Crate eco[−][src]
Expand description
A tool for reasoning about breaking changes in Rust ecosystems
Eco helps Rust programmers to keep an ecosystem updated. An ecosystem is a collection of libraries that are relevant to a project.
This library is organized into modules, where each module has its own custom text format. By using text, it is easy to customize the collecting and generating of data.
Ecosystem
The definition of an ecosystem used by Eco is:
A list of libraries, each with a set of dependencies,
forming an directed acyclic graph for dependencies and directed cyclic
graph for dev-dependencies, with no holes.
Example
Extract info is a bird view of an ecosystem of libraries. This is used to build a dependency graph, which then is used to generate recommended update actions to keep the ecosystem healthy.
extern crate eco;
fn main() {
use std::io::Read;
use std::fs::File;
// Load extract info from file.
let mut extract_info_file = File::open("assets/extract/piston.txt").unwrap();
let mut extract_info = String::new();
extract_info_file.read_to_string(&mut extract_info).unwrap();
let dependency_info = eco::extract::extract_dependency_info_from(&extract_info).unwrap();
let update_info = eco::update::generate_update_info_from(&dependency_info).unwrap();
println!("{}", update_info);
}
Unsoundness of holes
It is important to not leave any hole in the ecosystem. A hole is when a dependency is not listed that uses a listed library.
Example:
A (listed) -> B (not listed) -> C (listed)
The dependencies of library B will not be analyzed because they are not listed. This will lead to a potential error since breaking changes in library C does not cause a breaking change in A.
Notice it is OK to not list libraries that are lower level dependencies.
As long as there are no holes, the update algorithm is sound.
Modules
Dependency info.
Extract dependency information from extract info.
Generate todo list for each package.
Generate update information from dependency information.