NAME¶
cargo-vendor — Vendor all dependencies locally
SYNOPSIS¶
cargo vendor [options] [path]
DESCRIPTION¶
This cargo subcommand will vendor all crates.io and git
dependencies for a project into the specified directory at
<path>. After this command completes the vendor directory
specified by <path> will contain all remote sources from
dependencies specified. Additional manifests beyond the default one can be
specified with the -s option.
The cargo vendor command will also print out the
configuration necessary to use the vendored sources, which you will need to
add to .cargo/config.toml.
OPTIONS¶
Vendor Options¶
-s manifest, --sync manifest
Specify an extra Cargo.toml manifest to workspaces
which should also be vendored and synced to the output. May be specified
multiple times.
--no-delete
Don’t delete the “vendor” directory
when vendoring, but rather keep all existing contents of the vendor
directory
--respect-source-config
Instead of ignoring [source] configuration by
default in .cargo/config.toml read it and use it when downloading
crates from crates.io, for example
--versioned-dirs
Normally versions are only added to disambiguate multiple
versions of the same package. This option causes all directories in the
“vendor” directory to be versioned, which makes it easier to
track the history of vendored packages over time, and can help with the
performance of re-vendoring when only a subset of the packages have
changed.
Manifest Options¶
--manifest-path path
Path to the Cargo.toml file. By default, Cargo
searches for the Cargo.toml file in the current directory or any parent
directory.
--frozen, --locked
Either of these flags requires that the
Cargo.lock
file is up-to-date. If the lock file is missing, or it needs to be updated,
Cargo will exit with an error. The
--frozen flag also prevents Cargo
from attempting to access the network to determine if it is out-of-date.
These may be used in environments where you want to assert that
the Cargo.lock file is up-to-date (such as a CI build) or want to
avoid network access.
--offline
Prevents Cargo from accessing the network for any reason.
Without this flag, Cargo will stop with an error if it needs to access the
network and the network is not available. With this flag, Cargo will attempt
to proceed without the network if possible.
Beware that this may result in different dependency resolution
than online mode. Cargo will restrict itself to crates that are downloaded
locally, even if there might be a newer version as indicated in the local
copy of the index. See the cargo-fetch(1) command to download
dependencies before going offline.
May also be specified with the net.offline config
value <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html>.
Display Options¶
-v, --verbose
-q, --quiet
--color when
Control when colored output is used. Valid values:
•auto (default): Automatically detect if
color support is available on the terminal.
•always: Always display colors.
•never: Never display colors.
May also be specified with the term.color config
value <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html>.
Common Options¶
+toolchain
If Cargo has been installed with rustup, and the first
argument to
cargo begins with
+, it will be interpreted as a
rustup toolchain name (such as
+stable or
+nightly). See the
rustup documentation
<
https://rust-lang.github.io/rustup/overrides.html> for more information
about how toolchain overrides work.
--config KEY=VALUE or PATH
-C PATH
Changes the current working directory before executing
any specified operations. This affects things like where cargo looks by
default for the project manifest (
Cargo.toml), as well as the
directories searched for discovering
.cargo/config.toml, for example.
This option must appear before the command name, for example
cargo -C
path/to/my-project build.
This option is only available on the nightly channel
<https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/appendix-07-nightly-rust.html> and
requires the -Z unstable-options flag to enable (see #10098
<https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/10098>).
-h, --help
Prints help information.
-Z flag
Unstable (nightly-only) flags to Cargo. Run cargo -Z
help for details.
EXIT STATUS¶
•0: Cargo succeeded.
•101: Cargo failed to complete.
EXAMPLES¶
1.Vendor all dependencies into a local
“vendor” folder
2.Vendor all dependencies into a local
“third-party/vendor” folder
cargo vendor third-party/vendor
3.Vendor the current workspace as well as another to
“vendor”
cargo vendor -s ../path/to/Cargo.toml