Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
doc(features): Highlight the non-blocking feature gating technique
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
We already discussed non-blocking gates but the language makes it sound
like it was limited to `config.toml`.
Since I haven't been touching that, I had always overlooked that
section.

This change brings the blocking / non-blocking decision front and
center.
To support this, the later sections focus more on mechanisms (the gate)
rather than on what is being done (new syntax for `cargo-features`).

I also feel this makes the content more scannable.

This is adapted from what I did for `[lints]` (see rust-lang#12148).
  • Loading branch information
epage committed Jan 16, 2024
1 parent 1cff2ee commit 38c9345
Showing 1 changed file with 28 additions and 46 deletions.
74 changes: 28 additions & 46 deletions src/cargo/core/features.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -9,29 +9,43 @@
//! Cargo, and the good news is that it shouldn't be too hard! First determine
//! how the feature should be gated:
//!
//! * New syntax in Cargo.toml should use `cargo-features`.
//! * New CLI options should use `-Z unstable-options`.
//! * New functionality that may not have an interface, or the interface has
//! not yet been designed, or for more complex features that affect multiple
//! parts of Cargo should use a new `-Z` flag.
//! * Error when the feature is used without the gate
//! * Required if ignoring the feature violates the users intent in non-superficial ways
//! * A low-effort / safe way to protect the user from being broken if the format of the feature changes in
//! incompatible was (can be worked around)
//! * Good for: CLI (gate: `-Zunstable-options` or `-Z` if combined with other changes), `Cargo.toml` (gate: `cargo-features`)
//! * Warn that the feature is ignored due to lack of the gate
//! * For if you could opt-in to the unimplemented feature on cargo today and cargo would
//! operate just fine
//! * If gate is not enabled, prefer to warn if the format of the feature is incompatible
//! (instead of error or ignore)
//! * Good for: `Cargo.toml`, `.cargo/config.toml`, `config.json` index file (gate: `-Z`)
//! * Ignore the feature that is used without a gate
//! * For when ignoring the feature has so little impact that annoying the user is not worth it
//! (e.g. a config field that changes cargo's terminal output)
//! * For behavior changes without an interface (e.g. the resolver)
//! * Good for: `.cargo/config.toml`, `config.json` index file (gate: `-Z`)
//!
//! For features that touch multiple parts of cargo, multiple feature gating strategies (error,
//! warn, ignore) and mechnisms (`-Z`, `cargo-features`) may be used.
//!
//! When adding new tests for your feature, usually the tests should go into a
//! new module of the testsuite. See
//! new module of the testsuite named after the feature. See
//! <https://doc.crates.io/contrib/tests/writing.html> for more information on
//! writing tests. Particularly, check out the "Testing Nightly Features"
//! section for testing unstable features.
//! section for testing unstable features. Be sure to test the feature gate itself.
//!
//! After you have added your feature, be sure to update the unstable
//! documentation at `src/doc/src/reference/unstable.md` to include a short
//! description of how to use your new feature.
//!
//! And hopefully that's it!
//!
//! ## New Cargo.toml syntax
//! ## `cargo-features`
//!
//! The steps for adding new Cargo.toml syntax are:
//!
//! 1. Add the cargo-features unstable gate. Search below for "look here" to
//! 1. Add the cargo-features unstable gate. Search the code below for "look here" to
//! find the [`features!`] macro invocation and add your feature to the list.
//!
//! 2. Update the Cargo.toml parsing code to handle your new feature.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -68,43 +82,10 @@
//! [`Config::cli_unstable`] to get an instance of [`CliUnstable`]
//! and check if the option has been enabled on the [`CliUnstable`] instance.
//! Nightly gating is already handled, so no need to worry about that.
//!
//! ### `-Z` vs `cargo-features`
//!
//! In some cases there might be some changes that `cargo-features` is unable
//! to sufficiently encompass. An example would be a syntax change in
//! `Cargo.toml` that also impacts the index or resolver. The resolver doesn't
//! know about `cargo-features`, so it needs a `-Z` flag to enable the
//! experimental functionality.
//!
//! In those cases, you usually should introduce both a `-Z` flag (to enable
//! the changes outside of the manifest) and a `cargo-features` entry (to
//! enable the new syntax in `Cargo.toml`). The `cargo-features` entry ensures
//! that any experimental syntax that gets uploaded to crates.io is clearly
//! intended for nightly-only builds. Otherwise, users accessing those crates
//! may get confusing errors, particularly if the syntax changes during the
//! development cycle, and the user tries to access it with a stable release.
//!
//! ### `-Z` with external files
//!
//! Some files, such as `config.toml` config files, or the `config.json` index
//! file, are used in a global location which can make interaction with stable
//! releases problematic. In general, before the feature is stabilized, stable
//! Cargo should behave roughly similar to how it behaved *before* the
//! unstable feature was introduced. If Cargo would normally have ignored or
//! warned about the introduction of something, then it probably should
//! continue to do so.
//!
//! For example, Cargo generally ignores (or warns) about `config.toml`
//! entries it doesn't know about. This allows a limited degree of
//! forwards-compatibility with future versions of Cargo that add new entries.
//!
//! Whether or not to warn on stable may need to be decided on a case-by-case
//! basis. For example, you may want to avoid generating a warning for options
//! that are not critical to Cargo's operation in order to reduce the
//! annoyance of constant warnings. However, ignoring some options may prevent
//! proper operation, so a warning may be valuable for a user trying to
//! diagnose why it isn't working correctly.
//! If warning when feature is used without the gate, be sure to gracefully degrade (with a
//! warning) when the `Cargo.toml` / `.cargo/config.toml` field usage doesn't match the
//! schema.
//! 4. For any `Cargo.toml` fields, strip them in [`prepare_for_publish`] if the gate isn't set
//!
//! ## Stabilization
//!
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -135,6 +116,7 @@
//! [`fail_if_stable_opt`]: CliUnstable::fail_if_stable_opt
//! [`features!`]: macro.features.html
//! [`unstable_cli_options!`]: macro.unstable_cli_options.html
//! [`prepare_for_publish`]: crate::util::toml::prepare_for_publish

use std::collections::BTreeSet;
use std::env;
Expand Down

0 comments on commit 38c9345

Please sign in to comment.