Servo is a prototype web browser engine written in the Rust language. It is currently developed on 64-bit macOS, 64-bit Linux, 64-bit Windows, and Android.
Servo welcomes contribution from everyone. See
CONTRIBUTING.md
and HACKING_QUICKSTART.md
for help getting started.
Visit the Servo Project page for news and guides.
If these instructions fail or you would like to install dependencies manually, try the manual build setup.
- Install Xcode
- Install Homebrew
- Run
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
- Run
./mach bootstrap
Note: This will install the recommended version of GStreamer globally on your system.
- Run
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
- Install Python
- Debian-like: Run
sudo apt install python3-pip
- Fedora: Run
sudo dnf install python3 python3-pip python3-devel
- Arch: Run
sudo pacman -S --needed python python-pip
- Gentoo: Run
sudo emerge dev-python/pip
- Debian-like: Run
- Run
./mach bootstrap
- Download and run
rustup-init.exe
then follow the onscreen instructions. - Install chocolatey
- Run
mach bootstrap
- This will install CMake, Git, Ninja, Python and the Visual Studio 2019 Build Tools via choco in an Administrator console. It can take quite a while.
- If you already have Visual Studio 2019 installed, this may not install all necessary components. Please follow the Visual Studio 2019 installation instructions in the manual setup.
- Run
refreshenv
See also Windows Troubleshooting Tips.
Your CARGO_HOME needs to point to (or be in) the same drive as your Servo repository (See #28530).
git clone https://github.com/servo/servo
cd servo
Servo is built with Cargo, the Rust package manager. We also use Mozilla's Mach tools to orchestrate the build and other tasks. You can call Mach like this:
On Unix systems:
./mach [command] [arguments]
On Windows Commandline:
mach.bat [command] [arguments]
The examples below will use Unix, but the same applies to Windows.
Servo's build system uses rustup.rs to automatically download a Rust compiler.
This is a specific version of Rust Nightly determined by the
rust-toolchain.toml
file.
To build Servo in development mode. This is useful for development, but the resulting binary is very slow:
./mach build --dev
./mach run tests/html/about-mozilla.html
For benchmarking, performance testing, or real-world use.
Add the --release
flag to create an optimized build:
./mach build --release
./mach run --release tests/html/about-mozilla.html
If you’re making changes to one crate that cause build errors in another crate, consider this instead of a full build:
./mach check
It will run cargo check
, which runs the analysis phase of the compiler
(and so shows build errors if any) but skips the code generation phase.
This can be a lot faster than a full build,
though of course it doesn’t produce a binary you can run.
For ARM (armv7-linux-androideabi
, most phones):
./mach build --release --android
./mach package --release --android
For x86 (typically for the emulator):
./mach build --release --target i686-linux-android
./mach package --release --target i686-linux-android
Run Servo with the command:
./servo [url] [arguments] # if you run with nightly build
./mach run [url] [arguments] # if you run with mach
# For example
./mach run https://www.google.com
-p INTERVAL
turns on the profiler and dumps info to the console everyINTERVAL
seconds-s SIZE
sets the tile size for painting; defaults to 512-z
disables all graphical output; useful for running JS / layout tests-Z help
displays useful output to debug servo
Ctrl
+L
opens URL prompt (Cmd
+L
on Mac)Ctrl
+R
reloads current page (Cmd
+R
on Mac)Ctrl
+-
zooms out (Cmd
+-
on Mac)Ctrl
+=
zooms in (Cmd
+=
on Mac)Alt
+left arrow
goes backwards in the history (Cmd
+left arrow
on Mac)Alt
+right arrow
goes forwards in the history (Cmd
+right arrow
on Mac)Esc
orCtrl
+Q
exits Servo (Cmd
+Q
on Mac)
GStreamer
>=1.16gst-plugins-bad
>=1.16libXcursor
libXrandr
libXi
libxkbcommon
vulkan-loader
There are lots of mach commands you can use. You can list them with ./mach --help
.
The generated documentation can be found on https://doc.servo.org/servo/index.html