Extern crate declarations
Syntax:
ExternCrate :
extern
crate
CrateRef AsClause?;
CrateRef :
IDENTIFIER |self
AsClause :
as
( IDENTIFIER |_
)
An extern crate
declaration specifies a dependency on an external crate.
The external crate is then bound into the declaring scope as the given identifier in the type namespace.
Additionally, if the extern crate
appears in the crate root, then the crate name is also added to the extern prelude, making it automatically in scope in all modules.
The as
clause can be used to bind the imported crate to a different name.
The external crate is resolved to a specific soname
at compile time, and a
runtime linkage requirement to that soname
is passed to the linker for
loading at runtime. The soname
is resolved at compile time by scanning the
compiler’s library path and matching the optional crate_name
provided against
the crate_name
attributes that were declared on the external crate when it was
compiled. If no crate_name
is provided, a default name
attribute is assumed,
equal to the identifier given in the extern crate
declaration.
The self
crate may be imported which creates a binding to the current crate.
In this case the as
clause must be used to specify the name to bind it to.
Three examples of extern crate
declarations:
extern crate pcre;
extern crate std; // equivalent to: extern crate std as std;
extern crate std as ruststd; // linking to 'std' under another name
When naming Rust crates, hyphens are disallowed. However, Cargo packages may
make use of them. In such case, when Cargo.toml
doesn’t specify a crate name,
Cargo will transparently replace -
with _
(Refer to RFC 940 for more
details).
Here is an example:
// Importing the Cargo package hello-world
extern crate hello_world; // hyphen replaced with an underscore
Underscore Imports
An external crate dependency can be declared without binding its name in scope
by using an underscore with the form extern crate foo as _
. This may be
useful for crates that only need to be linked, but are never referenced, and
will avoid being reported as unused.
The macro_use
attribute works as usual and imports the macro names
into the macro_use
prelude.
The no_link
attribute
The no_link
attribute may be specified on an extern crate
item to
prevent linking the crate into the output. This is commonly used to load a
crate to access only its macros.