As Pavel Strakhov said
Cargo is not a compiler, it's a package manager. It runs rustc
and does some extra work (e.g. resolves dependencies), so it can't be faster than bare rustc
.
You can see this for yourself by running cargo build --verbose
, which outputs the rustc
command that cargo runs:
$ cargo build --verbose
Compiling hw v0.1.0 (file:///private/tmp/hw)
Running `rustc --crate-name hw src/main.rs --crate-type bin --emit=dep-info,link -C debuginfo=2 -C metadata=3c693c67d55ff970 -C extra-filename=-3c693c67d55ff970 --out-dir /private/tmp/hw/target/debug/deps -L dependency=/private/tmp/hw/target/debug/deps`
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.30 secs
Why should I still use cargo
The output above shows one reason: Look at all those arguments passed to rustc
. Do you know what each of them does? Do you want to know? Cargo abstracts some of the details away, allowing you to concentrate on the code.
Cargo also does so much more than just invoking the compiler. The biggest benefit to most people is that it manages your dependencies based on versions and allows publishing your own crates as well. It also allows for build scripts which run before your main compilation. It has easy ways of running your tests and examples.
More immediately useful, Cargo performs a check to see if you should rebuild at all:
$ time rustc src/main.rs
0:00.21
$ time rustc src/main.rs
0:00.22
$ time cargo build
0:00.41
$ time cargo build
0:00.09 # Much better!
cargo
is not a compiler, it's a package manager. It runsrustc
and does some extra work (e.g. resolves dependencies), so it can't be faster than barerustc
.make
whilegcc
is faster"...