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Cargo B(inary)Install

cargo binstall provides a low-complexity mechanism for installing rust binaries as an alternative to building from source (via cargo install) or manually downloading packages. This is intended to work with existing CI artifacts and infrastructure, and with minimal overhead for package maintainers.

binstall works by fetching the crate information from crates.io, then searching the linked repository for matching releases and artifacts, with fallbacks to quickinstall and finally cargo install if these are not found. To support binstall maintainers must add configuration values to Cargo.toml to allow the tool to locate the appropriate binary package for a given version and target. See SUPPORT.md for more detail.

Status

CI build GitHub tag Crates.io

You probably want to see this page as it was when the latest version was published for accurate documentation.

Installation

Here are the one-liners for installing pre-compiled cargo-binstall binary from release on Linux and macOS:

curl -L --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/main/install-from-binstall-release.sh | bash

And the one-liner for installing a pre-compiled cargo-binstall binary from release on Windows (x86_64 and aarch64):

Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted -Scope Process; iex (iwr "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/main/install-from-binstall-release.ps1").Content

To get started using cargo-binstall first install the binary (either via cargo install cargo-binstall or by downloading a pre-compiled release), then extract it using tar or unzip and move it into $HOME/.cargo/bin. We recommend using the pre-compiled ones because we optimize those more than a standard source build does.

OS Arch URL
linux x86_64 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-x86_64-unknown-linux-musl.tgz
linux armv7 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-armv7-unknown-linux-musleabihf.tgz
linux arm64 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-aarch64-unknown-linux-musl.tgz
macos x86_64 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-x86_64-apple-darwin.zip
macos m1 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-aarch64-apple-darwin.zip
macos universal https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-universal-apple-darwin.zip
windows x86_64 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-x86_64-pc-windows-msvc.zip
windows arm64 https://github.com/cargo-bins/cargo-binstall/releases/latest/download/cargo-binstall-aarch64-pc-windows-msvc.zip

We also provide pre-built artifacts with debuginfo for Linux and Mac. These artifacts are suffixed with .full.tgz on Linux and .full.zip on Mac and Windows.

To upgrade cargo-binstall, use cargo binstall cargo-binstall!

Usage

Supported packages can be installed using cargo binstall NAME where NAME is the crates.io package name.

Package versions and targets may be specified using the --version and --target arguments respectively, and will be installed into $HOME/.cargo/bin by default. For additional options please see cargo binstall --help.

[garry] ➜  ~ cargo binstall radio-sx128x --version 0.14.1-alpha.5
21:14:15 [INFO] Resolving package: 'radio-sx128x'
21:14:18 [INFO] This will install the following binaries:
21:14:18 [INFO]   - sx128x-util (sx128x-util-x86_64-apple-darwin -> /Users/ryankurte/.cargo/bin/sx128x-util-v0.14.1-alpha.5)
21:14:18 [INFO] And create (or update) the following symlinks:
21:14:18 [INFO]   - sx128x-util (/Users/ryankurte/.cargo/bin/sx128x-util-v0.14.1-alpha.5 -> /Users/ryankurte/.cargo/bin/sx128x-util)
21:14:18 [INFO] Do you wish to continue? yes/[no]
? yes
21:14:20 [INFO] Installing binaries...
21:14:21 [INFO] Done in 6.212736s

Unsupported crates

Nowadays, cargo-binstall is smart enough. All you need just passing the crate name.

cargo binstall --no-confirm --no-symlinks cargo-edit cargo-watch cargo-tarpaulin \
    watchexec-cli cargo-outdated just fnm broot stylua

If your favorite package fails to install, you can instead specify the pkg-url, bin-dir, and pkg-fmt at the command line, with values as documented in SUPPORT.md.

For example:

$ cargo-binstall \
  --pkg-url="{ repo }/releases/download/{ version }/{ name }-{ version }-{ target }.{ archive-format }" \
  --pkg-fmt="txz" \
  crate_name

Upgrade installed crates

The most ergonomic way to upgrade the installed crates is with cargo-update. cargo-update automatically uses cargo-binstall to install the updates if cargo-binstall is present.

Supported crates such as cargo-binstall itself can also be updated with cargo-binstall as in the example in Installation above.

Signatures

We have initial, limited support for maintainers to specify a signing public key and where to find package signatures. With this enabled, Binstall will download and verify signatures for that package.

You can use --only-signed to refuse to install packages if they're not signed.

If you like to live dangerously (please don't use this outside testing), you can use --skip-signatures to disable checking or even downloading signatures at all.

FAQ

Why use this?

Because wget-ing releases is frustrating, cargo install takes a not inconsequential portion of forever on constrained devices, and often putting together actual packages is overkill.

Why use the cargo manifest?

Crates already have these, and they already contain a significant portion of the required information. Also, there's this great and woefully underused (IMO) [package.metadata] field.

Is this secure?

Yes and also no?

We have initial support for verifying signatures, but not a lot of the ecosystem produces signatures at the moment. See #1 to discuss more on this.

We always pull the metadata from crates.io over HTTPS, and verify the checksum of the crate tar. We also enforce using HTTPS with TLS >= 1.2 for the actual download of the package files.

Compared to something like a curl ... | sh script, we're not running arbitrary code, but of course the crate you're downloading a package for might itself be malicious!

What do the error codes mean?

You can find a full description of errors including exit codes here: https://docs.rs/binstalk/latest/binstalk/errors/enum.BinstallError.html

Can I use it in CI?

Yes! We have two options, both for GitHub Actions:

  1. For full featured use, we recommend the excellent taiki-e/install-action, which has explicit support for selected tools and uses cargo-binstall for everything else.
  2. We provide a first-party, minimal action that only installs the tool:
  - uses: cargo-bins/cargo-binstall@main

Are debug symbols available?

Yes! Extra pre-built packages with a .full suffix are available and contain split debuginfo, documentation files, and extra binaries like the detect-wasi utility.


If you have ideas/contributions or anything is not working the way you expect (in which case, please include an output with --log-level debug) and feel free to open an issue or PR.

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