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rustup installs The Rust Programming Language from the official release channels, enabling you to easily switch between stable, beta, and nightly compilers and keep them updated. It makes cross-compiling simpler with binary builds of the standard library for common platforms. And it runs on all platforms Rust supports, including Windows.
- Installation
- How rustup works
- Keeping Rust up to date
- Working with nightly Rust
- Toolchain specification
- Toolchain override shorthand
- Directory overrides
- The toolchain file
- Override precedence
- Cross-compilation
- Working with Rust on Windows
- Working with custom toolchains
- Working with network proxies
- Examples
- Environment variables
- Other installation methods
- Security
- FAQ
- License
- Contributing
Follow the instructions at https://rustup.rs. If that doesn't work for you there are other installation methods.
rustup
installs rustc
, cargo
, rustup
and other standard tools
to Cargo's bin
directory. On Unix it is located at
$HOME/.cargo/bin
and on Windows at %USERPROFILE%\.cargo\bin
. This
is the same directory that cargo install
will install Rust programs
and Cargo plugins.
This directory will be in your $PATH
environment variable, which
means you can run them from the shell without further
configuration. Open a new shell and type the following:
rustc --version
If you see something like rustc 1.19.0 (0ade33941 2017-07-17)
then
you are ready to Rust. If you decide Rust isn't your thing, you can
completely remove it from your system by running rustup self uninstall
.
rustup
now supports generating completion scripts for Bash, Fish,
Zsh, and PowerShell. See rustup help completions
for full details,
but the gist is as simple as using one of the following:
# Bash
$ rustup completions bash > ~/.local/share/bash_completion/completions/rustup
# Bash (macOS/Homebrew)
$ rustup completions bash > $(brew --prefix)/etc/bash_completion.d/rustup.bash-completion
# Fish
$ mkdir -p ~/.config/fish/completions
$ rustup completions fish > ~/.config/fish/completions/rustup.fish
# Zsh
$ rustup completions zsh > ~/.zfunc/_rustup
# PowerShell v5.0+
$ rustup completions powershell >> $PROFILE.CurrentUserCurrentHost
# or
$ rustup completions powershell | Out-String | Invoke-Expression
Note: you may need to restart your shell in order for the changes to take effect.
For zsh
, you must then add the following line in your ~/.zshrc
before
compinit
:
fpath+=~/.zfunc
rustup
allows you to customise your installation by setting the environment
variables CARGO_HOME
and RUSTUP_HOME
before running the rustup-init
executable. As mentioned in the Environment Variables section, RUSTUP_HOME
sets the root rustup folder, which is used for storing installed
toolchains and configuration options. CARGO_HOME
contains cache files used
by cargo.
Note that you will need to ensure these environment variables are always
set and that CARGO_HOME/bin
is in the $PATH
environment variable when
using the toolchain.
rustup
is a toolchain multiplexer. It installs and manages many
Rust toolchains and presents them all through a single set of tools
installed to ~/.cargo/bin
. The rustc
and cargo
installed to
~/.cargo/bin
are proxies that delegate to the real
toolchain. rustup
then provides mechanisms to easily change the
active toolchain by reconfiguring the behavior of the proxies.
So when rustup
is first installed running rustc
will run the proxy
in $HOME/.cargo/bin/rustc
, which in turn will run the stable
compiler. If you later change the default toolchain to nightly with
rustup default nightly
, then that same proxy will run the nightly
compiler instead.
This is similar to Ruby's rbenv, Python's pyenv, or Node's nvm.
Rust is distributed on three different release channels: stable,
beta, and nightly. rustup
is configured to use the stable channel by
default, which represents the latest release of Rust,
and is released every six weeks.
When a new version of Rust is released, you can type rustup update
to update
to it:
$ rustup update
info: syncing channel updates for 'stable'
info: downloading component 'rustc'
info: downloading component 'rust-std'
info: downloading component 'rust-docs'
info: downloading component 'cargo'
info: installing component 'rustc'
info: installing component 'rust-std'
info: installing component 'rust-docs'
info: installing component 'cargo'
info: checking for self-updates
info: downloading self-updates
stable updated: rustc 1.7.0 (a5d1e7a59 2016-02-29)
This is the essence of rustup
.
Running rustup update
also checks for updates to rustup
and automatically
installs the latest version. To manually check for updates and install the
latest version of rustup
without updating installed toolchains type rustup self update
:
$ rustup self update
info: checking for self-updates
info: downloading self-updates
Note: rustup
will automatically update itself at the end of any toolchain
installation as well. You can prevent this automatic behaviour by passing the
--no-self-update
argument when running rustup update
or rustup toolchain install
.
Rustup gives you easy access to the nightly compiler and its
experimental features. To add it just run rustup toolchain install nightly
:
$ rustup toolchain install nightly
info: syncing channel updates for 'nightly'
info: downloading toolchain manifest
info: downloading component 'rustc'
info: downloading component 'rust-std'
info: downloading component 'rust-docs'
info: downloading component 'cargo'
info: installing component 'rustc'
info: installing component 'rust-std'
info: installing component 'rust-docs'
info: installing component 'cargo'
nightly installed: rustc 1.9.0-nightly (02310fd31 2016-03-19)
Now Rust nightly is installed, but not activated. To test it out you can run a command from the nightly toolchain like
$ rustup run nightly rustc --version
rustc 1.9.0-nightly (02310fd31 2016-03-19)
But more likely you want to use it for a while. To switch to nightly
globally, change the default with rustup default nightly
:
$ rustup default nightly
info: using existing install for 'nightly'
info: default toolchain set to 'nightly'
nightly unchanged: rustc 1.9.0-nightly (02310fd31 2016-03-19)
Now any time you run cargo
or rustc
you will be running the
nightly compiler.
With nightly installed any time you run rustup update
, the nightly channel
will be updated in addition to stable:
$ rustup update
info: syncing channel updates for 'stable'
info: syncing channel updates for 'nightly'
info: checking for self-updates
info: downloading self-updates
stable unchanged: rustc 1.7.0 (a5d1e7a59 2016-02-29)
nightly unchanged: rustc 1.9.0-nightly (02310fd31 2016-03-19)
Many rustup
commands deal with toolchains, a single installation
of the Rust compiler. rustup
supports multiple types of
toolchains. The most basic track the official release channels:
stable, beta and nightly; but rustup
can also install
toolchains from the official archives, for alternate host platforms,
and from local builds.
Standard release channel toolchain names have the following form:
<channel>[-<date>][-<host>]
<channel> = stable|beta|nightly|<version>
<date> = YYYY-MM-DD
<host> = <target-triple>
'channel' is either a named release channel or an explicit version number, such as '1.8.0'. Channel names can be optionally appended with an archive date, as in 'nightly-2014-12-18', in which case the toolchain is downloaded from the archive for that date.
Finally, the host may be specified as a target triple. This is most useful for installing a 32-bit compiler on a 64-bit platform, or for installing the MSVC-based toolchain on Windows. For example:
$ rustup toolchain install stable-x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
For convenience, elements of the target triple that are omitted will be inferred, so the above could be written:
$ rustup toolchain install stable-msvc
Toolchain names that don't name a channel instead can be used to name custom toolchains.
The rustup
toolchain proxies can be instructed directly to use a
specific toolchain, a convenience for developers who often test
different toolchains. If the first argument to cargo
, rustc
or
other tools in the toolchain begins with +
, it will be interpreted
as a rustup toolchain name, and that toolchain will be preferred,
as in
cargo +beta test
Directories can be assigned their own Rust toolchain with rustup override
. When a directory has an override then any time rustc
or
cargo
is run inside that directory, or one of its child directories,
the override toolchain will be invoked.
To use to a specific nightly for a directory:
rustup override set nightly-2014-12-18
Or a specific stable release:
rustup override set 1.0.0
To see the active toolchain use rustup show
. To remove the override
and use the default toolchain again, rustup override unset
.
rustup
directory overrides are a local configuration, stored in
$RUSTUP_HOME
. Some projects though find themselves 'pinned' to a
specific release of Rust and want this information reflected in their
source repository. This is most often the case for nightly-only
software that pins to a revision from the release archives.
In these cases the toolchain can be named in the project's directory
in a file called rust-toolchain
, the content of which is the name of
a single rustup
toolchain, and which is suitable to check in to
source control.
The toolchains named in this file have a more restricted form than rustup toolchains generally, and may only contain the names of the three release channels, 'stable', 'beta', 'nightly', Rust version numbers, like '1.0.0', and optionally an archive date, like 'nightly-2017-01-01'. They may not name custom toolchains, nor host-specific toolchains.
There are several ways to specify which toolchain rustup
should
execute:
- An explicit toolchain, e.g.
cargo +beta
, - The
RUSTUP_TOOLCHAIN
environment variable, - A directory override, ala
rustup override set beta
, - The
rust-toolchain
file, - The default toolchain,
and they are prefered by rustup in that order, with the explicit
toolchain having highest precedence, and the default toolchain having
the lowest. There is one exception though: directory overrides and the
rust-toolchain
file are also preferred by their proximity to the
current directory. That is, these two override methods are discovered
by walking up the directory tree toward the filesystem root, and a
rust-toolchain
file that is closer to the current directory will be
prefered over a directory override that is further away.
To verify which toolchain is active use rustup show
.
Rust supports a great number of platforms. For many of these
platforms The Rust Project publishes binary releases of the standard
library, and for some the full compiler. rustup
gives easy access
to all of them.
When you first install a toolchain, rustup
installs only the
standard library for your host platform - that is, the architecture
and operating system you are presently running. To compile to other
platforms you must install other target platforms. This is done
with the rustup target add
command. For example, to add the
Android target:
$ rustup target add arm-linux-androideabi
info: downloading component 'rust-std' for 'arm-linux-androideabi'
info: installing component 'rust-std' for 'arm-linux-androideabi'
With the arm-linux-androideabi
target installed you can then build
for Android with Cargo by passing the --target
flag, as in cargo build --target=arm-linux-androideabi
.
Note that rustup target add
only installs the Rust standard library
for a given target. There are typically other tools necessary to
cross-compile, particularly a linker. For example, to cross compile
to Android the Android NDK must be installed. In the future, rustup
will provide assistance installing the NDK components as well.
To install a target for a toolchain that isn't the default toolchain
use the --toolchain
argument of rustup target add
, like so:
$ rustup target add --toolchain <toolchain> <target>...
To see a list of available targets, rustup target list
. To remove a
previously-added target, rustup target remove
.
rustup
works the same on Windows as it does on Unix, but there are
some special considerations for Rust developers on Windows. As
mentioned on the Rust download page, there are two ABIs in use
on Windows: the native (MSVC) ABI used by Visual Studio, and the GNU
ABI used by the GCC toolchain. Which version of Rust you need depends
largely on what C/C++ libraries you want to interoperate with: for
interop with software produced by Visual Studio use the MSVC build of
Rust; for interop with GNU software built using the MinGW/MSYS2
toolchain use the GNU build.
When targeting the MSVC ABI, Rust additionally requires an installation of Visual Studio 2013 (or later) or the Visual C++ Build Tools 2019 so rustc can use its linker. For Visual Studio, make sure to check the "C++ tools" option. No additional software installation is necessary for basic use of the GNU build.
By default rustup on Windows configures Rust to target the MSVC
ABI, that is a target triple of either i686-pc-windows-msvc
or
x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
depending on the CPU architecture of the
host Windows OS. The toolchains that rustup chooses to install, unless
told otherwise through the toolchain specification, will be compiled
to run on that target triple host and will target that triple by default.
You can change this behavior with rustup set default-host
or during installation.
For example, to explicitly select the 32-bit MSVC host:
$ rustup set default-host i686-pc-windows-msvc
Or to choose the 64 bit GNU toolchain:
$ rustup set default-host x86_64-pc-windows-gnu
Since the MSVC ABI provides the best interoperation with other Windows software
it is recommended for most purposes. The GNU toolchain is always available, even
if you don't use it by default. Just install it with rustup toolchain install
:
$ rustup toolchain install stable-gnu
You don't need to switch toolchains to support all windows targets though; a single toolchain supports all four x86 windows targets:
$ rustup target add x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
$ rustup target add x86_64-pc-windows-gnu
$ rustup target add i686-pc-windows-msvc
$ rustup target add i686-pc-windows-gnu
Several Linux distributions package Rust, and you may wish to use the packaged toolchain, such as for distribution package development. You may also wish to use a rustup-managed toolchain such as nightly or beta. Normally, rustup will complain that you already have Rust installed in /usr and refuse to install. However, you can install Rust via Rustup and have it coexist with your distribution's packaged Rust.
When you initially install Rust with rustup, pass the -y
option to make it
ignore the packaged Rust toolchain and install a rustup-managed toolchain into
~/.cargo/bin
. Add that directory to your $PATH
(or let rustup do it for you
by not passing --no-modify-path
). Then, to tell rustup about your system
toolchain, run:
rustup toolchain link system /usr
You can then use +system as a rustup toolchain, just like +nightly; for instance, you can run cargo +system build to build with the system toolchain, or cargo +nightly build to build with nightly.
If you do distribution Rust development, you should likely make +system your default toolchain:
rustup default system
For convenience of developers working on Rust itself, rustup
can manage
local builds of the Rust toolchain. To teach rustup
about your build,
run:
$ rustup toolchain link my-toolchain path/to/my/toolchain/sysroot
For example, on Ubuntu you might clone rust-lang/rust
into ~/rust
, build it, and then run:
$ rustup toolchain link myrust ~/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/
$ rustup default myrust
Now you can name my-toolchain
as any other rustup
toolchain. Create a rustup
toolchain for each of your
rust-lang/rust
workspaces and test them easily with rustup run my-toolchain rustc
.
Because the rust-lang/rust
tree does not include Cargo, when cargo
is invoked for a custom toolchain and it is not available, rustup
will attempt to use cargo
from one of the release channels,
preferring 'nightly', then 'beta' or 'stable'.
Enterprise networks often don't have direct outside HTTP access, but enforce
the use of proxies. If you're on such a network, you can request that
rustup uses a proxy by setting its URL in the environment. In most cases,
setting https_proxy
should be sufficient. On a Unix-like system with a
shell like bash or zsh, you could use:
export https_proxy=socks5://proxy.example.com:1080 # or http://proxy.example.com:8080
On Windows, the command would be:
set https_proxy=socks5://proxy.example.com:1080
If you need a more complex setup, rustup supports the convention used by the curl program, documented in the ENVIRONMENT section of its manual page.
The use of curl
is presently deprecated, however it can still be used by
providing the RUSTUP_USE_CURL
environment variable, for example:
RUSTUP_USE_CURL=1 rustup update
Note that some versions of libcurl
apparently require you to drop the
http://
or https://
prefix in environment variables. For example,
export http_proxy=proxy.example.com:1080
(and likewise for HTTPS).
If you are getting an SSL unknown protocol
error from rustup
via libcurl
but the command-line curl
command works fine, this may be the problem.
Command | Description |
---|---|
rustup default nightly |
Set the default toolchain to the latest nightly |
rustup target list |
List all available targets for the active toolchain |
rustup target add arm-linux-androideabi |
Install the Android target |
rustup target remove arm-linux-androideabi |
Remove the Android target |
rustup run nightly rustc foo.rs |
Run the nightly regardless of the active toolchain |
rustc +nightly foo.rs |
Shorthand way to run a nightly compiler |
rustup run nightly bash |
Run a shell configured for the nightly compiler |
rustup default stable-msvc |
On Windows, use the MSVC toolchain instead of GNU |
rustup override set nightly-2015-04-01 |
For the current directory, use a nightly from a specific date |
rustup toolchain link my-toolchain "C:\RustInstallation" |
Install a custom toolchain by symlinking an existing installation |
rustup show |
Show which toolchain will be used in the current directory |
rustup toolchain uninstall nightly |
Uninstall a given toolchain |
rustup toolchain help |
Show the help page for a subcommand (like toolchain ) |
rustup man cargo |
(Unix only) View the man page for a given command (like cargo ) |
-
RUSTUP_HOME
(default:~/.rustup
or%USERPROFILE%/.rustup
) Sets the root rustup folder, used for storing installed toolchains and configuration options. -
RUSTUP_TOOLCHAIN
(default: none) If set, will override the toolchain used for all rust tool invocations. A toolchain with this name should be installed, or invocations will fail. -
RUSTUP_DIST_SERVER
(default:https://static.rust-lang.org
) Sets the root URL for downloading static resources related to Rust. You can change this to instead use a local mirror, or to test the binaries from the staging directory. -
RUSTUP_DIST_ROOT
(default:https://static.rust-lang.org/dist
) Deprecated. UseRUSTUP_DIST_SERVER
instead. -
RUSTUP_UPDATE_ROOT
(defaulthttps://static.rust-lang.org/rustup
) Sets the root URL for downloading self-updates.
The primary installation method, as described at https://rustup.rs, differs by platform:
- On Windows, download and run the rustup-init.exe built for
i686-pc-windows-gnu
target. In general, this is the build of rustup one should install on Windows. Despite being built against the GNU toolchain, the Windows build of rustup will install Rust for the MSVC toolchain if it detects that MSVC is installed. If you prefer to install GNU toolchains or x86_64 toolchains by default this can be modified at install time, either interactively or with the--default-host
flag, or after installation viarustup set default-host
. - On Unix, run
curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
in your shell. This downloads and runsrustup-init.sh
, which in turn downloads and runs the correct version of therustup-init
executable for your platform.
rustup-init
accepts arguments, which can be passed through
the shell script. Some examples:
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- --help
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- --no-modify-path
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- --default-toolchain nightly
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- --default-toolchain none
If you prefer you can directly download rustup-init
for the
platform of your choice:
- aarch64-linux-android
- aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
- arm-linux-androideabi
- arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi
- arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf
- armv7-linux-androideabi
- armv7-unknown-linux-gnueabihf
- i686-apple-darwin
- i686-linux-android
- i686-pc-windows-gnu
- i686-pc-windows-msvc†
- i686-unknown-linux-gnu
- mips-unknown-linux-gnu
- mips64-unknown-linux-gnuabi64
- mips64el-unknown-linux-gnuabi64
- mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu
- powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu
- powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu
- powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu
- s390x-unknown-linux-gnu
- x86_64-apple-darwin
- x86_64-linux-android
- x86_64-pc-windows-gnu
- x86_64-pc-windows-msvc†
- x86_64-unknown-freebsd
- x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
- x86_64-unknown-netbsd
†
MSVC builds of rustup
additionally require an installation of
Visual Studio 2019 or the Visual C++ Build Tools 2019. For
Visual Studio, make sure to check the "C++ tools" option. No
additional software installation is necessary for basic use of
the GNU build.
You can fetch an older version from https://static.rust-lang.org/rustup/archive/{rustup-version}/{target-triple}/rustup-init[.exe]
To install from source just run cargo run --release
. Note that
currently rustup only builds on nightly Rust, and that after
installation the rustup toolchains will supersede any pre-existing
toolchains by prepending ~/.cargo/bin
to the PATH
environment
variable.
rustup
is secure enough for the non-paranoid, but it still needs
work. rustup
performs all downloads over HTTPS, but does not
yet validate signatures of downloads.
Yes. rustup is an official Rust project. It is the recommended way to install Rust at https://www.rust-lang.org.
rustup is the successor to multirust. rustup began as multirust-rs, a rewrite of multirust from shell script to Rust, by Diggory Blake, and is now maintained by The Rust Project.
The Rust source can be obtained by running rustup component add rust-src
.
It will be downloaded to the <toolchain root>/lib/rustlib/src/rust
directory of the current toolchain.
If rustup fails with Windows error 32, it may be due to antivirus scanning in the background. Disable antivirus scanner and try again.
Copyright Diggory Blake, the Mozilla Corporation, and rustup contributors.
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.