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| 1 | +# The walking tour of rustdoc |
| 2 | + |
| 3 | +Rustdoc is implemented entirely within the crate `librustdoc`. After partially compiling a crate to |
| 4 | +get its AST (technically the HIR map) from rustc, librustdoc performs two major steps past that to |
| 5 | +render a set of documentation: |
| 6 | + |
| 7 | +* "Clean" the AST into a form that's more suited to creating documentation (and slightly more |
| 8 | + resistant to churn in the compiler). |
| 9 | +* Use this cleaned AST to render a crate's documentation, one page at a time. |
| 10 | + |
| 11 | +Naturally, there's more than just this, and those descriptions simplify out lots of details, but |
| 12 | +that's the high-level overview. |
| 13 | + |
| 14 | +(Side note: this is a library crate! The `rustdoc` binary is crated using the project in |
| 15 | +`src/tools/rustdoc`. Note that literally all that does is call the `main()` that's in this crate's |
| 16 | +`lib.rs`, though.) |
| 17 | + |
| 18 | +## Cheat sheet |
| 19 | + |
| 20 | +* Use `x.py build --stage 1 src/libstd src/tools/rustdoc` to make a useable rustdoc you can run on |
| 21 | + other projects. |
| 22 | + * Add `src/libtest` to be able to use `rustdoc --test`. |
| 23 | + * If you've used `rustup toolchain link local /path/to/build/$TARGET/stage1` previously, then |
| 24 | + after the previous build command, `cargo +local doc` will Just Work. |
| 25 | +* Use `x.py doc --stage 1 src/libstd` to use this rustdoc to generate the standard library docs. |
| 26 | + * The completed docs will be available in `build/$TARGET/doc/std`, though the bundle is meant to |
| 27 | + be used as though you would copy out the `doc` folder to a web server, since that's where the |
| 28 | + CSS/JS and landing page are. |
| 29 | +* Most of the HTML printing code is in `html/format.rs` and `html/render.rs`. It's in a bunch of |
| 30 | + `fmt::Display` implementations and supplementary functions. |
| 31 | +* The types that got `Display` impls above are defined in `clean/mod.rs`, right next to the custom |
| 32 | + `Clean` trait used to process them out of the rustc HIR. |
| 33 | +* The bits specific to using rustdoc as a test harness are in `test.rs`. |
| 34 | +* The Markdown renderer is loaded up in `html/markdown.rs`, including functions for extracting |
| 35 | + doctests from a given block of Markdown. |
| 36 | +* The tests on rustdoc *output* are located in `src/test/rustdoc`, where they're handled by the test |
| 37 | + runner of rustbuild and the supplementary script `src/etc/htmldocck.py`. |
| 38 | +* Tests on search index generation are located in `src/test/rustdoc-js`, as a series of JavaScript |
| 39 | + files that encode queries on the standard library search index and expected results. |
| 40 | + |
| 41 | +## From crate to clean |
| 42 | + |
| 43 | +In `core.rs` are two central items: the `DocContext` struct, and the `run_core` function. The latter |
| 44 | +is where rustdoc calls out to rustc to compile a crate to the point where rustdoc can take over. The |
| 45 | +former is a state container used when crawling through a crate to gather its documentation. |
| 46 | + |
| 47 | +The main process of crate crawling is done in `clean/mod.rs` through several implementations of the |
| 48 | +`Clean` trait defined within. This is a conversion trait, which defines one method: |
| 49 | + |
| 50 | +```rust |
| 51 | +pub trait Clean<T> { |
| 52 | + fn clean(&self, cx: &DocContext) -> T; |
| 53 | +} |
| 54 | +``` |
| 55 | + |
| 56 | +`clean/mod.rs` also defines the types for the "cleaned" AST used later on to render documentation |
| 57 | +pages. Each usually accompanies an implementation of `Clean` that takes some AST or HIR type from |
| 58 | +rustc and converts it into the appropriate "cleaned" type. "Big" items like modules or associated |
| 59 | +items may have some extra processing in its `Clean` implementation, but for the most part these |
| 60 | +impls are straightforward conversions. The "entry point" to this module is the `impl Clean<Crate> |
| 61 | +for visit_ast::RustdocVisitor`, which is called by `run_core` above. |
| 62 | + |
| 63 | +You see, I actually lied a little earlier: There's another AST transformation that happens before |
| 64 | +the events in `clean/mod.rs`. In `visit_ast.rs` is the type `RustdocVisitor`, which *actually* |
| 65 | +crawls a `hir::Crate` to get the first intermediate representation, defined in `doctree.rs`. This |
| 66 | +pass is mainly to get a few intermediate wrappers around the HIR types and to process visibility |
| 67 | +and inlining. This is where `#[doc(inline)]`, `#[doc(no_inline)]`, and `#[doc(hidden)]` are |
| 68 | +processed, as well as the logic for whether a `pub use` should get the full page or a "Reexport" |
| 69 | +line in the module page. |
| 70 | + |
| 71 | +The other major thing that happens in `clean/mod.rs` is the collection of doc comments and |
| 72 | +`#[doc=""]` attributes into a separate field of the Attributes struct, present on anything that gets |
| 73 | +hand-written documentation. This makes it easier to collect this documentation later in the process. |
| 74 | + |
| 75 | +The primary output of this process is a clean::Crate with a tree of Items which describe the |
| 76 | +publicly-documentable items in the target crate. |
| 77 | + |
| 78 | +### Hot potato |
| 79 | + |
| 80 | +Before moving on to the next major step, a few important "passes" occur over the documentation. |
| 81 | +These do things like combine the separate "attributes" into a single string and strip leading |
| 82 | +whitespace to make the document easier on the markdown parser, or drop items that are not public or |
| 83 | +deliberately hidden with `#[doc(hidden)]`. These are all implemented in the `passes/` directory, one |
| 84 | +file per pass. By default, all of these passes are run on a crate, but the ones regarding dropping |
| 85 | +private/hidden items can be bypassed by passing `--document-private-items` to rustdoc. |
| 86 | + |
| 87 | +(Strictly speaking, you can fine-tune the passes run and even add your own, but [we're trying to |
| 88 | +deprecate that][44136]. If you need finer-grain control over these passes, please let us know!) |
| 89 | + |
| 90 | +[44136]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44136 |
| 91 | + |
| 92 | +## From clean to crate |
| 93 | + |
| 94 | +This is where the "second phase" in rustdoc begins. This phase primarily lives in the `html/` |
| 95 | +folder, and it all starts with `run()` in `html/render.rs`. This code is responsible for setting up |
| 96 | +the `Context`, `SharedContext`, and `Cache` which are used during rendering, copying out the static |
| 97 | +files which live in every rendered set of documentation (things like the fonts, CSS, and JavaScript |
| 98 | +that live in `html/static/`), creating the search index, and printing out the source code rendering, |
| 99 | +before beginning the process of rendering all the documentation for the crate. |
| 100 | + |
| 101 | +Several functions implemented directly on `Context` take the `clean::Crate` and set up some state |
| 102 | +between rendering items or recursing on a module's child items. From here the "page rendering" |
| 103 | +begins, via an enormous `write!()` call in `html/layout.rs`. The parts that actually generate HTML |
| 104 | +from the items and documentation occurs within a series of `std::fmt::Display` implementations and |
| 105 | +functions that pass around a `&mut std::fmt::Formatter`. The top-level implementation that writes |
| 106 | +out the page body is the `impl<'a> fmt::Display for Item<'a>` in `html/render.rs`, which switches |
| 107 | +out to one of several `item_*` functions based on the kind of `Item` being rendered. |
| 108 | + |
| 109 | +Depending on what kind of rendering code you're looking for, you'll probably find it either in |
| 110 | +`html/render.rs` for major items like "what sections should I print for a struct page" or |
| 111 | +`html/format.rs` for smaller component pieces like "how should I print a where clause as part of |
| 112 | +some other item". |
| 113 | + |
| 114 | +Whenever rustdoc comes across an item that should print hand-written documentation alongside, it |
| 115 | +calls out to `html/markdown.rs` which interfaces with the Markdown parser. This is exposed as a |
| 116 | +series of types that wrap a string of Markdown, and implement `fmt::Display` to emit HTML text. It |
| 117 | +takes special care to enable certain features like footnotes and tables and add syntax highlighting |
| 118 | +to Rust code blocks (via `html/highlight.rs`) before running the Markdown parser. There's also a |
| 119 | +function in here (`find_testable_code`) that specifically scans for Rust code blocks so the |
| 120 | +test-runner code can find all the doctests in the crate. |
| 121 | + |
| 122 | +### From soup to nuts |
| 123 | + |
| 124 | +(alternate title: ["An unbroken thread that stretches from those first `Cell`s to us"][video]) |
| 125 | + |
| 126 | +[video]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOLAGYmUQV0 |
| 127 | + |
| 128 | +It's important to note that the AST cleaning can ask the compiler for information (crucially, |
| 129 | +`DocContext` contains a `TyCtxt`), but page rendering cannot. The `clean::Crate` created within |
| 130 | +`run_core` is passed outside the compiler context before being handed to `html::render::run`. This |
| 131 | +means that a lot of the "supplementary data" that isn't immediately available inside an item's |
| 132 | +definition, like which trait is the `Deref` trait used by the language, needs to be collected during |
| 133 | +cleaning, stored in the `DocContext`, and passed along to the `SharedContext` during HTML rendering. |
| 134 | +This manifests as a bunch of shared state, context variables, and `RefCell`s. |
| 135 | + |
| 136 | +Also of note is that some items that come from "asking the compiler" don't go directly into the |
| 137 | +`DocContext` - for example, when loading items from a foreign crate, rustdoc will ask about trait |
| 138 | +implementations and generate new `Item`s for the impls based on that information. This goes directly |
| 139 | +into the returned `Crate` rather than roundabout through the `DocContext`. This way, these |
| 140 | +implementations can be collected alongside the others, right before rendering the HTML. |
| 141 | + |
| 142 | +## Other tricks up its sleeve |
| 143 | + |
| 144 | +All this describes the process for generating HTML documentation from a Rust crate, but there are |
| 145 | +couple other major modes that rustdoc runs in. It can also be run on a standalone Markdown file, or |
| 146 | +it can run doctests on Rust code or standalone Markdown files. For the former, it shortcuts straight |
| 147 | +to `html/markdown.rs`, optionally including a mode which inserts a Table of Contents to the output |
| 148 | +HTML. |
| 149 | + |
| 150 | +For the latter, rustdoc runs a similar partial-compilation to get relevant documentation in |
| 151 | +`test.rs`, but instead of going through the full clean and render process, it runs a much simpler |
| 152 | +crate walk to grab *just* the hand-written documentation. Combined with the aforementioned |
| 153 | +"`find_testable_code`" in `html/markdown.rs`, it builds up a collection of tests to run before |
| 154 | +handing them off to the libtest test runner. One notable location in `test.rs` is the function |
| 155 | +`make_test`, which is where hand-written doctests get transformed into something that can be |
| 156 | +executed. |
| 157 | + |
| 158 | +## Dotting i's and crossing t's |
| 159 | + |
| 160 | +So that's rustdoc's code in a nutshell, but there's more things in the repo that deal with it. Since |
| 161 | +we have the full `compiletest` suite at hand, there's a set of tests in `src/test/rustdoc` that make |
| 162 | +sure the final HTML is what we expect in various situations. These tests also use a supplementary |
| 163 | +script, `src/etc/htmldocck.py`, that allows it to look through the final HTML using XPath notation |
| 164 | +to get a precise look at the output. The full description of all the commands available to rustdoc |
| 165 | +tests is in `htmldocck.py`. |
| 166 | + |
| 167 | +In addition, there are separate tests for the search index and rustdoc's ability to query it. The |
| 168 | +files in `src/test/rustdoc-js` each contain a different search query and the expected results, |
| 169 | +broken out by search tab. These files are processed by a script in `src/tools/rustdoc-js` and the |
| 170 | +Node.js runtime. These tests don't have as thorough of a writeup, but a broad example that features |
| 171 | +results in all tabs can be found in `basic.js`. The basic idea is that you match a given `QUERY` |
| 172 | +with a set of `EXPECTED` results, complete with the full item path of each item. |
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