Build rules exercise
In your Chromium build, add a new Rust target to //ui/base/BUILD.gn
containing:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { #[no_mangle] pub extern "C" fn hello_from_rust() { println!("Hello from Rust!") } }
Important: note that no_mangle
here is considered a type of unsafety by
the Rust compiler, so you’ll need to to allow unsafe code in your gn
target.
Add this new Rust target as a dependency of //ui/base:base
. Declare this
function at the top of ui/base/resource/resource_bundle.cc
(later, we’ll see
how this can be automated by bindings generation tools):
extern "C" void hello_from_rust();
Call this function from somewhere in ui/base/resource/resource_bundle.cc
- we
suggest the top of ResourceBundle::MaybeMangleLocalizedString
. Build and run
Chromium, and ensure that “Hello from Rust!” is printed lots of times.
If you use VSCode, now set up Rust to work well in VSCode. It will be useful in
subsequent exercises. If you’ve succeeded, you will be able to use right-click
“Go to definition” on println!
.
Where to find help
- The options available to the
rust_static_library
gn template - Information about
#[no_mangle]
- Information about
extern "C"
- Information about gn’s
--export-rust-project
switch - How to install rust-analyzer in VSCode
This example is unusual because it boils down to the lowest-common-denominator interop language, C. Both C++ and Rust can natively declare and call C ABI functions. Later in the course, we’ll connect C++ directly to Rust.
allow_unsafe = true
is required here because #[no_mangle]
might allow Rust
to generate two functions with the same name, and Rust can no longer guarantee
that the right one is called.
If you need a pure Rust executable, you can also do that using the
rust_executable
gn template.