Rust is a systems programming language with massive ambitions. It is designed for creating the most reliable software, from the tiniest embedded systems to multi-million line behemoths, and its users need to have confidence that it is fit for purpose.

In service of this ambition Rust has an extremely thorough testing regimen, and that is one of the things I am most proud of about Rust. Rust has a strict continuous integration system that runs a great number of tests on every pull request, basically guaranteeing that the Rust master branch always works; which is crucial because Rust releases nightly builds every night, and stable builds every six weeks. And Rust further tests every release against its entire open source library ecosystem.

I’ve always admired well-tested software projects, like SQLite, and aim to place Rust among the pantheon of the best. This document then, is a catalog of all the ways we test Rust. I hope it provides insight into what it takes to deliver a production-quality programming language, a hint at the wide variety of techniques employed in software validation, and that it reinforces your confidence in Rust’s reliability.

Summary (2017/07/10)

All patches built in 58 configurations before landing

All patches tested in 20 configurations before landing

126k tests per PR across all platforms

Full release artifacts published for 48 platforms every merge

Testing of all documentation

Releases every six weeks

13k Rust projects regression-tested before releases

222k tests in Rust projects tested before releases

Fuzz testing and formal verification

Contents

The promise of Rust

Rust is a systems programming language with massive ambitions. It is designed for creating the most reliable software, from the tiniest embedded systems to multi-million line behemoths, and its users need to have confidence that it is fit for purpose.

Today Rust runs on many platforms, and tomorrow it will run on many more. Rust will one day run on any machine with a microprocessor.

And Rust moves fast, with releases every 6 weeks, and a growing ecosystem of software depending on it. Rust makes strong guarantees about compatibility and stability, what will, won’t, and might break as the plattform evolves, and ensuring that we fulfill those guarantees is crucial to maintaining the trust of Rust’s users.

It’s a big challenge to keep it all from falling apart. This is how we do it.

We use strong continuous integration to catch many bugs before they are ever committed to the Rust repository, and continuous releases to enable more extensive testing of nightly and beta builds prior to the release every 6 weeks.

During CI, all patches must pass the Rust test suite in all supported configurations before landing. Nightly and beta releases are subject to further testing using a number of techniques.

Continuous integration

Rust relies on continuous integration, where the code base is tested as part of the process of reviewing and merging patches.

In Rust we do CI in a very particular way, and one which we are very proud of. Rust’s creator, Graydon, originally described it in a blog post, “The Not Rocket Science Rule”. The thing we do differently from most is that we run the full test suite against every patch, as if it were merged to master, before committing it into the master branch, whereas most CI setups test after committing, or if they do run tests against every PR, they do so before merging, leaving open the possibility of regressions introduced during the merge.

How does this work precisely? Our integration bot, bors, maintains a queue of all pull requests that have been reviewed and approved for landing. It proceeds through this queue, one at a time: for each pull request it merges the pull request branch with the master branch, but into a temporary branch (which we call “auto”); then it runs the entire test suite on that branch, in many configurations (as of 2017/07/10 there are 59 configurations built, and 20 tested). If all tests pass in all configurations only then does that commit become the master branch. Then bors moves onto the next PR.

The important things to recognize about this arrangement are: first, the head commit on Rust’s master branch is guaranteed to be fully tested at all times; but as a consequence, landing pull requests to Rust is completely serialized - only one PR can be under final testing at a time.

The benefit of this arrangement is that Rust’s developers have high confidence that the master branch works correctly, always. It isn’t perfect - bugs do slip through - but it does provide significant peace of mind.

There’s a big downside though in that landing patches to Rust is serialized on running the test suite on every patch, and it takes a particularly long time to Run the Rust test suite in all the configurations we care about. Today the longest-running configuration takes over 2 hours. Rust always has a queue of approved patches waiting to land, and so it can take days for even simple patches to get through the queue.

This can create an interesting competitive environment where authors desire high spots in the queue and complain when the queue grows.

While PR authors are waiting in bors’s queue, we also have a bot test their PR in a single configuration as a smoke test. This avoids the frustration of waiting for one’s PR to work through the queue only to be rejected by a simple mistake.

We do this style of CI not only on rust-lang/rust but also on other key projects, including cargo and rustup.

bors’s implementation has gone through several iterations, and today it is implemented by a script called homu, which is shared with Rust’s sister project, Servo. It has also inspired other ther integration bots used in the Rust ecosystem and beyond, including bors-ng.

Test-first CI is the cornerstone of Rust stability.

Today we do our CI on Travis CI for Linux and Mac OS, and AppVeyor for Windows. Notably, all of our testing hosts are running x86, and so, for the non-x86 platforms that we do test, we currently use the QEMU emulator on Linux. Many non-x86 platforms do not yet get test coverage as part of the CI process (though see the smoke project). No non-x86 platforms are automatically tested on real hardware, a major limitation of the current setup.

Continuous releases

Since we test so thoroughly, ideally all bugs are caught before entering the tree, but that is not the case. Once a patch enters the tree the clock is ticking until it hits the stable release.

Rust publishes releases on three “channels”: nightly, beta, and stable. The nightly and beta channels provide an opportunity to catch bugs missed by the official CI before they hit a release.

Rust has a 6 week beta cycle, so the minimum a patch will sit in tree before hitting a stable release is 6 weeks (if it lands on master right before the next beta), and the maximum is 12 weeks (if it lands at the beginning of a cycle).

During the 6 week release cycle, regression triage meetings are held every 2 weeks to keep ahead of breakage and ensure the release stays on track. Again, the Rust release schedule is incredibly aggressive and it takes constant vigilence to maintain.

To make releases as simple as possible we tie it directly to the CI system. Since we are already testing Rust in the same configurations that we ship releases for, it’s a natural extension to simply produce release artifacts while we’re testing. So we do that and publish them to their own S3 bucket.

From those binaries we have a bot that periodically collects them into their final form for release and deploys them to static.rust-lang.org.

So not only do we fully test every commit that lands on master, we also publish the complete release binaries at the same time.

With as many release configurations as Rust has, differences between the continuous integration configuration and the release build configuration became a huge source of problems. Making testing and releasing the same thing eliminated them.

The Rust test suite

The Rust test suite covers rustc, std, cargo, rustdoc, and the Rust documentation, and features a number of special test harnesses to cover specific classes of bugs relevant to Rust.

The tests are all ultimately run by libtest, the standard test crate, and many of them are coordinated by the compiletest tool.

As of 2017/07/10 there are a little over 6k tests in the Rust test suite. This may seem surprisingly few, but keep in mind that Rust’s strong static typing prevents many errors at compile-time, so Rust projects in general are believed to require fewer test cases than projects in other languages. All features and bug fixes are accompanied by test cases. Still, test coverage is currently unknown, and assumed to be far from complete.

Unit tests

Standard Rust unit tests, like any Rust author would write. These are tests annotated with #[test] and run with cargo test . This is the primary method for testing the standard library, and for cargo as well.

This is the most basic kind of testing in Rust, but the compiler itself is mostly tested with more specialized tools.

compiletest

compiletest is the main test harness of the Rust test suite, one of the oldest Rust codebases, and the oldest parallel Rust program. It implements a number of classes of test, each of which generally corresponds to a directory under src/test . Most of these tests involve driving the compiler to compile one or more source programs, then interpreting the results.

Most tests are represented by a Rust source file that may have annotations in comments directing compiletest in how to run the test, as in the following run-fail test, test-panic.rs , that tells compiletest that the string “thread ‘test_foo’ panicked at” must be printed to stdout, to compile with the --test flag, and to ignore the test on emscripten.

// check-stdout // error-pattern:thread 'test_foo' panicked at // compile-flags: --test // ignore-emscripten #[test] fn test_foo () { panic! () }

Most of the test types in the following sections are implemented by compiletest.

run-pass and run-fail

Two of the oldest and simplest types of test. These test cases are Rust source code that should compile successfully. run-pass tests must run successfully; run-fail tests must run and return the Rust standard error code, 101.

compile-fail

compile-fail tests are some of the most common tests for testing language features. They must fail to compile, and stderr must emit errors containing specific text:

fn main () { 1 = 2 ; //~ ERROR invalid left-hand side expression 1 += 2 ; //~ ERROR invalid left-hand side expression ( 1 , 2 ) = ( 3 , 4 ); //~ ERROR invalid left-hand side expression let ( a , b ) = ( 1 , 2 ); ( a , b ) = ( 3 , 4 ); //~ ERROR invalid left-hand side expression None = Some ( 3 ); //~ ERROR invalid left-hand side expression }

While these are the bread and butter of rustc testing, their weakness is that they only validate some of the text output to stderr - they do not guarantee that the output actually looks good. For that reason new tests, or tests of tricky error output, are often written as ‘ui’ tests.

ui

UI tests are like compile-fail tests, but the output of stdout and stderr are checked fully. In these tests, instead of annotating the source with expected output, source files are accompanied by *.stdout and *.stderr templates that capture expactly what the compiler is allowed to output.

So the test issue-39544.rs :

enum X { Y } struct Z { x : X } fn main () { let z = Z { x : X :: Y }; let _ = & mut z .x ; }

must have the output from issue-39544.stderr :

error : cannot borrow immutable field ` z .x ` as mutable - -> $ DIR / issue - 39544 .rs : 21 : 18 | 21 | let _ = & mut z .x ; | ^^^ error : aborting due to previous error

Because these templates are difficult to write by hand, there are scripts to help keep them updated when the output changes.

run-make

This is the kind of test you write when none of the other tests are sufficient. compiletest simply runs a Makefile, while setting up a bunch of environment variables that might be useful. Tests import tools.mk to get access to various helpers.

These tests are usually testing the behavior of rustc, like in this test that is validating something related to target specs:

-include ../tools.mk all: $(RUSTC) foo.rs --target=my-awesome-platform.json --crate-type=lib --emit=asm grep -q -v morestack < $(TMPDIR)/foo.s $(RUSTC) foo.rs --target=my-invalid-platform.json 2>&1 | grep -q "Error loading target specification" $(RUSTC) foo.rs --target=my-incomplete-platform.json 2>&1 | grep 'Field llvm-target' RUST_TARGET_PATH=. $(RUSTC) foo.rs --target=my-awesome-platform --crate-type=lib --emit=asm RUST_TARGET_PATH=. $(RUSTC) foo.rs --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu --crate-type=lib --emit=asm $(RUSTC) -Z unstable-options --target=my-awesome-platform.json --print target-spec-json > $(TMPDIR)/test-platform.json && $(RUSTC) -Z unstable-options --target=$(TMPDIR)/test-platform.json --print target-spec-json | diff -q $(TMPDIR)/test-platform.json -

codegen

codegen tests verify that rustc produces the expected LLVM IR for a given file. It is similar to tests used by LLVM to verify its own lowering to assembly.

// compile-flags: -C no-prepopulate-passes #![crate_type = "lib" ] pub enum E { A , B , } // CHECK-LABEL: @exhaustive_match #[no_mangle] pub fn exhaustive_match ( e : E ) { // CHECK: switch, label %[[DEFAULT:[a-zA-Z0-9_]+]] // CHECK: [[DEFAULT]]: // CHECK-NEXT: unreachable match e { E :: A => (), E :: B => (), } }

codegen-units

Like codegen tests these tests are validating the internal compiler behavior, in this case testing how items in Rust source are partitioned between “codegen units” at translation time. Correctly subdividing the work of translating Rust to LLVM and then machine code is required for incremental translation.

// compile-flags:-Zprint-trans-items=eager pub static FN : fn () = foo :: < i32 > ; pub fn foo < T > () { } //~ TRANS_ITEM fn static_init::foo[0]<i32> //~ TRANS_ITEM static static_init::FN[0] fn main () { } //~ TRANS_ITEM fn static_init::main[0] //~ TRANS_ITEM drop-glue i8

pretty

pretty tests are testing rustc’s “pretty printer”, the code that converts the Rust AST back to Rust syntax. Rust uses the pretty printer for displaying error messages.

pretty testing is done by asking the compiler to pretty-print source code, then asking it to pretty-print that source code, and testing that it reaches a steady state, where further pretty-printing produces the same source, and that it still works.

Historically, rustc has run pretty testing over the entire codebase, but as the pretty-printer matured, pretty testing was reduced to a subset of the full tree.

debuginfo

The problem of getting debuggers to understand the compiler’s output is nearly as difficult as just getting the compiler to work in the first place. Debuggers are so complicated. These tests drive gdb and lldb to verify they work with the given Rust program.

Here’s a simple example from cross-crate-spans.rs :

#![feature(omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section)] #![omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section] // min-lldb-version: 310 // aux-build:cross_crate_spans.rs extern crate cross_crate_spans ; // compile-flags:-g // === GDB TESTS =================================================================================== // gdb-command:break cross_crate_spans.rs:24 // gdb-command:run // gdb-command:print result // gdbg-check:$1 = {__0 = 17, __1 = 17} // gdbr-check:$1 = (17, 17) // gdb-command:print a_variable // gdb-check:$2 = 123456789 // gdb-command:print another_variable // gdb-check:$3 = 123456789.5 // gdb-command:continue // gdb-command:print result // gdbg-check:$4 = {__0 = 1212, __1 = 1212} // gdbr-check:$4 = (1212, 1212) // gdb-command:print a_variable // gdb-check:$5 = 123456789 // gdb-command:print another_variable // gdb-check:$6 = 123456789.5 // gdb-command:continue // === LLDB TESTS ================================================================================== // lldb-command:b cross_crate_spans.rs:24 // lldb-command:run // lldb-command:print result // lldb-check:[...]$0 = (17, 17) // lldb-command:print a_variable // lldb-check:[...]$1 = 123456789 // lldb-command:print another_variable // lldb-check:[...]$2 = 123456789.5 // lldb-command:continue // lldb-command:print result // lldb-check:[...]$3 = (1212, 1212) // lldb-command:print a_variable // lldb-check:[...]$4 = 123456789 // lldb-command:print another_variable // lldb-check:[...]$5 = 123456789.5 // lldb-command:continue // This test makes sure that we can break in functions inlined from other crates. fn main () { let _ = cross_crate_spans :: generic_function ( 17u32 ); let _ = cross_crate_spans :: generic_function ( 1212i16 ); }

incremental

Tests of incremental compilation, a technique rustc uses to track within a crate which source code needs to be recompiled when any other source code changes.

In the example below, the test is run twice, first with --cfg rpass1 , then again with --cfg rpass2 . The test instructs the compiler to verify that the change in source code between the two invocations results in only mod x being recompiled. Other modules are reused.

// A first "spike" for incremental compilation: here, we change the // content of the `make` function, and we find that we can reuse the // `y` module entirely (but not the `x` module). // revisions:rpass1 rpass2 #![feature(rustc_attrs)] #![rustc_partition_reused(module= "spike" , cfg= "rpass2" )] #![rustc_partition_translated(module= "spike-x" , cfg= "rpass2" )] #![rustc_partition_reused(module= "spike-y" , cfg= "rpass2" )] mod x { pub struct X { x : u32 , y : u32 , } #[cfg(rpass1)] fn make () -> X { X { x : 22 , y : 0 } } #[cfg(rpass2)] fn make () -> X { X { x : 11 , y : 11 } } pub fn new () -> X { make () } pub fn sum ( x : & X ) -> u32 { x .x + x .y } } mod y { use x ; pub fn assert_sum () -> bool { let x = x :: new (); x :: sum ( & x ) == 22 } } pub fn main () { y :: assert_sum (); }

mir-opt

Tests of optimizations on MIR, rustc’s internal Rust representation. These tests check that the MIR looks as expected before and after given optimization passes.

Note that as of 2017/07/10 MIR optimizations are not enabled by default.

fn main () { if false { println! ( "hello world!" ); } } // END RUST SOURCE // START rustc.node4.SimplifyBranches-initial.before.mir // bb0: { // switchInt(const false) -> [0u8: bb2, otherwise: bb1]; // } // END rustc.node4.SimplifyBranches-initial.before.mir // START rustc.node4.SimplifyBranches-initial.after.mir // bb0: { // goto -> bb2; // } // END rustc.node4.SimplifyBranches-initial.after.mir

rustdoc

This set of tests verifies that the HTML output of rustdoc includes various properties. Again, they are run by compiletest by interpreting comments in Rust source files. They look something like:

#![crate_type= "lib" ] #![feature(const_fn)] pub struct Foo ; impl Foo { // @has const/struct.Foo.html '//*[@id="new.v"]//code' 'const unsafe fn new' pub const unsafe fn new () -> Foo { Foo } }

documentation

Rust uses Markdown for both API documentation and standalone documentation. All examples in Rust documentation are tested by rustdoc, the documentation tool.

linkchecker

The linkchecker ensures that all internal HTML links produced by rustdoc for the standard library documentation are valid.

cargotest

cargotest is a small tool that runs the test suite of several significant out-of-tree Rust projects. The projects are chosen to have a wide variety of dependencies to maximize the chances of detecting type system regressions through build failures.

This suite of tests was added in anger after cargo’s own build broke too many times due to Rust regressions.

check-error-index

rustc’s error messages included extended help messages that often include examples. As with other documentation examples, these are tested. A special tool is used to extract them from the compiler, convert them to markdown, and then run them through rustdoc.

distcheck

Every release of Rust is accompanied by a tarball containing the source. This check verifies that that source tarball unpacks, builds and tests as expected.

tidy

The tidy tool runs a variety of sanity checks that the source tree conforms to various conventions:

bins - verifies that no binaries are checked in

style - verifies line length, no tabs, no trailing whitespace, no CR characters, no TODO or XXX directives, and that each file contains a license header

errors - verifies that rustc error codes are not duplicated

cargo - verifies that crates listed in [dependencies] are actually imported as extern crate

are actually imported as features - verifies that various properties of Rust’s ‘feature’ definitions are correct

pal - verifies that platform-specific code only occurs in specific places

unstable_book - verifies that unstable features are represented in the documentation

deps - verifies the license of third-party crate dependencies

bootstrap

The Rust build system (called “bootstrap”) itself is written in Rust and has a self-check that runs before the build begins.

Rust is distributed with several externally-developed tools, today cargo and rls (the Rust Language Server). Their test suites are included as part of the Rust test suite.

Other testing

All of the above sections describe the Rust test suite, which is Run prior to landing any patch. But that is neither the beginning nor the end of the Rust validation process. Below are yet more tools we use to test other aspects of the Rust platform. This includes tools and libraries Rust depends on, and the application of additional validation to releases during their nightly and beta phases, prior to their stable release.

cargobomb and crater

In would be lovely if the Rust test suite caught all regressions. Sadly, the authors of the test suite haven’t yet figured out how to anticipate every way in which Rust will be used in the wild.

Fortunately though, Rust has a standard testing facility that most Rust crates use, and Rust has a standard repository of Rust crates in crates.io. GitHub further contains repositories of Rust crates that are not published to crates.io.

These factors allow us to treat the entire world of open source Rust code as our test suite.

As new nightlies and betas are published, we use the cargobomb tool to test this corpus of Rust code (as of 2017/07/10 over 13,000 crates) against both the stable release and a nightly or beta release, comparing the results for regressions.

This type of testing helps us find subtle changes in the type system as crates fail to build on new releases, errors in code generation or library behavior that cause tests to fail or crash, and logic errors in the compiler that cause the compiler to crash.

Here’s an example of a cargobomb run against nightly. Clicking the red “regressed” button reveals the most important category of results: those where the build against the second toolchain failed earlier than the first toolchain. Clicking through the results yields the full logs. In this run, 6972 of the 13055 crates tested passed their test suites against both toolchains; 56 crates regressed; and 3985 crates failed to even build (this can be for many reasons, but is often simply because the cargobomb environment is not set up appropriately for the crate).

As of 2017/07/10, each run of cargobomb runs over 222,000 tests, twice over, across more than 13,000 projects.

When cargbomb detects regressions, they are filed against rust-lang/rust, and the downstream crate authors alerted to the issue. Using the binary builds published for every successful PR, the PR that caused the regression is quickly identified by the bisect-rust tool.

As cargobomb-discovered regressions are fixed, naturally test cases capturing them are checked in to prevent those regressions occurring again in the future.

cargobomb is the successor to a similar project called crater, which only checks for successful typechecking, and does not run test suites. It is still in occasional use.

libc

The libc crate has a special place in the ecosystem: it defines the FFI definitions of the C library and related systems libraries for every platform Rust supports, and ends up used in some form by most every Rust project. So it’s important that it be correct.

But writing correct FFI bindings is not a simple thing, since one does not have the benefit of the Rust type checker verifying the definitions. So the libc crate has a special testing regime designed to accomplish this verification.

It uses the ctest crate to automatically compare the libc Rust bindings to the actual C definition.

The basic process involves generating two programs, one in C, and one in Rust, that each produce metadata about function signatures, constant values, struct layout, alignment, and more. The Rust program calls into the C program and then compares that both sides produce the same metadata values.

compiler-builtins

This touches on a little known piece of black magic in comon compiler toolchains. One might expect that C compilers like gcc and clang compile your code directly to machine code, but in actuality, there are a number of constructs defined in the language which do not necessarily correspond neatly to machine instructions, depending on the architecture. As a consequence, nearly all C programs silently link to a tiny runtime library to provide implementations of very low level operations. In gcc this library is called libgcc, and in clang it is called compiler-rt, which began essentially by reverse-engineering libgcc.

LLVM will silently lower LLVM IR to calls to functions provided by compiler-rt, so rustc, like clang, must ensure these functions are available.

This library is implemented in a combination of assembly and C, and has over time grown to include a variety of runtime functionality expected by LLVM for sometimes niche features.

Over the years we’ve found it quite challenging to keep compiler-rt working on all platforms Rust (and LLVM) supports, so are in the gradual process of reimplementing it ourselves (in Rust), in a library called compiler-builtins.

The compiler-builtins crate is exclusively limited to basic math intrinsics, and does not include many of the advanced runtime features of compiler-rt, notably the sanitizer runtimes (which in Rust we would expect to be provided in a different crate).

To verify this set of crucial low-level math functions behaves as expected the compiler-builtin crate has its own custom testing. For each function there is a test that generates a set of inputs to it, and passes it to both the upstream compiler-rt, and to our own compiler-builtins, and verifies their same output. The test suite additionally compares the symbols exported by each to ensure our implementation does not miss any functions.

perf.rust-lang.org

It’s a long-standing desire of the team to get a stronger handle on rustc’s compile times, and to prevent them from increasing. perf.rust-lang.org is a project that uses the CI builds of Rust to build a variety of representative Rust code bases and record how long it took, and how much memory was used. The compiler team then uses the reporting provided by the site to identify performance regressions.

fuzzing

There are two major fuzzers for Rust: afl.rs, which uses the American Fuzzy Lop fuzzer; and cargo-fuzz, which uses LLVM’s libfuzzer. Both project collaborate under the Rust Fuzzing Authority to improve the Rust crate ecosystem. They maintain a trophy case of bugs discovered through their tools. Although an important part of the Rust toolset, fuzzing Rust tends to find fewer and less severe bugs than fuzzing software written in memory-unsafe languages.

rust-icci

The Rust compiler supports a technique called “incremental compilation”, a process by which the compiler tracks, on a very fine-grained level, dependencies between items in the code, to avoid re-typechecking and re-translating fetaures that have not changed since previous compilations. It can be thought of roughly as caching and reusing previously translated functions. The system is extremely complex and opportunities for errors are innumerable.

rust-icci is a project that does brute-force validation of Rust incremental compilation by replaying the commit history of Rust projects with incremental compilation activitated, and without, and verifies that the results are the same.

Firefox beta testing

One of the major initial users of Rust is the Firefox web browser, which has integrated Rust into a number of subsystems of a large C++ codebase that supports a variety of platforms across millions of client systems. This real-world exposure quickly began to expose regressions in Rust, and so Firefox is built and tested against Rust betas as they are produced, providing important feedback during the Rust beta cycle.

Formal verification

Ultimately we hope and expect Rust to be adopted by industries that traditionally require strong guarantees about reliability and correctness. These industries are conservative and slow to change, and tend to require large accumulations of evidence of correctness; and formal proofs provide some of the strongest such evidence. Furthermore, having formal models of the Rust system gives the Rust developers a framework to confidently apply advanced optimizations to Rust that are not yet possible.

The most prominent project applying formal methods to validate Rust is the Rust Belt project, which aims to prove the Rust type system sound, and to develop a model for reasoning about unsafe code in Rust. It has thus far proven the soundness of the most common abstractions in the standard library, discovering one soundness bug in the process.

Previously, Eric Reed formalized a safe subset of Rust called Patina, and the CRUST project used bounded model checking to find memory safety violation.

smoke

Many of the platforms that Rust supports, though they may be built by Rust’s CI, are not tested by Rust’s CI, either because of lack of capacity, or because it would take too long (often due to emulation).

The smoke project is an independent CI project to run tests against some of these platforms using emulators.

Note that as of 2017/07/10 the smoke project is bitrotted and needs to be refreshed.

rustup

Though not strictly a part of the Rust distribution, rustup is a critical piece of the Rust distribution infrastructure. It is the tool that installs Rust for most Rust users. While limited in scope, in performs important network and and file I/O that must be reliable across all supported platforms. rustup is self-updating, and a self-update failure would cause major disruption for Rust users.

rustup’s primary functionality works by downloading a release “manifest” from the official Rust servers, and interpreting it to install the requested Rust releases.

While its test scaffolding includes a mock distribution server, it notably it does not contain actual network tests. In general, rustup’s testing could be much more thorough.

clippy

clippy provides additional static analysis (called “lints”) beyond what is done by the compiler. While not distributed by the compiler, and rarely run on the Rust codebase itself, it is widely used by the Rust community to provide an extra level of consistency and polish, so seems worth mentioning.

Notes and future work

So Rust receives a lot of testing, but there’s more that can be done. Here we’ll say a little bit about other possibilities. Almost everything here would be an awesome project for an ambitious contributor to undertake!

An obvious omission is the lack of any testing with tools like valgrind and address sanitizer. These tools are incredibly effective at finding incorrect memory accesses by instrumenting programs at runtime, so with Rust’s focus on memory safety one might expect them to be employed extensively. They are not though.

Valgrind was a crucial tool in Rust’s original development, back when Rust barely worked. There were several years where the entire test suite was required to be valgrind-clean, and it’s hard to imagine bringing up Rust without it. At some point though LLVM began doing a valid optimization that valgrind was unable to recognize as valid, and that made its application useless for us, or at least too difficult to maintain. By that point Rust was mature and memory safe, so valgrind testing was disabled, and eventually it bitrotted and was removed from the tree.

Unlike valgrind, address sanitizer requires the help of the compiler to instrument binaries, and that support landed in LLVM long after Rust had matured.

Today rustc’s code generation and the abstractions in the standard library are mature and well-trusted, and it’s rare for either of them to create the kind of errors these tools detect, so nobody feels it a pressing matter to reenable this kind of testing.

We do not measure test coverage of the Rust compiler, and have no conception of how well it is covered. Integration of coverage reporting into Rust CI is an obvious and easy improvement.

The Rust source tree contains a poorly-maintained definition of the Rust language grammar, along with the facilities for testing that grammar against the compiler’s production parser. These tests have never been activated as part of Rust’s CI though and as a result the grammar is neither complete nor authoritative.

The Rust installers, of which there are several different types, are not automatically tested, and there is a notable lack of human-driven QA during the Rust release process. It would be greatly desirable to automate the deployment and installation of Rust in a variety of scenarios via a test environment prior to release.

In the future we expect to develop a formal definition of Rust’s memory model, which will define what is and isn’t allowed to be done in unsafe blocks, and also what the compiler is allowed to do during optimization. The memory model will be defined in such a way that Rust code can be instrumented to validate conformance, and we will run conformance tests across the entire ecosystem with the cargobomb tool.

The Rust standard library is intended to provide a superset of the core library API, but there is no validation that this is true, and already there are known places where the two crates diverge in their APIs. There should be a tool that verifies the superset relationship.

Rust would probably benefit from “chaos engineering”, that is, injecting faults into the runtime and confirming that the system behaves as expected. Panic and error paths are little exercised and tend to hide bugs, especially around the interaction between unsafe and unwinding. Of course the standard library is small and well-reviewed, so the returns of such an effort may be small there, but it would almost certainly be fruitful to apply the appoach more broadly in the crate ecosystem.

Rust crates use an interpretation of the semver versioning standard. Among other things it defines what API changes are allowed between releases of crates. We expect in the future to provide a tool that crate authors can use to validate that the API changes in their releases correspond to semver.

We also expect to provide other tools to help the crate ecosystem manage their evolution. cargo-crusader is one such tool, though it is not fully-realized. It runs the test suites of a crate’s reverse dependencies (that is, the crates that depend on your crate) prior to publishing a new version.

We have no tracking of metrics around regression rates from release to release, despite being vigilant about testing downstream crates. We should expect in the future to be able to provide firm numbers on known regressions per release.

The cargobomb technique of testing all known Rust code in the ecosystem is powerful, but currently limited to running crates’ test suites to detect Rust language regressions. There are other types of analyses we would like to do in this fashion.

The security of the Rust release process is crucial, and lacking. The possibility of the compiler being backdoored, or even the subject of a “trusting trust” attack, is real. In the future we expect to have reproducible builds, and reproducible releases, meaning that third-parties can produce the exact same binary releases the Rust project does. With that capability we would be able to produce a simple tool that would let others validate that any individual release has not been compromised with code that does not originate from the source tree; and ultimately, to validate that the entire bootstrap chain has not been compromised by a self-replicating, “trusting trust” -style backdoor.

Along those same lines, someday we would expect to have multiple implementations of Rust to validate against the reference compiler, and to provide further assurance against “trusting trust” via diverse double compilation.

rustup should do mock testing using a self-contained http server, whereas today its mock server is just using a filesystem mimicking the layout of static.rust-lang.org.

rustup should have a set of self-upgrade tests, run against the live rustup release archives, and run prior to releases, that ensure that it can self-upgrade from the original release up to the present release.