Split up rustdoc page
This commit is contained in:
parent
b8065faa0f
commit
4329b8e91a
|
|
@ -51,6 +51,7 @@
|
|||
- [Salsa](./salsa.md)
|
||||
- [Memory Management in Rustc](./memory.md)
|
||||
- [Parallel Compilation](./parallel-rustc.md)
|
||||
- [Rustdoc](./rustdoc-internals.md)
|
||||
|
||||
- [Part 3: Source Code Representations](./part-3-intro.md)
|
||||
- [Command-line arguments](./cli.md)
|
||||
|
|
|
|||
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,197 @@
|
|||
# Rustdoc internals
|
||||
|
||||
This page describes rustdoc's passes and modes. For an overview of rustdoc,
|
||||
see [`rustdoc`](./rustdoc.md).
|
||||
|
||||
## From crate to clean
|
||||
|
||||
In `core.rs` are two central items: the `DocContext` struct, and the `run_core`
|
||||
function. The latter is where rustdoc calls out to rustc to compile a crate to
|
||||
the point where rustdoc can take over. The former is a state container used
|
||||
when crawling through a crate to gather its documentation.
|
||||
|
||||
The main process of crate crawling is done in `clean/mod.rs` through several
|
||||
implementations of the `Clean` trait defined within. This is a conversion
|
||||
trait, which defines one method:
|
||||
|
||||
```rust,ignore
|
||||
pub trait Clean<T> {
|
||||
fn clean(&self, cx: &DocContext) -> T;
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
`clean/mod.rs` also defines the types for the "cleaned" AST used later on to
|
||||
render documentation pages. Each usually accompanies an implementation of
|
||||
`Clean` that takes some AST or HIR type from rustc and converts it into the
|
||||
appropriate "cleaned" type. "Big" items like modules or associated items may
|
||||
have some extra processing in its `Clean` implementation, but for the most part
|
||||
these impls are straightforward conversions. The "entry point" to this module
|
||||
is the `impl Clean<Crate> for visit_ast::RustdocVisitor`, which is called by
|
||||
`run_core` above.
|
||||
|
||||
You see, I actually lied a little earlier: There's another AST transformation
|
||||
that happens before the events in `clean/mod.rs`. In `visit_ast.rs` is the
|
||||
type `RustdocVisitor`, which *actually* crawls a `rustc_hir::Crate` to get the first
|
||||
intermediate representation, defined in `doctree.rs`. This pass is mainly to
|
||||
get a few intermediate wrappers around the HIR types and to process visibility
|
||||
and inlining. This is where `#[doc(inline)]`, `#[doc(no_inline)]`, and
|
||||
`#[doc(hidden)]` are processed, as well as the logic for whether a `pub use`
|
||||
should get the full page or a "Reexport" line in the module page.
|
||||
|
||||
The other major thing that happens in `clean/mod.rs` is the collection of doc
|
||||
comments and `#[doc=""]` attributes into a separate field of the Attributes
|
||||
struct, present on anything that gets hand-written documentation. This makes it
|
||||
easier to collect this documentation later in the process.
|
||||
|
||||
The primary output of this process is a `clean::Crate` with a tree of Items
|
||||
which describe the publicly-documentable items in the target crate.
|
||||
|
||||
### Hot potato
|
||||
|
||||
Before moving on to the next major step, a few important "passes" occur over
|
||||
the documentation. These do things like combine the separate "attributes" into
|
||||
a single string and strip leading whitespace to make the document easier on the
|
||||
markdown parser, or drop items that are not public or deliberately hidden with
|
||||
`#[doc(hidden)]`. These are all implemented in the `passes/` directory, one
|
||||
file per pass. By default, all of these passes are run on a crate, but the ones
|
||||
regarding dropping private/hidden items can be bypassed by passing
|
||||
`--document-private-items` to rustdoc. Note that unlike the previous set of AST
|
||||
transformations, the passes happen on the _cleaned_ crate.
|
||||
|
||||
(Strictly speaking, you can fine-tune the passes run and even add your own, but
|
||||
[we're trying to deprecate that][44136]. If you need finer-grain control over
|
||||
these passes, please let us know!)
|
||||
|
||||
[44136]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44136
|
||||
|
||||
Here is current (as of this writing) list of passes:
|
||||
|
||||
- `propagate-doc-cfg` - propagates `#[doc(cfg(...))]` to child items.
|
||||
- `collapse-docs` concatenates all document attributes into one document
|
||||
attribute. This is necessary because each line of a doc comment is given as a
|
||||
separate doc attribute, and this will combine them into a single string with
|
||||
line breaks between each attribute.
|
||||
- `unindent-comments` removes excess indentation on comments in order for
|
||||
markdown to like it. This is necessary because the convention for writing
|
||||
documentation is to provide a space between the `///` or `//!` marker and the
|
||||
text, and stripping that leading space will make the text easier to parse by
|
||||
the Markdown parser. (In the past, the markdown parser used was not
|
||||
Commonmark- compliant, which caused annoyances with extra whitespace but this
|
||||
seems to be less of an issue today.)
|
||||
- `strip-priv-imports` strips all private import statements (`use`, `extern
|
||||
crate`) from a crate. This is necessary because rustdoc will handle *public*
|
||||
imports by either inlining the item's documentation to the module or creating
|
||||
a "Reexports" section with the import in it. The pass ensures that all of
|
||||
these imports are actually relevant to documentation.
|
||||
- `strip-hidden` and `strip-private` strip all `doc(hidden)` and private items
|
||||
from the output. `strip-private` implies `strip-priv-imports`. Basically, the
|
||||
goal is to remove items that are not relevant for public documentation.
|
||||
|
||||
## From clean to crate
|
||||
|
||||
This is where the "second phase" in rustdoc begins. This phase primarily lives
|
||||
in the `html/` folder, and it all starts with `run()` in `html/render.rs`. This
|
||||
code is responsible for setting up the `Context`, `SharedContext`, and `Cache`
|
||||
which are used during rendering, copying out the static files which live in
|
||||
every rendered set of documentation (things like the fonts, CSS, and JavaScript
|
||||
that live in `html/static/`), creating the search index, and printing out the
|
||||
source code rendering, before beginning the process of rendering all the
|
||||
documentation for the crate.
|
||||
|
||||
Several functions implemented directly on `Context` take the `clean::Crate` and
|
||||
set up some state between rendering items or recursing on a module's child
|
||||
items. From here the "page rendering" begins, via an enormous `write!()` call
|
||||
in `html/layout.rs`. The parts that actually generate HTML from the items and
|
||||
documentation occurs within a series of `std::fmt::Display` implementations and
|
||||
functions that pass around a `&mut std::fmt::Formatter`. The top-level
|
||||
implementation that writes out the page body is the `impl<'a> fmt::Display for
|
||||
Item<'a>` in `html/render.rs`, which switches out to one of several `item_*`
|
||||
functions based on the kind of `Item` being rendered.
|
||||
|
||||
Depending on what kind of rendering code you're looking for, you'll probably
|
||||
find it either in `html/render.rs` for major items like "what sections should I
|
||||
print for a struct page" or `html/format.rs` for smaller component pieces like
|
||||
"how should I print a where clause as part of some other item".
|
||||
|
||||
Whenever rustdoc comes across an item that should print hand-written
|
||||
documentation alongside, it calls out to `html/markdown.rs` which interfaces
|
||||
with the Markdown parser. This is exposed as a series of types that wrap a
|
||||
string of Markdown, and implement `fmt::Display` to emit HTML text. It takes
|
||||
special care to enable certain features like footnotes and tables and add
|
||||
syntax highlighting to Rust code blocks (via `html/highlight.rs`) before
|
||||
running the Markdown parser. There's also a function in here
|
||||
(`find_testable_code`) that specifically scans for Rust code blocks so the
|
||||
test-runner code can find all the doctests in the crate.
|
||||
|
||||
### From soup to nuts
|
||||
|
||||
(alternate title: ["An unbroken thread that stretches from those first `Cell`s
|
||||
to us"][video])
|
||||
|
||||
[video]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOLAGYmUQV0
|
||||
|
||||
It's important to note that the AST cleaning can ask the compiler for
|
||||
information (crucially, `DocContext` contains a `TyCtxt`), but page rendering
|
||||
cannot. The `clean::Crate` created within `run_core` is passed outside the
|
||||
compiler context before being handed to `html::render::run`. This means that a
|
||||
lot of the "supplementary data" that isn't immediately available inside an
|
||||
item's definition, like which trait is the `Deref` trait used by the language,
|
||||
needs to be collected during cleaning, stored in the `DocContext`, and passed
|
||||
along to the `SharedContext` during HTML rendering. This manifests as a bunch
|
||||
of shared state, context variables, and `RefCell`s.
|
||||
|
||||
Also of note is that some items that come from "asking the compiler" don't go
|
||||
directly into the `DocContext` - for example, when loading items from a foreign
|
||||
crate, rustdoc will ask about trait implementations and generate new `Item`s
|
||||
for the impls based on that information. This goes directly into the returned
|
||||
`Crate` rather than roundabout through the `DocContext`. This way, these
|
||||
implementations can be collected alongside the others, right before rendering
|
||||
the HTML.
|
||||
|
||||
## Other tricks up its sleeve
|
||||
|
||||
All this describes the process for generating HTML documentation from a Rust
|
||||
crate, but there are couple other major modes that rustdoc runs in. It can also
|
||||
be run on a standalone Markdown file, or it can run doctests on Rust code or
|
||||
standalone Markdown files. For the former, it shortcuts straight to
|
||||
`html/markdown.rs`, optionally including a mode which inserts a Table of
|
||||
Contents to the output HTML.
|
||||
|
||||
For the latter, rustdoc runs a similar partial-compilation to get relevant
|
||||
documentation in `test.rs`, but instead of going through the full clean and
|
||||
render process, it runs a much simpler crate walk to grab *just* the
|
||||
hand-written documentation. Combined with the aforementioned
|
||||
"`find_testable_code`" in `html/markdown.rs`, it builds up a collection of
|
||||
tests to run before handing them off to the libtest test runner. One notable
|
||||
location in `test.rs` is the function `make_test`, which is where hand-written
|
||||
doctests get transformed into something that can be executed.
|
||||
|
||||
Some extra reading about `make_test` can be found
|
||||
[here](https://quietmisdreavus.net/code/2018/02/23/how-the-doctests-get-made/).
|
||||
|
||||
## Dotting i's and crossing t's
|
||||
|
||||
So that's rustdoc's code in a nutshell, but there's more things in the repo
|
||||
that deal with it. Since we have the full `compiletest` suite at hand, there's
|
||||
a set of tests in `src/test/rustdoc` that make sure the final HTML is what we
|
||||
expect in various situations. These tests also use a supplementary script,
|
||||
`src/etc/htmldocck.py`, that allows it to look through the final HTML using
|
||||
XPath notation to get a precise look at the output. The full description of all
|
||||
the commands available to rustdoc tests is in `htmldocck.py`.
|
||||
|
||||
To use multiple crates in a rustdoc test, add `// aux-build:filename.rs`
|
||||
to the top of the test file. `filename.rs` should be placed in an `auxiliary`
|
||||
directory relative to the test file with the comment. If you need to build
|
||||
docs for the auxiliary file, use `// build-aux-docs`.
|
||||
|
||||
In addition, there are separate tests for the search index and rustdoc's
|
||||
ability to query it. The files in `src/test/rustdoc-js` each contain a
|
||||
different search query and the expected results, broken out by search tab.
|
||||
These files are processed by a script in `src/tools/rustdoc-js` and the Node.js
|
||||
runtime. These tests don't have as thorough of a writeup, but a broad example
|
||||
that features results in all tabs can be found in `basic.js`. The basic idea is
|
||||
that you match a given `QUERY` with a set of `EXPECTED` results, complete with
|
||||
the full item path of each item.
|
||||
|
||||
You can run tests using the name of the folder. For example,
|
||||
`x.py test --stage 1 src/test/rustdoc` will run the output tests using a stage1 rustdoc.
|
||||
193
src/rustdoc.md
193
src/rustdoc.md
|
|
@ -56,195 +56,6 @@ does is call the `main()` that's in this crate's `lib.rs`, though.)
|
|||
series of JavaScript files that encode queries on the standard library search
|
||||
index and expected results.
|
||||
|
||||
## From crate to clean
|
||||
## See also
|
||||
|
||||
In `core.rs` are two central items: the `DocContext` struct, and the `run_core`
|
||||
function. The latter is where rustdoc calls out to rustc to compile a crate to
|
||||
the point where rustdoc can take over. The former is a state container used
|
||||
when crawling through a crate to gather its documentation.
|
||||
|
||||
The main process of crate crawling is done in `clean/mod.rs` through several
|
||||
implementations of the `Clean` trait defined within. This is a conversion
|
||||
trait, which defines one method:
|
||||
|
||||
```rust,ignore
|
||||
pub trait Clean<T> {
|
||||
fn clean(&self, cx: &DocContext) -> T;
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
`clean/mod.rs` also defines the types for the "cleaned" AST used later on to
|
||||
render documentation pages. Each usually accompanies an implementation of
|
||||
`Clean` that takes some AST or HIR type from rustc and converts it into the
|
||||
appropriate "cleaned" type. "Big" items like modules or associated items may
|
||||
have some extra processing in its `Clean` implementation, but for the most part
|
||||
these impls are straightforward conversions. The "entry point" to this module
|
||||
is the `impl Clean<Crate> for visit_ast::RustdocVisitor`, which is called by
|
||||
`run_core` above.
|
||||
|
||||
You see, I actually lied a little earlier: There's another AST transformation
|
||||
that happens before the events in `clean/mod.rs`. In `visit_ast.rs` is the
|
||||
type `RustdocVisitor`, which *actually* crawls a `rustc_hir::Crate` to get the first
|
||||
intermediate representation, defined in `doctree.rs`. This pass is mainly to
|
||||
get a few intermediate wrappers around the HIR types and to process visibility
|
||||
and inlining. This is where `#[doc(inline)]`, `#[doc(no_inline)]`, and
|
||||
`#[doc(hidden)]` are processed, as well as the logic for whether a `pub use`
|
||||
should get the full page or a "Reexport" line in the module page.
|
||||
|
||||
The other major thing that happens in `clean/mod.rs` is the collection of doc
|
||||
comments and `#[doc=""]` attributes into a separate field of the Attributes
|
||||
struct, present on anything that gets hand-written documentation. This makes it
|
||||
easier to collect this documentation later in the process.
|
||||
|
||||
The primary output of this process is a `clean::Crate` with a tree of Items
|
||||
which describe the publicly-documentable items in the target crate.
|
||||
|
||||
### Hot potato
|
||||
|
||||
Before moving on to the next major step, a few important "passes" occur over
|
||||
the documentation. These do things like combine the separate "attributes" into
|
||||
a single string and strip leading whitespace to make the document easier on the
|
||||
markdown parser, or drop items that are not public or deliberately hidden with
|
||||
`#[doc(hidden)]`. These are all implemented in the `passes/` directory, one
|
||||
file per pass. By default, all of these passes are run on a crate, but the ones
|
||||
regarding dropping private/hidden items can be bypassed by passing
|
||||
`--document-private-items` to rustdoc. Note that unlike the previous set of AST
|
||||
transformations, the passes happen on the _cleaned_ crate.
|
||||
|
||||
(Strictly speaking, you can fine-tune the passes run and even add your own, but
|
||||
[we're trying to deprecate that][44136]. If you need finer-grain control over
|
||||
these passes, please let us know!)
|
||||
|
||||
[44136]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44136
|
||||
|
||||
Here is current (as of this writing) list of passes:
|
||||
|
||||
- `propagate-doc-cfg` - propagates `#[doc(cfg(...))]` to child items.
|
||||
- `collapse-docs` concatenates all document attributes into one document
|
||||
attribute. This is necessary because each line of a doc comment is given as a
|
||||
separate doc attribute, and this will combine them into a single string with
|
||||
line breaks between each attribute.
|
||||
- `unindent-comments` removes excess indentation on comments in order for
|
||||
markdown to like it. This is necessary because the convention for writing
|
||||
documentation is to provide a space between the `///` or `//!` marker and the
|
||||
text, and stripping that leading space will make the text easier to parse by
|
||||
the Markdown parser. (In the past, the markdown parser used was not
|
||||
Commonmark- compliant, which caused annoyances with extra whitespace but this
|
||||
seems to be less of an issue today.)
|
||||
- `strip-priv-imports` strips all private import statements (`use`, `extern
|
||||
crate`) from a crate. This is necessary because rustdoc will handle *public*
|
||||
imports by either inlining the item's documentation to the module or creating
|
||||
a "Reexports" section with the import in it. The pass ensures that all of
|
||||
these imports are actually relevant to documentation.
|
||||
- `strip-hidden` and `strip-private` strip all `doc(hidden)` and private items
|
||||
from the output. `strip-private` implies `strip-priv-imports`. Basically, the
|
||||
goal is to remove items that are not relevant for public documentation.
|
||||
|
||||
## From clean to crate
|
||||
|
||||
This is where the "second phase" in rustdoc begins. This phase primarily lives
|
||||
in the `html/` folder, and it all starts with `run()` in `html/render.rs`. This
|
||||
code is responsible for setting up the `Context`, `SharedContext`, and `Cache`
|
||||
which are used during rendering, copying out the static files which live in
|
||||
every rendered set of documentation (things like the fonts, CSS, and JavaScript
|
||||
that live in `html/static/`), creating the search index, and printing out the
|
||||
source code rendering, before beginning the process of rendering all the
|
||||
documentation for the crate.
|
||||
|
||||
Several functions implemented directly on `Context` take the `clean::Crate` and
|
||||
set up some state between rendering items or recursing on a module's child
|
||||
items. From here the "page rendering" begins, via an enormous `write!()` call
|
||||
in `html/layout.rs`. The parts that actually generate HTML from the items and
|
||||
documentation occurs within a series of `std::fmt::Display` implementations and
|
||||
functions that pass around a `&mut std::fmt::Formatter`. The top-level
|
||||
implementation that writes out the page body is the `impl<'a> fmt::Display for
|
||||
Item<'a>` in `html/render.rs`, which switches out to one of several `item_*`
|
||||
functions based on the kind of `Item` being rendered.
|
||||
|
||||
Depending on what kind of rendering code you're looking for, you'll probably
|
||||
find it either in `html/render.rs` for major items like "what sections should I
|
||||
print for a struct page" or `html/format.rs` for smaller component pieces like
|
||||
"how should I print a where clause as part of some other item".
|
||||
|
||||
Whenever rustdoc comes across an item that should print hand-written
|
||||
documentation alongside, it calls out to `html/markdown.rs` which interfaces
|
||||
with the Markdown parser. This is exposed as a series of types that wrap a
|
||||
string of Markdown, and implement `fmt::Display` to emit HTML text. It takes
|
||||
special care to enable certain features like footnotes and tables and add
|
||||
syntax highlighting to Rust code blocks (via `html/highlight.rs`) before
|
||||
running the Markdown parser. There's also a function in here
|
||||
(`find_testable_code`) that specifically scans for Rust code blocks so the
|
||||
test-runner code can find all the doctests in the crate.
|
||||
|
||||
### From soup to nuts
|
||||
|
||||
(alternate title: ["An unbroken thread that stretches from those first `Cell`s
|
||||
to us"][video])
|
||||
|
||||
[video]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOLAGYmUQV0
|
||||
|
||||
It's important to note that the AST cleaning can ask the compiler for
|
||||
information (crucially, `DocContext` contains a `TyCtxt`), but page rendering
|
||||
cannot. The `clean::Crate` created within `run_core` is passed outside the
|
||||
compiler context before being handed to `html::render::run`. This means that a
|
||||
lot of the "supplementary data" that isn't immediately available inside an
|
||||
item's definition, like which trait is the `Deref` trait used by the language,
|
||||
needs to be collected during cleaning, stored in the `DocContext`, and passed
|
||||
along to the `SharedContext` during HTML rendering. This manifests as a bunch
|
||||
of shared state, context variables, and `RefCell`s.
|
||||
|
||||
Also of note is that some items that come from "asking the compiler" don't go
|
||||
directly into the `DocContext` - for example, when loading items from a foreign
|
||||
crate, rustdoc will ask about trait implementations and generate new `Item`s
|
||||
for the impls based on that information. This goes directly into the returned
|
||||
`Crate` rather than roundabout through the `DocContext`. This way, these
|
||||
implementations can be collected alongside the others, right before rendering
|
||||
the HTML.
|
||||
|
||||
## Other tricks up its sleeve
|
||||
|
||||
All this describes the process for generating HTML documentation from a Rust
|
||||
crate, but there are couple other major modes that rustdoc runs in. It can also
|
||||
be run on a standalone Markdown file, or it can run doctests on Rust code or
|
||||
standalone Markdown files. For the former, it shortcuts straight to
|
||||
`html/markdown.rs`, optionally including a mode which inserts a Table of
|
||||
Contents to the output HTML.
|
||||
|
||||
For the latter, rustdoc runs a similar partial-compilation to get relevant
|
||||
documentation in `test.rs`, but instead of going through the full clean and
|
||||
render process, it runs a much simpler crate walk to grab *just* the
|
||||
hand-written documentation. Combined with the aforementioned
|
||||
"`find_testable_code`" in `html/markdown.rs`, it builds up a collection of
|
||||
tests to run before handing them off to the libtest test runner. One notable
|
||||
location in `test.rs` is the function `make_test`, which is where hand-written
|
||||
doctests get transformed into something that can be executed.
|
||||
|
||||
Some extra reading about `make_test` can be found
|
||||
[here](https://quietmisdreavus.net/code/2018/02/23/how-the-doctests-get-made/).
|
||||
|
||||
## Dotting i's and crossing t's
|
||||
|
||||
So that's rustdoc's code in a nutshell, but there's more things in the repo
|
||||
that deal with it. Since we have the full `compiletest` suite at hand, there's
|
||||
a set of tests in `src/test/rustdoc` that make sure the final HTML is what we
|
||||
expect in various situations. These tests also use a supplementary script,
|
||||
`src/etc/htmldocck.py`, that allows it to look through the final HTML using
|
||||
XPath notation to get a precise look at the output. The full description of all
|
||||
the commands available to rustdoc tests is in `htmldocck.py`.
|
||||
|
||||
To use multiple crates in a rustdoc test, add `// aux-build:filename.rs`
|
||||
to the top of the test file. `filename.rs` should be placed in an `auxiliary`
|
||||
directory relative to the test file with the comment. If you need to build
|
||||
docs for the auxiliary file, use `// build-aux-docs`.
|
||||
|
||||
In addition, there are separate tests for the search index and rustdoc's
|
||||
ability to query it. The files in `src/test/rustdoc-js` each contain a
|
||||
different search query and the expected results, broken out by search tab.
|
||||
These files are processed by a script in `src/tools/rustdoc-js` and the Node.js
|
||||
runtime. These tests don't have as thorough of a writeup, but a broad example
|
||||
that features results in all tabs can be found in `basic.js`. The basic idea is
|
||||
that you match a given `QUERY` with a set of `EXPECTED` results, complete with
|
||||
the full item path of each item.
|
||||
|
||||
You can run tests using the name of the folder. For example,
|
||||
`x.py test --stage 1 src/test/rustdoc` will run the output tests using a stage1 rustdoc.
|
||||
For more details about how rustdoc works, see the page on [rustdoc internals](./rustdoc-internals.md).
|
||||
|
|
|
|||
Loading…
Reference in New Issue