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I want to generate a static library from a Rust project that I do not maintain. The project allows building a dynamic library — the Cargo.toml specifies crate-type = ["cdylib"].

Modifying the crate type in the file works, but I want to keep the unmodified original project as git submodule in my project if possible.

Is there is any flag that can be passed to the cargo build command to override this setting?

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3 Answers 3

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You can't override it, but you can supplement it. Use cargo rustc and pass --crate-type=staticlib directly to the compiler:

% cargo build
   Compiling example v0.1.0 (/private/tmp/example)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.31s

% find target -name '*.a'

% cargo rustc -- --crate-type=staticlib
   Compiling example v0.1.0 (/private/tmp/example)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.29s

% find target -name '*.a'
target/debug/deps/libexample.a
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  • Thank you. First of all this works for me (I'm actually calling cargo rustc --release -- --crate-type=staticlib now), I find the static lib in target/release/deps. Still I have to admit that as a C++ programer with few rust experience I'm not sure what this call is actually doing or not doing in contrast to cargo build? Besides respecting the crate-type I pass to it, will it still use the Cargo.toml to e.g. figure out dependencies and other settings found there that I might or might not fully understand right now? Why do I find the generated library in a different destination folder now? Nov 25, 2020 at 21:15
  • @PluginPenguin I've added a link to the docs for cargo rustc. TL;DR — you can use it to pass more flags to the final invocation of rustc that Cargo would make. Yes, dependencies will still be honored. I don't fully understand why the output remains in the deps directory, but I think that Cargo always builds into there and then links / copies to the "expected" output location. That copy is skipped here.
    – Shepmaster
    Nov 25, 2020 at 21:22
  • documentation says "The --crate-type command-line value will override the crate_type attribute" so either this answer is deprecated or the documentation is incorrect Jun 9, 2022 at 14:03
  • When I try that, I run into tons of errors because then all dependencies are also built as type staticlib and this causes error when trying to use them (crate: ... required to be available in rlib format, but was not found in this form). Specifying both, staticlib and rlib also doesn't solve this. Modifying the Cargo.toml works fine, though.
    – Mecki
    Jun 15, 2022 at 13:30
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You can provide the crate-type, but you cannot override the one specified in your Cargo.toml:

$ cargo rustc -- --crate-type=staticlib
Compiling example v0.1.0 (/dev/tmp)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.34s

There is an tracking issue to add a --crate-type override. In the meantime, a workaround is to use cargo-crate-type:

$ cargo install cargo-crate-type

$ cargo crate-type static
$ cargo build

Note that this command will alter your Cargo.toml

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Since Rust 1.64 it is possible to override the crate-type for libraries and examples. Please note the missing -- compared to the other answers. The --crate-type flag in this answer is a cargo rustc flag, while in the other answers cargo rustc was used to pass an additional flag to rustc (as opposed to replacing the flag like cargo rustc does).

$ cargo rustc --crate-type=staticlib

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