Skip to content
forked from trunk-rs/trunk

Build, bundle & ship your Rust WASM application to the web.

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

MartinKavik/trunk

 
 

Repository files navigation

trunk

Build Status Discord Chat

Build, bundle & ship your Rust WASM application to the web.
”Pack your things, we’re going on an adventure!” ~ Ferris

Trunk is a WASM web application bundler for Rust. Trunk uses a simple, zero-config pattern for building & bundling WASM, JS snippets & other assets (images, css, scss) via a source HTML file.

getting started

install

First, install Trunk via one of the following options.

# Install via homebrew on Mac, Linux or Windows (WSL).
brew install trunk

# Install a release binary (great for CI).
# You will need to specify a value for ${VERSION}.
wget -qO- https://github.com/thedodd/trunk/releases/download/${VERSION}/trunk-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.gz | tar -xzf-

# Install via cargo.
cargo install --locked trunk

Release binaries can be found on the Github releases page.

Next, we will need to install wasm-bindgen-cli. In the future Trunk will handle this for you.

cargo install wasm-bindgen-cli

If using wasm-opt, we will need to install wasm-opt which is part of binaryen. On MacOS we can install it with Homebrew:

brew install binaryen

Some linux distributions provide a binaryen package in their package managers but if it's not available, outdated or you're on Windows, then we can grab a pre-compiled release, extract it and put the wasm-opt binary in some location that's available on the PATH.

app setup

Get setup with your favorite wasm-bindgen based framework. Yew & Seed are the most popular options today, but there are others. Trunk will work with any wasm-bindgen based framework. The easiest way to ensure that your application launches properly is to setup your app as an executable with a standard main function:

fn main() {
    // ... your app setup code here ...
}

Trunk uses a source HTML file to drive all asset building and bundling. Trunk also ships with a built-in sass/scss compiler, so let's get started with the following example. Copy this HTML to the root of your project's repo as index.html:

<html>
  <head>
    <link data-trunk rel="scss" href="path/to/index.scss"/>
  </head>
</html>

trunk build will produce the following HTML at dist/index.html, along with the compiled scss, WASM & the JS loader for the WASM:

<html>
  <head>
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="/index.700471f89cef12e4.css">
    <script type="module">
      import init from '/index-719b4e04e016028b.js';
      init('/index-719b4e04e016028b_bg.wasm');
    </script>
  </head>
</html>

The contents of your dist dir are now ready to be served on the web. But that's not all! Trunk has even more useful features. Continue reading to learn about other Trunk commands and supported asset types.

commands

build

trunk build runs a cargo build targeting the wasm32 instruction set, runs wasm-bindgen on the built WASM, and spawns asset build pipelines for any assets defined in the target index.html.

Trunk leverages Rust's powerful concurrency primitives for maximum build speeds & throughput.

watch

trunk watch does the same thing as trunk build, but also watches the filesystem for changes, triggering new builds as changes are detected.

serve

trunk serve does the same thing as trunk watch, but also spawns a web server.

clean

trunk clean cleans up any build artifacts generated from earlier builds.

config show

trunk config show prints out Trunk's current config, before factoring in CLI arguments. Nice for testing & debugging.

assets

Declaring assets to be processed by Trunk is simple and extensible. All assets to be processed by Trunk must follow these three rules:

  • must be declared as a valid HTML link tag.
  • must have the attribute data-trunk.
  • must have the attribute rel="{type}", where {type} is one of the asset types listed below.

This will typically look like: <link data-trunk rel="{type}" href="{path}" ..other options here.. />. Each asset type described below specifies the required and optional attributes for its asset type. All <link data-trunk .../> HTML elements will be replaced with the output HTML of the associated pipeline.

Currently supported asset types:

  • rust: Trunk will compile the specified Cargo project as the main WASM application. This is optional. If not specified, Trunk will look for a Cargo.toml in the parent directory of the source HTML file.
    • href: (optional) the path to the Cargo.toml of the Rust project. If a directory is specified, then Trunk will look for the Cargo.toml in the given directory. If no value is specified, then Trunk will look for a Cargo.toml in the parent directory of the source HTML file.
    • data-bin: (optional) the name of the binary to compile and use as the main WASM application. If the Cargo project has multiple binaries, this value will be required for proper functionality.
    • data-wasm-opt: (optional) run wasm-opt with the set optimization level. wasm-opt is turned off by default but that may change in the future. The possible values are 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, s, z or an empty value for wasm-opt's default. Set this option to 0 to disable wasm-opt explicitly. The values 1-4 are increasingly stronger optimization levels for speed. s and z (z means more optimization) optimize for binary size instead.
  • sass, scss: Trunk ships with a built-in sass/scss compiler. Just link to your sass files from your source HTML, and Trunk will handle the rest. This content is hashed for cache control. The href attribute must be included in the link pointing to the sass/scss file to be processed.
  • css: Trunk will copy linked css files found in the source HTML without content modification. This content is hashed for cache control. The href attribute must be included in the link pointing to the css file to be processed.
    • In the future, Trunk will resolve local @imports, will handle minification (see trunk#7), and we may even look into a pattern where any CSS found in the source tree will be bundled, which would enable a nice zero-config "component styles" pattern. See trunk#3 for more details.
  • icon: Trunk will copy the icon image specified in the href attribute to the dist dir. This content is hashed for cache control.
  • inline: Trunk will inline the content of the file specified in the href attribute into index.html. This content is copied exactly, no hashing is performed.
    • type: (optional) either html, css, or js. If not present, the type is inferred by the file extension. css is wrapped in style tags, while js is wrapped in script tags.
  • copy-file: Trunk will copy the file specified in the href attribute to the dist dir. This content is copied exactly, no hashing is performed.
  • copy-dir: Trunk will recursively copy the directory specified in the href attribute to the dist dir. This content is copied exactly, no hashing is performed.
  • rust-worker: (in-progress) Trunk will compile the specified Rust project as a WASM web worker. The following attributes are required:
    • href: (optional) the path to the Cargo.toml of the Rust project. If a directory is specified, then Trunk will look for the Cargo.toml in the given directory. If no value is specified, then Trunk will look for a Cargo.toml in the parent directory of the source HTML file.
    • data-bin: (optional) the name of the binary to compile and use as the web worker. If the Cargo project has multiple binaries, this value will be required for proper functionality.

Trunk is still a young project, and new asset types will be added as we move forward. Keep an eye on trunk#3 for more information on planned asset types, implementation status, and please contribute to the discussion if you think something is missing.

js snippets

JS snippets generated from the wasm-bindgen JS snippets feature are automatically copied to the dist dir, hashed and ready to rock. No additional setup is required. Just use the feature in your application, and Trunk will take care of the rest.

images & other resources

Images and other resource types can be copied into the dist dir by adding a link like this to your source HTML: <link data-trunk rel="copy-file" href="path/to/image"/>. Any normal file type is supported. This will cause Trunk to find the target resource, and copy it to the dist dir unmodified. No hashing will be applied. The link itself will be removed from the HTML. To copy an entire directory of assets/images, you can use the following HTML: <link data-trunk rel="copy-dir" href="path/to/images-dir"/>.

This will allow your WASM application to reference images directly from the dist dir, and Trunk will ensure that the images are available in the dist dir to be served.

NOTE: as Trunk continues to mature, we will find better ways to include images and other resources. Hashing content for cache control is great, we just need to find a nice pattern to work with images referenced in Rust components. Please contribute to the discussion over in trunk#9! See you there.

directives

You can instruct Trunk to write the URL passed to --public-url to the HTML output by adding this to your <head>: <base data-trunk-public-url/>. Trunk will set the href attribute of the element to the public URL. This changes the behavior of relative URLs to be relative to the public URL instead of the current location. You can also access this value at runtime using document.baseURI which is useful for apps that need to know what base URL they're hosted on (eg. for routing).

configuration

Trunk supports a layered config system. At the base, a config file can encapsulate project specific defaults, paths, ports and other config. Environment variables can be used to overwrite config file values. Lastly, CLI arguments / options take final precedence.

Trunk.toml

Trunk supports an optional Trunk.toml config file. An example config file is included in the Trunk repo, and shows all available config options along with their default values. By default, Trunk will look for a Trunk.toml config file in the current working directory. Trunk supports the global --config option to specify an alternative location for the file.

Note that any relative paths declared in a Trunk.toml file will be treated as being relative to the Trunk.toml file itself.

environment variables

Trunk environment variables mirror the Trunk.toml config schema. All Trunk environment variables have the following 3 part form TRUNK_<SECTION>_<ITEM>, where TRUNK_ is the required prefix, <SECTION> is one of the Trunk.toml sections, and <ITEM> is a specific configuration item from the corresponding section. E.G., TRUNK_SERVE_PORT=80 will cause trunk serve to listen on port 80. The equivalent CLI invocation would be trunk serve --port=80.

cli arguments & options

The final configuration layer is the CLI itself. Any arguments / options provided on the CLI will take final precedence over any other config layer.

proxy

Trunk ships with a built-in proxy which can be enabled when running trunk serve. There are two ways to configure the proxy, each discussed below. All Trunk proxies will transparently pass along the request body, headers, and query parameters to the proxy backend.

proxy cli flags

The trunk serve command accepts two proxy related flags.

--proxy-backend specifies the URL of the backend server to which requests should be proxied. The URI segment of the given URL will be used as the path on the Trunk server to handle proxy requests. E.G., trunk serve --proxy-backend=http://localhost:9000/api/ will proxy any requests received on the path /api/ to the server listening at http://localhost:9000/api/. Further path segments or query parameters will be seamlessly passed along.

--proxy-rewrite specifies an alternative URI on which the Trunk server is to listen for proxy requests. Any requests received on the given URI will be rewritten to match the URI of the proxy backend, effectively stripping the rewrite prefix. E.G., trunk serve --proxy-backend=http://localhost:9000/ --proxy-rewrite=/api/ will proxy any requests received on /api/ over to http://localhost:9000/ with the /api/ prefix stripped from the request, while everything following the /api/ prefix will be left unchanged.

--proxy-ws specifies that the proxy is for a WebSocket endpoint.

config file

The Trunk.toml config file accepts multiple [[proxy]] sections, which allows for multiple proxies to be configured. Each section requires at least the backend field, and optionally accepts the rewrite and ws fields, corresponding to the --proxy-* CLI flags discussed above.

As it is with other Trunk config, a proxy declared via CLI will take final precedence and will cause any config file proxies to be ignored, even if there are multiple proxies declared in the config file.

The following is a snippet from the Trunk.toml file in this repo:

[[proxy]]
rewrite = "/api/v1/"
backend = "http://localhost:9000/"

contributing

Anyone and everyone is welcome to contribute! Please review the CONTRIBUTING.md document for more details. The best way to get started is to find an open issue, and then start hacking on implementing it. Letting other folks know that you are working on it, and sharing progress is a great approach. Open pull requests early and often, and please use Github's draft pull request feature.


license

trunk is licensed under the terms of the MIT License or the Apache License 2.0, at your choosing.

About

Build, bundle & ship your Rust WASM application to the web.

Resources

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Rust 95.7%
  • HTML 4.2%
  • SCSS 0.1%