cargo-msrv verify

COMMAND

  • Standalone: cargo-msrv verify
  • Through Cargo: cargo msrv verify

DESCRIPTION

Verify whether the MSRV can be satisfied.

The MSRV can be specified in the Cargo manifest (Cargo.toml) using either the package.rust-version (Rust >=1.56, recommended), or the package.metadata.msrv field.

If the check fails, the program returns with a non-zero exit code.

OPTIONS

--rust-version version

Specify the Rust version of a Rust toolchain, against which the crate will be checked for compatibility.

EXAMPLES

  1. Verify whether the MSRV specified in the Cargo manifest is satisfiable (Good case).

Given a minimal rust crate with the following Cargo.toml manifest:

[package]
name = "example"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
rust-version = "1.56.0"

and this minimal lib.rs file:

fn main() {
    println!("Hello world");
}

We check whether the MSRV's check command, in this case the default cargo check, can be satisfied. The crate author specified the MSRV in the Cargo.toml, using the package.rust-version key. Since the example crate used no features requiring a more recent version than Rust 1.56, the check will be satisfied, and the program returns a with exit code 0 (success).

cargo msrv verify # Will succeed, and return with exit code 0
  1. Verify whether the MSRV specified in the Cargo manifest is satisfiable (Bad case).

Given a minimal rust crate with the following Cargo.toml manifest:

[package]
name = "example"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"
rust-version = "1.56.0"

and this minimal lib.rs file:

fn main() {
    let cmd = Command::new("ls");
    assert_eq!(cmd.get_program(), "ls"); // will fail because Command::get_program was introduced in 1.57, which is greater than 1.56 (the MSRV)
}

We check whether the MSRV's check command, in this case the default cargo check, can be satisfied. The crate author specified the MSRV in the Cargo.toml, using the package.rust-version key. Since the example crate used a feature requiring a more recent version than Rust 1.56, the check cannot be satisfied, and the program returns a with a non-zero exit code (failure).

cargo msrv verify # Will fail, and return a non-zero exit code
  1. Run the 'verify' subcommand on a crate not in our current working directory.
cargo msrv --path path/to/my/crate verify

This example shows how to use arguments (in this case --path) shared between the default cargo-msrv command and verify. Note that shared arguments must be specified before the subcommand (here verify).

  1. Run the 'verify' subcommand using a self-determined Rust version.
cargo msrv verify --rust-version 1.56