Smithy code generators for Rust that generate clients, servers, and the entire AWS SDK. The latest unreleased SDK build can be found in aws-sdk-rust/next.
All internal and external interfaces are considered unstable and subject to change without notice.
./gradlew
will setup gradle for you. JDK 11 is required.- Running tests requires a working Rust installation. See Rust docs for installation instructions on your platform. Minimum supported Rust version is the latest released Rust version, although older versions may work.
For development, pre-commit hooks make it easier to pass automated linting when opening a pull request. Setup:
brew install pre-commit # (or appropriate for your platform: https://pre-commit.com/)
pre-commit install
aws
: AWS specific codegen & Rust code (signing, endpoints, customizations, etc.) Common commands:./gradlew :aws:sdk:assemble
: Generate (but do not test / compile etc.) a fresh SDK intosdk/build/aws-sdk
./gradlew :aws:sdk:test
: Generate & run all tests for a fresh SDK./gradlew :aws:sdk:{cargoCheck, cargoTest, cargoDocs, cargoClippy}
: Generate & run specified cargo command.
codegen
: Whitelabel Smithy client code generationcodegen-test
: Smithy protocol test generation & integration tests for Smithy client whitelabel codedesign
: Design documentation. See the design/README.md for details about building / viewing.codegen-server
: Whitelabel Smithy server code generationcodegen-server-test
: Smithy protocol test generation & integration tests for Smithy server whitelabel code
Running all of smithy-rs's tests can take a very long time, so it's better to know which parts to test based on the changes being made, and allow continuous integration to find other issues when posting a pull request.
In general, the components of smithy-rs affect each other in the following order (with earlier affecting later):
rust-runtime
codegen
andcodegen-server
aws/rust-runtime
aws/sdk-codegen
Some components, such as codegen-test
and codegen-server-test
, are purely for testing other components.
To test the rust-runtime
crates:
# Run all Rust tests for `rust-runtime/`
./gradlew rust-runtime:cargoTest
# Run clippy for `rust-runtime/`
./gradlew rust-runtime:cargoClippy
For aws/rust-runtime
, just prefix with aws:
:
# Run all Rust tests for `rust-runtime/`
./gradlew aws:rust-runtime:cargoTest
# Run clippy for `rust-runtime/`
./gradlew aws:rust-runtime:cargoClippy
Some runtime crates have a additional-ci
script that can also be run. These scripts often require
cargo-hack
and cargo-udeps
to be installed.
To test the code generation, the following can be used:
# Run Kotlin codegen unit tests
./gradlew codegen:check
# Run client codegen tests
./gradlew codegen-test:check
# Run server codegen tests
./gradlew codegen-server-test:check
Several Kotlin unit tests generate Rust projects and compile them. When these fail, they typically output links to the location of the generated code so that it can be inspected.
To look at generated code when the codegen tests fail, check these paths depending on the test suite that's failing:
- For codegen-test:
codegen-test/build/smithyprojections/codegen-test
- For codgen-server-test:
codegen-server-test/build/smithyprojections/codegen-server-test
See the readme in aws/sdk/
for more information about these targets as they can be configured
to generate more or less AWS service clients.
# Run Kotlin codegen unit tests
./gradlew aws:sdk-codegen:check
# Generate an SDK, but do not attempt to compile / run tests. Useful for inspecting generated code
./gradlew :aws:sdk:assemble
# Run all the tests
./gradlew :aws:sdk:test
# Validate that the generated code compiles
./gradlew :aws:sdk:cargoCheck
# Validate that the generated code passes Clippy
./gradlew :aws:sdk:cargoClippy
# Validate the generated docs
./gradlew :aws:sdk:cargoDoc
The generated SDK will be placed in aws/sdk/build/aws-sdk
.