Attributes
Syntax
Attribute :
InnerAttribute | OuterAttributeInnerAttribute :
#![
MetaItem]
OuterAttribute :
#[
MetaItem]
MetaItem :
IDENTIFIER
| IDENTIFIER=
LITERAL
| IDENTIFIER(
LITERAL)
| IDENTIFIER(
MetaSeq)
| IDENTIFIER(
MetaSeq,
)
MetaSeq :
EMPTY
| MetaItem
| MetaSeq,
MetaItem
Any item declaration may have an attribute applied to it. Attributes in Rust are modeled on Attributes in ECMA-335, with the syntax coming from ECMA-334 (C#). An attribute is a general, free-form metadatum that is interpreted according to name, convention, and language and compiler version. Attributes may appear as any of:
- A single identifier, the attribute name
- An identifier followed by the equals sign '=' and a literal, providing a key/value pair
- An identifier followed by a parenthesized literal, providing a key/value pair
- An identifier followed by a parenthesized list of sub-attribute arguments
Attributes with a bang ("!") after the hash ("#") apply to the item that the attribute is declared within. Attributes that do not have a bang after the hash apply to the item that follows the attribute.
An example of attributes:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { // General metadata applied to the enclosing module or crate. #![crate_type = "lib"] // A function marked as a unit test #[test] fn test_foo() { /* ... */ } // A conditionally-compiled module #[cfg(target_os = "linux")] mod bar { /* ... */ } // A lint attribute used to suppress a warning/error #[allow(non_camel_case_types)] type int8_t = i8; #}
Crate-only attributes
crate_name
- specify the crate's crate name.crate_type
- see linkage.no_builtins
- disable optimizing certain code patterns to invocations of library functions that are assumed to existno_main
- disable emitting themain
symbol. Useful when some other object being linked to definesmain
.no_start
- disable linking to thenative
crate, which specifies the "start" language item.no_std
- disable linking to thestd
crate.recursion_limit
- Sets the maximum depth for potentially infinitely-recursive compile-time operations like auto-dereference or macro expansion. The default is#![recursion_limit="64"]
.windows_subsystem
- Indicates that when this crate is linked for a Windows target it will configure the resulting binary's subsystem via the linker. Valid values for this attribute areconsole
andwindows
, corresponding to those two respective subsystems. More subsystems may be allowed in the future, and this attribute is ignored on non-Windows targets.
Module-only attributes
no_implicit_prelude
- disable injectinguse std::prelude::*
in this module.path
- specifies the file to load the module from.#[path="foo.rs"] mod bar;
is equivalent tomod bar { /* contents of foo.rs */ }
. The path is taken relative to the directory that the current module is in.
Function-only attributes
main
- indicates that this function should be passed to the entry point, rather than the function in the crate root namedmain
.test
- indicates that this function is a test function, to only be compiled in case of--test
.ignore
- indicates that this test function is disabled.
should_panic
- indicates that this test function should panic, inverting the success condition.cold
- The function is unlikely to be executed, so optimize it (and calls to it) differently.
FFI attributes
On an extern
block, the following attributes are interpreted:
link_args
- specify arguments to the linker, rather than just the library name and type. This is feature gated and the exact behavior is implementation-defined (due to variety of linker invocation syntax).link
- indicate that a native library should be linked to for the declarations in this block to be linked correctly.link
supports an optionalkind
key with three possible values:dylib
,static
, andframework
. See external blocks for more about external blocks. Two examples:#[link(name = "readline")]
and#[link(name = "CoreFoundation", kind = "framework")]
.linked_from
- indicates what native library this block of FFI items is coming from. This attribute is of the form#[linked_from = "foo"]
wherefoo
is the name of a library in either#[link]
or a-l
flag. This attribute is currently required to export symbols from a Rust dynamic library on Windows, and it is feature gated behind thelinked_from
feature.
On declarations inside an extern
block, the following attributes are
interpreted:
link_name
- the name of the symbol that this function or static should be imported as.linkage
- on a static, this specifies the linkage type.
See type layout for documentation on the repr
attribute
which can be used to control type layout.
Macro-related attributes
-
macro_use
on amod
— macros defined in this module will be visible in the module's parent, after this module has been included. -
macro_use
on anextern crate
— load macros from this crate. An optional list of names#[macro_use(foo, bar)]
restricts the import to just those macros named. Theextern crate
must appear at the crate root, not insidemod
, which ensures proper function of the$crate
macro variable. -
macro_reexport
on anextern crate
— re-export the named macros. -
macro_export
- export a macro for cross-crate usage. -
no_link
on anextern crate
— even if we load this crate for macros, don't link it into the output.
See the macros section of the book for more information on macro scope.
Miscellaneous attributes
export_name
- on statics and functions, this determines the name of the exported symbol.link_section
- on statics and functions, this specifies the section of the object file that this item's contents will be placed into.no_mangle
- on any item, do not apply the standard name mangling. Set the symbol for this item to its identifier.must_use
- on structs and enums, will warn if a value of this type isn't used or assigned to a variable. You may also include an optional message by using#[must_use = "message"]
which will be given alongside the warning.
Deprecation
The deprecated
attribute marks an item as deprecated. It has two optional
fields, since
and note
.
since
expects a version number, as in#[deprecated(since = "1.4.1")]
rustc
doesn't know anything about versions, but external tools likeclippy
may check the validity of this field.
note
is a free text field, allowing you to provide an explanation about the deprecation and preferred alternatives.
Only public items can be given the
#[deprecated]
attribute. #[deprecated]
on a module is inherited by all
child items of that module.
rustc
will issue warnings on usage of #[deprecated]
items. rustdoc
will
show item deprecation, including the since
version and note
, if available.
Here's an example.
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { #[deprecated(since = "5.2", note = "foo was rarely used. Users should instead use bar")] pub fn foo() {} pub fn bar() {} #}
The RFC contains motivations and more details.
Documentation
The doc
attribute is used to document items and fields. Doc comments
are transformed into doc
attributes.
See The Rustdoc Book for reference material on this attribute.
Conditional compilation
Sometimes one wants to have different compiler outputs from the same code, depending on build target, such as targeted operating system, or to enable release builds.
Configuration options are boolean (on or off) and are named either with a
single identifier (e.g. foo
) or an identifier and a string (e.g. foo = "bar"
;
the quotes are required and spaces around the =
are unimportant). Note that
similarly-named options, such as foo
, foo="bar"
and foo="baz"
may each be set
or unset independently.
Configuration options are either provided by the compiler or passed in on the
command line using --cfg
(e.g. rustc main.rs --cfg foo --cfg 'bar="baz"'
).
Rust code then checks for their presence using the #[cfg(...)]
attribute:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { // The function is only included in the build when compiling for macOS #[cfg(target_os = "macos")] fn macos_only() { // ... } // This function is only included when either foo or bar is defined #[cfg(any(foo, bar))] fn needs_foo_or_bar() { // ... } // This function is only included when compiling for a unixish OS with a 32-bit // architecture #[cfg(all(unix, target_pointer_width = "32"))] fn on_32bit_unix() { // ... } // This function is only included when foo is not defined #[cfg(not(foo))] fn needs_not_foo() { // ... } #}
This illustrates some conditional compilation can be achieved using the
#[cfg(...)]
attribute. any
, all
and not
can be used to assemble
arbitrarily complex configurations through nesting.
The following configurations must be defined by the implementation:
target_arch = "..."
- Target CPU architecture, such as"x86"
,"x86_64"
"mips"
,"powerpc"
,"powerpc64"
,"arm"
, or"aarch64"
. This value is closely related to the first element of the platform target triple, though it is not identical.target_os = "..."
- Operating system of the target, examples include"windows"
,"macos"
,"ios"
,"linux"
,"android"
,"freebsd"
,"dragonfly"
,"bitrig"
,"openbsd"
or"netbsd"
. This value is closely related to the second and third element of the platform target triple, though it is not identical.target_family = "..."
- Operating system family of the target, e. g."unix"
or"windows"
. The value of this configuration option is defined as a configuration itself, likeunix
orwindows
.unix
- Seetarget_family
.windows
- Seetarget_family
.target_env = ".."
- Further disambiguates the target platform with information about the ABI/libc. Presently this value is either"gnu"
,"msvc"
,"musl"
, or the empty string. For historical reasons this value has only been defined as non-empty when needed for disambiguation. Thus on many GNU platforms this value will be empty. This value is closely related to the fourth element of the platform target triple, though it is not identical. For example, embedded ABIs such asgnueabihf
will simply definetarget_env
as"gnu"
.target_endian = "..."
- Endianness of the target CPU, either"little"
or"big"
.target_pointer_width = "..."
- Target pointer width in bits. This is set to"32"
for targets with 32-bit pointers, and likewise set to"64"
for 64-bit pointers.target_has_atomic = "..."
- Set of integer sizes on which the target can perform atomic operations. Values are"8"
,"16"
,"32"
,"64"
and"ptr"
.target_vendor = "..."
- Vendor of the target, for exampleapple
,pc
, or simply"unknown"
.test
- Enabled when compiling the test harness (using the--test
flag).debug_assertions
- Enabled by default when compiling without optimizations. This can be used to enable extra debugging code in development but not in production. For example, it controls the behavior of the standard library'sdebug_assert!
macro.
You can also set another attribute based on a cfg
variable with cfg_attr
:
#[cfg_attr(a, b)]
This is the same as #[b]
if a
is set by cfg
, and nothing otherwise.
Lastly, configuration options can be used in expressions by invoking the cfg!
macro: cfg!(a)
evaluates to true
if a
is set, and false
otherwise.
Lint check attributes
A lint check names a potentially undesirable coding pattern, such as unreachable code or omitted documentation, for the static entity to which the attribute applies.
For any lint check C
:
allow(C)
overrides the check forC
so that violations will go unreported,deny(C)
signals an error after encountering a violation ofC
,forbid(C)
is the same asdeny(C)
, but also forbids changing the lint level afterwards,warn(C)
warns about violations ofC
but continues compilation.
The lint checks supported by the compiler can be found via rustc -W help
,
along with their default settings. Compiler
plugins can provide additional lint checks.
pub mod m1 {
// Missing documentation is ignored here
#[allow(missing_docs)]
pub fn undocumented_one() -> i32 { 1 }
// Missing documentation signals a warning here
#[warn(missing_docs)]
pub fn undocumented_too() -> i32 { 2 }
// Missing documentation signals an error here
#[deny(missing_docs)]
pub fn undocumented_end() -> i32 { 3 }
}
This example shows how one can use allow
and warn
to toggle a particular
check on and off:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { #[warn(missing_docs)] pub mod m2{ #[allow(missing_docs)] pub mod nested { // Missing documentation is ignored here pub fn undocumented_one() -> i32 { 1 } // Missing documentation signals a warning here, // despite the allow above. #[warn(missing_docs)] pub fn undocumented_two() -> i32 { 2 } } // Missing documentation signals a warning here pub fn undocumented_too() -> i32 { 3 } } #}
This example shows how one can use forbid
to disallow uses of allow
for
that lint check:
#[forbid(missing_docs)]
pub mod m3 {
// Attempting to toggle warning signals an error here
#[allow(missing_docs)]
/// Returns 2.
pub fn undocumented_too() -> i32 { 2 }
}
Inline attribute
The inline attribute suggests that the compiler should place a copy of the function or static in the caller, rather than generating code to call the function or access the static where it is defined.
The compiler automatically inlines functions based on internal heuristics. Incorrectly inlining functions can actually make the program slower, so it should be used with care.
#[inline]
and #[inline(always)]
always cause the function to be serialized
into the crate metadata to allow cross-crate inlining.
There are three different types of inline attributes:
#[inline]
hints the compiler to perform an inline expansion.#[inline(always)]
asks the compiler to always perform an inline expansion.#[inline(never)]
asks the compiler to never perform an inline expansion.
derive
The derive
attribute allows certain traits to be automatically implemented
for data structures. For example, the following will create an impl
for the
PartialEq
and Clone
traits for Foo
, the type parameter T
will be given
the PartialEq
or Clone
constraints for the appropriate impl
:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { #[derive(PartialEq, Clone)] struct Foo<T> { a: i32, b: T, } #}
The generated impl
for PartialEq
is equivalent to
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { # struct Foo<T> { a: i32, b: T } impl<T: PartialEq> PartialEq for Foo<T> { fn eq(&self, other: &Foo<T>) -> bool { self.a == other.a && self.b == other.b } fn ne(&self, other: &Foo<T>) -> bool { self.a != other.a || self.b != other.b } } #}
You can implement derive
for your own type through procedural macros.