cargo doc2readme
is a cargo subcommand to create a readme file to display on
GitHub or crates.io,
containing the rustdoc comments from your code.
If you are using ArchLinux, you can install cargo-doc2readme from the AUR:
yay -S cargo-doc2readme
On other Operating Systems, make sure you have Rust installed (using your distributions package manager, but if your package manager is garbage or you are running Windows, try rustup) and then run the following command:
cargo install cargo-doc2readme
To generate your readme, simply run
cargo doc2readme
This will output the readme to a file called README.md
, using README.j2
or the
built-in template.
If you want to run this using GitHub Actions, you can use the pre-built docker image:
readme:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: docker://ghcr.io/msrd0/cargo-doc2readme
with:
entrypoint: cargo
args: doc2readme --check
This will use the latest stable Rust version available when the latest release of
cargo doc2readme was created. If you need a newer/nightly Rust compiler, use the
ghcr.io/msrd0/cargo-doc2readme:nightly
docker image instead.
- parse markdown from your rustdoc comments and embed it into your readme
- use existing crates to parse Rust and Markdown
- support your
[CustomType]
rustdoc links - default, minimalistic readme template with some useful badges
- custom readme templates
- verbatim copy of your markdown
- easy readability of the generated markdown source code
cargo readme
is a similar tool. However, it brings its own Rust code
parser that only covers the 95% use case. Also, it does not support Rust path links
introduced in Rust 1.48, making your readme ugly due to GitHub showing the unsupported
links as raw markdown, and being less convenient for the reader that has to search
docs.rs instead of clicking on a link.
This project adheres to semantic versioning. All versions will be tested against the latest stable rust version at the time of the release. All non-bugfix changes to the rustdoc input processing and markdown output or the default readme template are considered breaking changes, as well as any non-backwards-compatible changes to the command-line arguments or to these stability guarantees. All other changes, including any changes to the Rust code, or bumping the MSRV, are not considered breaking changes.