[package] name = "copyrat" version = "0.5.7" edition = "2021" description = "A tmux plugin for copy-pasting within tmux panes." readme = "README.md" license = "MIT" authors = ["graelo "] repository = "https://github.com/graelo/tmux-copyrat" homepage = "https://github.com/graelo/tmux-copyrat" documentation = "https://docs.rs/tmux-copyrat" keywords = ["rust", "tmux", "tmux-plugin", "tmux-copycat"] categories = ["command-line-utilities"] exclude = ["/.github"] [dependencies] thiserror = "1" termion = "4" regex = "1.6" clap = { version = "4.0", features = ["derive", "wrap_help"]} sequence_trie = "0.3.6" duct = "0.13" [[bin]] name = "copyrat" path = "src/bin/copyrat.rs" [[bin]] name = "tmux-copyrat" path = "src/bin/tmux_copyrat.rs" [profile.release] # Enable link-time optimization (LTO). It’s a kind of whole-program or # inter-module optimization as it runs as the very last step when linking the # different parts of your binary together. You can think of it as allowing # better inlining across dependency boundaries (but it’s of course more # complicated that that). # # Rust can use multiple linker flavors, and the one we want is “optimize across # all crates”, which is called “fat”. To set this, add the lto flag to your # profile: lto = "fat" # To speed up compile times, Rust tries to split your crates into small chunks # and compile as many in parallel as possible. The downside is that there’s # less opportunities for the compiler to optimize code across these chunks. So, # let’s tell it to do one chunk per crate: codegen-units = 1 # Rust by default uses stack unwinding (on the most common platforms). That # costs performance, so let’s skip stack traces and the ability to catch panics # for reduced code size and better cache usage: panic = "abort"