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how to build and run compiler, first shot
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nikomatsakis committed Jan 24, 2018
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# How to build the compiler and run what you built

The compiler is built using a tool called `x.py`. You will need to
have Python installed to run it. But before we get to that, if you're going to
be hacking on rustc, you'll want to tweak the configuration of the compiler. The default
configuration is oriented towards running the compiler as a user, not a developer.

### Create a config.toml

To start, copy [`config.toml.example`] to `config.toml`:

[`config.toml.example`]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/config.toml.example

```bash
> cd $RUST_CHECKOUT
> cp config.toml.example config.toml
```

Then you will want to open up the file and change the following
settings (and possibly others, such as `llvm.ccache`):

```
[llvm]
# Enables LLVM assertions, which will check that the LLVM bitcode generated
# by the compiler is internally consistent. These are particularly helpful
# if you edit `trans`.
assertions = true
[rust]
# This enables some assertions, but more importantly it enables the `debug!` logging
# macros that are essential for debugging rustc.
debug-assertions = true
# This will make your build more parallel; it costs a bit of runtime
# performance perhaps (less inlining) but it's worth it.
codegen-units = 0
# I always enable full debuginfo, though debuginfo-lines is more important.
debuginfo = true
# Gives you line numbers for backtraces.
debuginfo-lines = true
# Using the system allocator (instead of jemalloc) means that tools
# like valgrind and memcache work better.
use-jemalloc = false
```

### Running x.py and building a stage1 compiler

Once you've created a config.toml, you are now ready to run
`x.py`. There are a lot of options here, but let's start with what is
probably the best "go to" command for building a local rust:

```
./x.py build --incremental --stage 1 src/libstd
```

What this command will do is the following:

- Using the beta compiler (also called stage 0), it will build the
standard library and rustc from the `src` directory. The resulting
compiler is called the "stage 1" compiler.
- During this build, the `--incremental` switch enables incremental
compilation, so that if you later rebuild after editing things in
`src`, you can save a bit of time.
- Using this stage 1 compiler, it will build the standard library.
(this is what the `src/libstd`) means.

This is just a subset of the full rustc build. The **full** rustc build (what you
get if you just say `./x.py build`) has quite a few more steps:

- Build stage1 rustc with stage0 compiler
- Build libstd with stage1 compiler (up to here is the same)
- Build stage2 rustc with stage1 compiler (this part is new)
- Build libstd with stage2 compiler
- Build librustdoc and a bunch of other things

### Creating a rustup toolchain

Once you have successfully built rustc, you will have created a bunch
of files in your `build` directory. In order to actually run the
resulting rustc, we recommend creating rustup toolchains. The first
one will run the stage1 compiler (which we built above). The second
will execute the stage2 compiler (which we did not build, but which
you will likely build at some point).

```
> rustup toolchain link stage1 build/<host-triple>/stage1
> rustup toolchain link stage2 build/<host-triple>/stage2
```

Now you can run the rustc you built with. If you run with `-vV`, you
should see a version number ending in `-dev`, indicating a build from
your local environment:

```
> rustc +stage1 -vV
rustc 1.25.0-dev
binary: rustc
commit-hash: unknown
commit-date: unknown
host: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
release: 1.25.0-dev
LLVM version: 4.0
```

### Other x.py commands

Here are a few other useful x.py commands. We'll cover some of them in detail in other sections:

- Building things:
- `./x.py clean` -- clean up the build directory (`rm -rf build` works too, but then you have to rebuild LLVM)
- `./x.py build --stage 1` -- builds everything using the stage 1 compiler, not just up to libstd
- `./x.py build` -- builds the stage2 compiler
- Running tests (see the section [running tests](./running-tests.html) for more details):
- `./x.py test --stage 1 src/libstd` -- runs the `#[test]` tests from libstd
- `./x.py test --stage 1 src/test/run-pass` -- runs the `run-pass` test suite

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