I used cargo install to globally install a package, such as rustfmt or racer.
How can I update the installed package without first deleting it ( cargo uninstall) and then running cargo install again.
Is there an update command?
There is no such command in vanilla cargo (well, there's cargo install but that's for dependencies), but since cargo supports third-party subcommands there is an answer: the cargo-update crate.
Install as usual with
cargo install cargo-update
then use
cargo install-update -a
to update all installed packages, for more usage information and examples see the cargo install-update manpage.
Disclaimer: am author
cargo install can now be used to install crates globally: Install a Rust binary. Default location is $HOME/.cargo/bin
As of Rust 1.41.0, you can use the following command to update crates to their latest version:
cargo install <crate>
This came from pull request #6798 (Add install-upgrade) and was stabilized in #7560 (Stabilize install-upgrade).
Instead of failing when cargo install detects a package is already installed, it will upgrade if the versions don't match, or do nothing (exit 0) if it is considered "up-to-date".
The following command will always uninstall, download and compile the latest version of the crate - even if there's no newer version available. Under normal circumstances the install-upgrade feature should be preferred as it does save time and bandwidth if there's no new version of the crate.
cargo install --force <crate>
Further information can be found in the GitHub issue rust-lang/cargo#6797 and in the official documentation chapter.
-Z install-upgrade argument. github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/7560
cargo install --list | grep '^[a-zA-Z0-9_\-]* v[0-9.]*:$' | cut -d ' ' -f1 | xargs cargo install would suffice
wasm-pack 0.10.0 installed, but when I tried to update it to 0.10.1 using cargo install wasm-pack I got an error: error: binary 'wasm-pack' already exists in destination and had to use --force.
A solution I've found is to add the --force flag to the install command. For example cargo install --force clippy. This will effectively re-install the latest version.
cargo, using --force is no longer necessary to update a crate
Feb 9, 2021 at 13:22
Here is a one-liner to update all installed Cargo crates, except those installed from a local folder:
cargo install $(cargo install --list | egrep '^[a-z0-9_-]+ v[0-9.]+:$' | cut -f1 -d' ')
Explanation:
cargo install with the resulting package namescargo install --list | egrep -o '^[^ ]+' is a bit shorter for listing the installed packages. Are there ever non-indented lines that are not packages?
May 17 at 13:00
I use the command
cargo install --locked $(cat $CARGO_HOME/.crates2.json | jq -r '.installs | keys[] | split(" ")[0]')
You need jq to run this command. I use this command to reliably get the installed packages.
Please note that i have used --locked here. Without --locked few builds may fail. For example, as of today, if you use cargo install-update -a, you will get a message like "Failed to update pueue, ripgrep_all." (Here, replace pueue, ripgrep_all with packages that need --locked).
Another thing is, we may have some dependencies to update the installed package. For that i made a function which will first get the dependencies then update the installed package.
Here is a sample function for fish shell.
function rust_update_packages
# cargo install --locked ripgrep_all
# cargo install --locked pueue
# Alacritty Dependencies
apt install -y cmake pkg-config libfreetype6-dev libfontconfig1-dev libxcb-xfixes0-dev libxkbcommon-dev python3
cargo install --locked $(cat $CARGO_HOME/.crates2.json | jq -r '.installs | keys[] | split(" ")[0]')
end
For other shell, only the function syntax will change, the body of the function will remain same.
cargo install thingwill cause it to be updated.