Expand description
§dirmod
Tired of writing and updating all the mod
statements in mod.rs?
Generate them with dirmod
instead.
dirmod
scans your directory and generates the corresponding mod
statements automatically
with a simple macro call:
dirmod::all!();
And that’s all!
(Note:
dirmod
is designed for Rust 2018 Edition, so macros take simple and ambiguous names likeall
,os
, etc. It is recommended to call the macros in fully-qualified fashion likedirmod::all!
,dirmod::os!()
, etc. for clarity. The old#[macro_use] extern crate dirmod;
style is not recommended.)
§Visibility
Modules can be set to a common visibility,
so all modules can be pub mod
or pub(self) mod
, etc. by default at your favour:
dirmod::all!(default pub);
You can also make all modules private, and set the visibility for the re-exported items instead.
If there are individual modules among dozens that need special visibility configuration, it is also possible to write
dirmod::all!(default pub; priv foo, bar);
Then all modules have pub
visibility,
except foo
and bar
which are private.
§Conditional compilation
But I use
mod
to implement conditional compilation!
No problem, dirmod
generates cfg
attributes for some idiomatic styles:
- A directory where each module name is the feature name (e.g.
#[cfg(feature = "foo")] mod foo;
) - A directory where each module name is the OS/OS family name (e.g.
#[cfg(target_family = "unix")] mod unix;
)
This can be achieved by calling dirmod::os!()
, dirmod::family!()
or dirmod::feature!()
.
It is likely that different OS variants of the same module expose the same API, so it might be practical to write:
dirmod::os!(pub use);
If none of the modules support the current OS, you could trigger a compile error:
dirmod::os!(pub use ||);
Or with a custom error message:
dirmod::os!(pub use || "custom error message");
Note that it does not make sense to use the ||
on dirmod::feature!
,
because Cargo features are incremental and should not be restricted in amount.
File an issue if I missed any common styles!
§But I am still unhappy about xxxx corner case!
No problem, you don’t have to use dirmod
for every module.
dirmod::all!()
has an except
argument that excludes certain modules.
Since the macro simply generates mod
statements,
it is perfectly fine to add more items before/after the macro call.
dirmod::all!(except corge, grault);
§Documentation
Instead of writing docs in mod.rs, write them in the module directly.
In addition to dirmod
constraints, there are a few advantages:
- Avoid lots of docs mixed together in a single mod.rs. Easier to navigate!
- Writing docs inside the module itself is much more relevant than references to the parent module.
To write docs for the module, use this syntax at the top of the module (before any other items):
//! Yay, I'm now describing myself!
//! I finally have my own place!
§Supported Rust versions
Since detecting the source file requires the proc_macro_span
feature,
Rust Nightly is required to compile this crate.
§Examples
See the testcrate
directory, which demonstrates the use of dirmod::all!
and dirmod::family!
.