Crates.io | cargo-watch |
lib.rs | cargo-watch |
version | 8.5.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2015-01-06 06:53:43.518068 |
updated_at | 2024-10-02 08:38:09.256209 |
description | Watches over your Cargo project’s source |
homepage | https://watchexec.github.io/#cargo-watch |
repository | https://github.com/watchexec/cargo-watch |
max_upload_size | |
id | 718 |
size | 316,334 |
Cargo Watch watches over your project's source for changes, and runs Cargo commands when they occur.
If you've used nodemon, guard, or entr, it will probably feel familiar.
I recommend Bacon or Watchexec instead. (see below for more)
Cargo Watch is on life support: it will not receive further updates, but does remain available.
I (@passcod) currently have very little time to dedicate to unpaid OSS. There is a significant amount of work I deem required to get Watchexec (the library) to a good-enough state to bring its improvements to Cargo Watch, and that has been the case for years without a realistic end in sight. I have dwindling motivation in the face of having spent 10 years on or around this project and its dependencies (it was a long while ago, but once upon a time the Notify library was spun off from Cargo Watch!), when at the very start, this tool was only made to clear a quick hurdle that I'd encountered while trying to code other, probably more interesting, yet now long-forgotten Rust adventures.
However, not all is lost, dear users. For almost the entire life of the project, I have had a thought: that someone with more resources, skill, time, and/or the benefit of hindsight would come around and make something better. Granted, I thought this would happen to Notify. But Notify has persisted, has been passed on to live a long life, and instead the contender is Bacon.
I have had no involvement in Bacon. Yet it is everything I have wanted to achieve in Cargo Watch. Indeed some five years ago I started development on a Cargo Watch replacement I called "Overwatch", which would have a TUI, a tasks file, a rich pager, and more long-desired features. That never eventuated, though a lot of the low-level improvements that I wrote in preparation for Overwatch "made it" into Notify version 5 and the Watchexec library version 2. Bacon today is what I wanted Overwatch to be.
Let's face it: Cargo Watch has gone through too many incremental changes, with too little overarching design. It sports no less than four different syntaxes to run commands. Its lackluster filtering options can be obnoxious to use. Pager support is non-existent, sometimes requiring arcane invocations to get right. It can conflict with Rust Analyzer (which didn't exist 10 years ago!), though that has improved a lot over the years.
It's time to let it go. Use Bacon. Remember Cargo Watch.
With cargo-binstall:
$ cargo binstall cargo-watch
From source:
$ cargo install cargo-watch --locked
Or clone and build with $ cargo build
then place in your $PATH.
You can also install from the pre-built binaries available on the release page.
This repository contains a manual page and Zsh completions that you may want to install.
By default, it runs check
. You can easily override this, though:
$ cargo watch [-x command]...
A few examples:
# Run tests only
$ cargo watch -x test
# Run check then tests
$ cargo watch -x check -x test
# Run run with arguments
$ cargo watch -x 'run -- --some-arg'
# Run an arbitrary command
$ cargo watch -- echo Hello world
# Run with features passed to cargo
$ cargo watch --features "foo,bar"
There's a lot more you can do! Here's a copy of the help:
USAGE:
cargo watch [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
-c, --clear Clear the screen before each run
-h, --help Display this message
--ignore-nothing Ignore nothing, not even target/ and .git/
--debug Show debug output
--why Show paths that changed
-q, --quiet Suppress output from cargo-watch itself
--no-vcs-ignores Don’t use .gitignore files
--no-dot-ignores Don’t use .ignore files
--no-restart Don’t restart command while it’s still running
-N, --notify Send a desktop notification when watchexec notices a change
(experimental, behaviour may change)
--poll Force use of polling for file changes
--postpone Postpone first run until a file changes
--skip-local-deps Don't try to find local dependencies of the current crate and watch
their working directories. Only watch the current directory.
-V, --version Display version information
--watch-when-idle Ignore events emitted while the commands run.
OPTIONS:
-x, --exec <cmd>... Cargo command(s) to execute on changes [default: check]
-s, --shell <cmd>... Shell command(s) to execute on changes
-d, --delay <delay> File updates debounce delay in seconds [default: 0.5]
--features <features> List of features passed to cargo invocations
-i, --ignore <pattern>... Ignore a glob/gitignore-style pattern
-B <rust-backtrace> Inject RUST_BACKTRACE=VALUE (generally you want to set it to 1)
into the environment
--use-shell <use-shell> Use a different shell. E.g. --use-shell=bash
-w, --watch <watch>... Watch specific file(s) or folder(s). Disables finding and
watching local dependencies.
-C, --workdir <workdir> Change working directory before running command [default: crate
root]
ARGS:
<cmd:trail>... Full command to run. -x and -s will be ignored!
Cargo commands (-x) are always executed before shell commands (-s). You can use the `-- command`
style instead, note you'll need to use full commands, it won't prefix `cargo` for you.
By default, the workspace directories of your project and all local dependencies are watched,
except for the target/ and .git/ folders. Your .ignore and .gitignore files are used to filter
paths.
On Windows, patterns given to -i have forward slashes (/) automatically
converted to backward ones (\) to ease command portability.
.gitignore
files are used by default to ignore paths to watch and trigger
runs. To stop honouring them, pass --no-vcs-ignores
.
.ignore
files in the same syntax are also used by default. This file can be
used to specify files that should be ignored by cargo watch but checked into
git, without constantly adding --ignore abc
options on the command-line. Do
note that .ignore
files may also be used by other programs, like
ripgrep.
To stop honouring these, pass --no-dot-ignores
.
Cargo watch also has an internal list of default ignores on top of those
specified in files, like target/
and .git/
and various other common types
(logs, editor swap files, lockfiles, etc).
To skip absolutely all ignores, use the --ignore-nothing
flag.
See the Glob patterns page for a description of how they work in the
context of this tool. That’s the syntax used for the --ignore
option.
Additionally, some specific quirks and behaviours:
On Windows, patterns should be specified with Windows-style (\\
) separators.
Unix-style separators (/
) would not match Windows paths, which could be
confusing and give the appearance of commandline ignores not working.
From Cargo Watch 7.0.0, /
in commandline ignores are automatically translated
to \\
when running on Windows, but one should still try to write the correct
patterns for the platform, as there may be more subtle differences.
From Cargo Watch 7.3.0, --ignore
patterns were fixed to provide better
experience with directory matching. Previously, ignoring a folder would need
unyieldy -i folder/**
patterns; now that is handled internally, and only -i folder
is needed for the same effect.
Cargo Watch pairs very well with systemfd/Catflap, tools for Unixy platforms that lets one spawn a socket before the watcher runs that Rust servers can then bind to, avoiding request-dropping and the infamous ADDRINUSE error. For example:
$ systemfd --no-pid -s http::5000 -- cargo watch -x run
Of course, if you don't need to guard against these issues or don't want to modify your program to grab sockets instead of ports, you can use Cargo Watch as-is: it will happily just restart your server normally.
Supervising and starting/restarting/stopping long-running processes is explicitly not within Cargo Watch's remit.
Instead, you should use a process manager.
On most Linuxes, systemd-run --user
is greatly useful here.
On other platforms, a tool such as pm2 or pmc can be used.
Start the application service:
$ systemd-run --user --pty --unit myappserver cargo run
Restart after a successful compile:
$ cargo -x check -x build -s 'systemctl --user restart myappserver'
Start the application service:
$ pm2 start --name myappserver cargo run
$ pm2 logs -f myappserver
Restart after a successful compile:
$ cargo -x check -x build -s 'pm2 restart myappserver'
This uses a "trigger file" that's watched by a second cargo watch to manage a process.
Start the application service:
$ touch .trigger
$ cargo watch --no-vcs-ignores -w .trigger -x run
Restart after a successful compile:
$ cargo watch -x check -x build -s 'touch .trigger'
The --no-vcs-ignores
flag ensures that you can safely add .trigger
to your
.gitignore
file to avoid mistakenly committing it.
In all cases, start by checking your version with cargo watch --version
and,
if necessary, upgrading to the latest one.
Cargo builds (and checks, and clippy, and tests because the tests have to be built) take out a lock on the project so two cargo instances don't run at the same time.
However, Rust Analyzer is much better at this, so use that instead of RLS.
Cargo Watch versions 5.0.0 and up (and Watchexec versions 1.3.0 and up) do not support Windows 7 or lower. Support will not be added. Issues for Windows <=7 will be closed. If it works, lucky you, but that is not intentional.
You can! But you'll have to specify the watch
subcommand as the first
argument, like so:
$ /path/to/cargo-watch watch -x build
That's not supported. If you have a good reason to use a Cargo-specific tool outside a Cargo project, please open an issue! Otherwise, you'll probably be best served with using Watchexec.
Try using --poll
to force the polling fallback.
If that still doesn't work, and you're using an editor that does "safe saving", like IntelliJ / PyCharm, you may have to disable "safe saving" as that may prevent file notifications from being generated properly.
Also try using the --why
option to see if the paths you expect are changing.
You may have hit the inotify watch limit. Here's a summary of what this means and how to increase it.
Cargo Watch (and Watchexec underlying) does not currently support running as PID 1.
It will probably work for basic uses, but you should consider using a supervisor,
init, or shell to handle PID 1 concerns. With Docker, the --init
option may be useful.
See watchexec#140 for more.
This isn't really a Cargo Watch issue, but when your host system is not Linux, running commands from inside the container on a volume or bind mount from the host will perform very badly due to filesystem indirection. Consider building outside the mount if possible:
# ...
RUN mkdir -p /build
WORKDIR `/src`
ENTRYPOINT cargo watch -C /build --manifest-path=/src/Cargo.toml -- cargo run
Or similarly with CARGO_TARGET_DIR
.
# ...
RUN mkdir -p /build
WORKDIR `/src`
ENV CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/build
ENTRYPOINT cargo watch -- cargo run
You may also have issues where it's the file updates that aren't triggering in a timely manner, not the compilation taking a long time. In that case, you should run Cargo Watch or Watchexec outside of Docker, on the host, and signal the container for restart or reload.
Watching one or more specific workspace member is not natively supported yet,
although you can use -w folder
to approximate it.
Watching the entire workspace and running a command in one member is done via
the usual -p
option on the child command:
$ cargo watch -x 'build -p subcrate'
That can happen when watching files that are modified by the command you're running.
If you're only running compiles or checks (i.e. any command that only affects
the target/ folder) and you're using -w
, you might be confusing the
target-folder-ignorer. Check your options and paths.
You can also use the --watch-when-idle
flag to ignore any event that happens
while the command is running.
Make sure the files you ignored are the only ones being touched. Use the
--why
option to see exactly which files were modified and triggered the
restart. Some programs and libraries create temporary files
that may not match a simple ignore pattern.
As above, you can also use the --watch-when-idle
flag to help.
This sometimes happens on some terminal configurations or for test harnesses.
A quick workaround (instead of going down the rabbit hole of debugging your
console settings) is to pass --color=always
to the command. E.g.
$ cargo watch -x 'check --color=always'
For test (and bench) commands, you'll need to pass the flag to the underlying program instead of cargo:
$ cargo watch -x 'test -- --color=always'
$ cargo watch --features foo,bar
will run cargo check --features foo,bar
on every watched change.
The --features
will be passed to every supported cargo
subcommand.
$ cargo watch --features foo,bar -x build -x doc
will run both build
and doc
with the foo
and bar
features.
Please open an issue, or look through the existing ones. You may also want to look through issues for the Notify library this tool depends on, or the issues for the Watchexec tool that we use under the covers (where I am also a maintainer).
If you want more verbose output, try running with the --debug
flag. Note that
this will also enable debug mode for watchexec. When filing an issue, make
sure to include a log with --debug
enabled so problems can be diagnosed.
If your issue is a watchexec issue, open it there directly. If you're not sure, feel free to open it here, but if it is a watchexec issue, it will get closed in favour of the upstream issue.
It is not recommended to do that directly. You may of course call cargo-watch
as any other program, and technically it exposes an (undocumented) library that
could be directly / statically embedded. If you have no other option, that may
be your best bet.
However, for most cases, consider building on top of Watchexec instead. That is itself built on Notify, and both of these can be used as Rust libraries.
If you want to build a tool that runs, restarts, and otherwise manages commands in response to file changes, you'll most probably want to use Watchexec.
If you want to build a tool that responds to file changes, but does not need to run commands, or does so in a way that is not well-supported by Watchexec, then Notify is your ticket.
Kind of! Watchexec does a really good job of watching files and running
commands and all the details that go with this. Cargo Watch uses the Watchexec
library interface and calls it with its own custom options, defaults, and
particularities, so you can just run cargo-watch
in your project and be in
business.
When asking questions and/or filing bugs, keep in mind that Cargo Watch and Watchexec share the same maintainer at the moment (but Notify does not, anymore)!
Created by Félix Saparelli and awesome contributors.