignored if `--cargo-all-features`
is provided
--focus-on <focus-on> Focus the graph on a particular path's environment
--layout <layout> The graph layout algorithm to use (e.g. dot, neato, twopi, circo, fdp, sfdp)
[default: neato]
--manifest-path <manifest-path> [default: ./Cargo.toml]
--max-depth <max-depth> The maximum depth of the generated graph relative to the node selected by
'--focus-on'
-p, --package <package> Package to process (see `cargo help pkgid`)
--target <target> rustc target
If you have xdot installed on your system, you can run this using:
`cargo modules generate graph | xdot -`
The following image is the result of using the following command to generate a graph of the smoke
test project within its own repo:
cd ./tests/projects/smoke
cargo-modules generate graph --with-types --with-tests --with-orphans | dot -Tsvg
The individual nodes are structured as follows:
┌────────────────────────┐
│ <visibility> <keyword> │
├────────────────────────┤
│ <path> │
└────────────────────────┘
The <visibility>
(more info) is further more highlighted by the following colors:
Color | Meaning |
---|---|
🔵 blue | Crates (i.e. their implicit root module) |
🟢 green | Items visible to all and everything (i.e. pub ) |
🟡 yellow | Items visible to the current crate (i.e. pub(crate) ) |
🟠 orange | Items visible to a certain parent module (i.e. pub(in path) ) |
🔴 red | Items visible to the current module (i.e. pub(self) , implied by lack of pub … ) |
🟣 purple | Orphaned modules (i.e. a file exists on disk but no corresponding mod … ) |
cargo-modules checks for the presence of a NO_COLOR
environment variable that, when present (regardless of its value), prevents the addition of color to the console output.
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct,
and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
We use SemVer for versioning. For the versions available, see the tags on this repository.
This project is licensed under the MPL-2.0 – see the LICENSE.md file for details.