A cargo plugin to easily build Swift packages from Rust code
cargo swift provides interactive commands for initializing and packaging a Rust library as Swift Package for usage in iOS and macOS apps. This plugin uses Mozilla's UniFFI for bridging between Swift and Rust. To learn more about using UniFFI, read its User Guide, but note that you can skip the parts about generating bindings (section 2.4) and building a swift module (sections 10. and 11.) as cargo swift already takes care of this!
Note This plugin can only be used on macOS, since proprietary toolchains are required for this plugin to work properly.
Install this plugin, simply run
cargo install cargo-swift
Currently, cargo swift
does not detect the UniFFI version of your project automatically, so for now, you have to install a matching version of cargo swift:
UniFFI | cargo swift |
---|---|
0.25 | 0.5 |
0.26 | 0.6 |
0.27 | 0.7 |
0.28 | 0.8 |
To do so, run
cargo install [email protected] -f
and replace 0.X
with the cargo swift version you want to install.
You can create a new library crate by running
cargo swift init
This creates a new Rust library crate with some boilerplate code and some examples to quickly get started with UniFFI. For full reference, check out this chapter of the UniFFI User Guide
To bundle the previously created Rust library as Swift Package, run:
cargo swift package
This command interactively prompts you for swift package name and target platforms. If some required toolchains for the selected target platforms are missing, cargo swift will ask you if it should install them automatically.
That's it! You can now include the created package in an iOS or macOS app via Swift Package Manager.
As of now, configuration can only be supplied via command line arguments. Most of the time, the default should be fine - however, sometimes it might be useful to store configuration persistently. You can find a draft of how this might look in CONFIG-DRAFT.md.
Copyright 2023 Antonius Naumann
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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Copyright (c) 2023 Antonius Naumann
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