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Rust

docs/lang/rust.md

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Rust

Rust/cargo can be installed which uses rustup under the hood. mise will install rustup if it is not already installed and install the requested toolchain, components, and targets. By default, mise respects the RUSTUP_HOME and CARGO_HOME environment variables for the home directories and falls back to their standard location (~/.rustup and ~/.cargo) if they are not set. You can change this by setting the MISE_RUSTUP_HOME and MISE_CARGO_HOME environment variables if you'd like to isolate mise's rustup/cargo from your other rustup/cargo installations.

Unlike most tools, these won't exist inside of ~/.local/share/mise/installs because they are managed by rustup. mise keeps a symlink there for install tracking, sets the RUSTUP_TOOLCHAIN environment variable to the requested version, and asks rustup to install any configured components or targets when you run mise install.

Usage

Use the latest stable version of rust:

sh
mise use -g rust
cargo build

Use the latest beta version of rust:

sh
mise use -g rust@beta
cargo build

Use a specific version of rust:

sh
mise use -g [email protected]
cargo build

Tool Options

The following tool-options are available for the rust backend—these go in [tools] in mise.toml.

install_env

Set environment variables for rustup install commands:

toml
[tools]
rust = { version = "latest", install_env = { RUSTUP_DIST_SERVER = "https://static.rust-lang.org" } }

components

The components option allows you to specify which components to install. Multiple components can be specified as an array or by separating them with a comma. The set of available components may vary with different releases and toolchains. Please consult the Rust documentation for the most up-to-date list of components.

toml
[tools]
"rust" = { version = "1.83.0", components = ["rust-src", "llvm-tools"] }

If the Rust toolchain is already installed, mise install will still add any missing configured components.

profile

The profile option allows you to specify the type of release to install. The following values are supported:

  • minimal: Includes as few components as possible to get a working compiler (rustc, rust-std, and cargo)
  • default: Includes all of the components in the minimal profile, and adds rust-docs, rustfmt, and clippy
  • complete: Includes all the components available through rustup. This should never be used, as it includes every component ever included in the metadata and thus will almost always fail.

If not set, it defaults to the profile configured in rustup. You can check your current default by running rustup show profile.

toml
[tools]
"rust" = { version = "1.83.0", profile = "minimal" }

targets

The targets option allows you to specify a list of platforms to install for cross-compilation. Multiple targets can be specified as an array or by separating them with a comma.

toml
[tools]
"rust" = {
  version = "1.83.0",
  targets = ["wasm32-unknown-unknown", "thumbv2-none-eabi"],
}

If the Rust toolchain is already installed, mise install will still add any missing configured targets.

Settings

<script setup> import Settings from '/components/settings.vue'; </script> <Settings child="rust" :level="3" />