Command-line arguments
Here's the list of arguments you can pass to rustdoc
:
-h
/--help
: help
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc -h
$ rustdoc --help
This will show rustdoc
's built-in help, which largely consists of
a list of possible command-line flags.
Some of rustdoc
's flags are unstable; this page only shows stable
options, --help
will show them all.
-V
/--version
: version information
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc -V
$ rustdoc --version
This will show rustdoc
's version, which will look something
like this:
rustdoc 1.17.0 (56124baa9 2017-04-24)
-v
/--verbose
: more verbose output
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc -v src/lib.rs
$ rustdoc --verbose src/lib.rs
This enables "verbose mode", which means that more information will be written
to standard out. What is written depends on the other flags you've passed in.
For example, with --version
:
$ rustdoc --verbose --version
rustdoc 1.17.0 (56124baa9 2017-04-24)
binary: rustdoc
commit-hash: hash
commit-date: date
host: host-triple
release: 1.17.0
LLVM version: 3.9
-o
/--output
: output path
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs -o target/doc
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --output target/doc
By default, rustdoc
's output appears in a directory named doc
in
the current working directory. With this flag, it will place all output
into the directory you specify.
--crate-name
: controlling the name of the crate
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --crate-name mycrate
By default, rustdoc
assumes that the name of your crate is the same name
as the .rs
file. --crate-name
lets you override this assumption with
whatever name you choose.
--document-private-items
: Show items that are not public
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --document-private-items
By default, rustdoc
only documents items that are publicly reachable.
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { pub fn public() {} // this item is public and will be documented mod private { // this item is private and will not be documented pub fn unreachable() {} // this item is public, but unreachable, so it will not be documented } }
--document-private-items
documents all items, even if they're not public.
-L
/--library-path
: where to look for dependencies
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs -L target/debug/deps
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --library-path target/debug/deps
If your crate has dependencies, rustdoc
needs to know where to find them.
Passing --library-path
gives rustdoc
a list of places to look for these
dependencies.
This flag takes any number of directories as its argument, and will use all of them when searching.
--cfg
: passing configuration flags
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --cfg feature="foo"
This flag accepts the same values as rustc --cfg
, and uses it to configure
compilation. The example above uses feature
, but any of the cfg
values
are acceptable.
--extern
: specify a dependency's location
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --extern lazy-static=/path/to/lazy-static
Similar to --library-path
, --extern
is about specifying the location
of a dependency. --library-path
provides directories to search in, --extern
instead lets you specify exactly which dependency is located where.
-C
/--codegen
: pass codegen options to rustc
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs -C target_feature=+avx
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --codegen target_feature=+avx
$ rustdoc --test src/lib.rs -C target_feature=+avx
$ rustdoc --test src/lib.rs --codegen target_feature=+avx
$ rustdoc --test README.md -C target_feature=+avx
$ rustdoc --test README.md --codegen target_feature=+avx
When rustdoc generates documentation, looks for documentation tests, or executes documentation tests, it needs to compile some rust code, at least part-way. This flag allows you to tell rustdoc to provide some extra codegen options to rustc when it runs these compilations. Most of the time, these options won't affect a regular documentation run, but if something depends on target features to be enabled, or documentation tests need to use some additional options, this flag allows you to affect that.
The arguments to this flag are the same as those for the -C
flag on rustc. Run rustc -C help
to
get the full list.
--test
: run code examples as tests
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --test
This flag will run your code examples as tests. For more, see the chapter on documentation tests.
See also --test-args
.
--test-args
: pass options to test runner
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --test --test-args ignored
This flag will pass options to the test runner when running documentation tests. For more, see the chapter on documentation tests.
See also --test
.
--target
: generate documentation for the specified target triple
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --target x86_64-pc-windows-gnu
Similar to the --target
flag for rustc
, this generates documentation
for a target triple that's different than your host triple.
All of the usual caveats of cross-compiling code apply.
--default-theme
: set the default theme
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --default-theme=ayu
Sets the default theme (for users whose browser has not remembered a previous theme selection from the on-page theme picker).
The supplied value should be the lowercase version of the theme name. The set of available themes can be seen in the theme picker in the generated output.
Note that the set of available themes - and their appearance - is not
necessarily stable from one rustdoc version to the next. If the
requested theme does not exist, the builtin default (currently
light
) is used instead.
--markdown-css
: include more CSS files when rendering markdown
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc README.md --markdown-css foo.css
When rendering Markdown files, this will create a <link>
element in the
<head>
section of the generated HTML. For example, with the invocation above,
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="foo.css">
will be added.
When rendering Rust files, this flag is ignored.
--html-in-header
: include more HTML in
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --html-in-header header.html
$ rustdoc README.md --html-in-header header.html
This flag takes a list of files, and inserts them into the <head>
section of
the rendered documentation.
--html-before-content
: include more HTML before the content
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --html-before-content extra.html
$ rustdoc README.md --html-before-content extra.html
This flag takes a list of files, and inserts them inside the <body>
tag but
before the other content rustdoc
would normally produce in the rendered
documentation.
--html-after-content
: include more HTML after the content
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --html-after-content extra.html
$ rustdoc README.md --html-after-content extra.html
This flag takes a list of files, and inserts them before the </body>
tag but
after the other content rustdoc
would normally produce in the rendered
documentation.
--markdown-playground-url
: control the location of the playground
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc README.md --markdown-playground-url https://play.rust-lang.org/
When rendering a Markdown file, this flag gives the base URL of the Rust
Playground, to use for generating Run
buttons.
--markdown-no-toc
: don't generate a table of contents
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc README.md --markdown-no-toc
When generating documentation from a Markdown file, by default, rustdoc
will
generate a table of contents. This flag suppresses that, and no TOC will be
generated.
-e
/--extend-css
: extend rustdoc's CSS
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs -e extra.css
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --extend-css extra.css
With this flag, the contents of the files you pass are included at the bottom
of Rustdoc's theme.css
file.
While this flag is stable, the contents of theme.css
are not, so be careful!
Updates may break your theme extensions.
--sysroot
: override the system root
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --sysroot /path/to/sysroot
Similar to rustc --sysroot
, this lets you change the sysroot rustdoc
uses
when compiling your code.
--edition
: control the edition of docs and doctests
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --edition 2018
$ rustdoc --test src/lib.rs --edition 2018
This flag allows rustdoc
to treat your rust code as the given edition. It will compile doctests with
the given edition as well. As with rustc
, the default edition that rustdoc
will use is 2015
(the first edition).
--theme
: add a theme to the documentation output
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --theme /path/to/your/custom-theme.css
rustdoc
's default output includes two themes: light
(the default) and
dark
. This flag allows you to add custom themes to the output. Giving a CSS
file to this flag adds it to your documentation as an additional theme choice.
The theme's name is determined by its filename; a theme file named
custom-theme.css
will add a theme named custom-theme
to the documentation.
--check-theme
: verify custom themes against the default theme
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc --check-theme /path/to/your/custom-theme.css
While rustdoc
's HTML output is more-or-less consistent between versions, there
is no guarantee that a theme file will have the same effect. The --theme
flag
will still allow you to add the theme to your documentation, but to ensure that
your theme works as expected, you can use this flag to verify that it implements
the same CSS rules as the official light
theme.
--check-theme
is a separate mode in rustdoc
. When rustdoc
sees the
--check-theme
flag, it discards all other flags and only performs the CSS rule
comparison operation.
--crate-version
: control the crate version
Using this flag looks like this:
$ rustdoc src/lib.rs --crate-version 1.3.37
When rustdoc
receives this flag, it will print an extra "Version (version)" into the sidebar of
the crate root's docs. You can use this flag to differentiate between different versions of your
library's documentation.
@path
: load command-line flags from a path
If you specify @path
on the command-line, then it will open path
and read
command line options from it. These options are one per line; a blank line indicates
an empty option. The file can use Unix or Windows style line endings, and must be
encoded as UTF-8.
--passes
: add more rustdoc passes
This flag is deprecated. For more details on passes, see the chapter on them.
--no-defaults
: don't run default passes
This flag is deprecated. For more details on passes, see the chapter on them.
-r
/--input-format
: input format
This flag is deprecated and has no effect.
Rustdoc only supports Rust source code and Markdown input formats. If the
file ends in .md
or .markdown
, rustdoc
treats it as a Markdown file.
Otherwise, it assumes that the input file is Rust.
--nocapture
When this flag is used with --test
, the output (stdout and stderr) of your tests won't be
captured by rustdoc. Instead, the output will be directed to your terminal,
as if you had run the test executable manually. This is especially useful
for debugging your tests!