cargo careful
is a tool to run your Rust code extra carefully -- opting into a bunch of
nightly-only extra checks that help detect Undefined Behavior, and using a standard library with
debug assertions.
The standard library does check for some Undefined Behavior when the program is built
with debug assertions, but some of these checks are disabled because their performance
impact was considered too high.
For example, it will find the alignment issue in the following snippet:
fn main() {
let arr = [1u8, 2, 3, 4];
for n in [0, 1] {
let val = unsafe { arr.as_ptr().add(n).cast::<u16>().read() };
println!("The value is {val}!");
}
}
To use cargo careful
, first install it:
cargo install cargo-careful
and then run the following in your project:
cargo +nightly careful test
You can also cargo +nightly careful run
to execute a binary crate. All cargo test
and cargo run
flags are supported.
Running cargo careful
requires a recent nightly toolchain. Nightly versions from the last 3 months
are supported.
The first time you run cargo careful
, it needs to run some setup steps, which requires the
rustc-src
rustup component -- the tool will offer to install it for you if needed.
The most important thing cargo careful
does is that it builds the standard library with debug
assertions.
The standard library does check for some Undefined Behavior when the program is built
with debug assertions, but some of these checks are disabled because their performance
impact was considered too high.
Furthermore, cargo careful
sets some flags that tell rustc to insert extra run-time checks.
Here are some of the checks this enables:
ptr.read()
/ptr.write(v)
check that the pointer is aligned and non-null.- The collection types perform plenty of internal consistency checks.
mem::zeroed
and the deprecatedmem::uninitialized
panic if the type does not allow that kind of initialization (with a check that is stricter than the default). (This is-Zstrict-init-checks
.)- Extra UB-checking is done during const-evaluation. (This is
-Zextra-const-ub-checks
.)
That said, there is a lot of Undefined Behavior that is not detected by cargo careful
; check out
Miri if you want to be more exhaustively covered.
The advantage of cargo careful
over Miri is that it works on all code, supports using arbitrary system and C FFI functions, and is much faster.
cargo careful
honors the CARGO_ENCODED_RUSTFLAGS
and RUSTFLAGS
environment variables as well
as the build.rustflags
cargo setting (in that order, the first one being set is used). It
currently does not honor the target.rustflags
settings as that would require re-implementing all
the target cfg
logic from cargo. The flags are applied to both the sysroot build and the program
itself.
cargo careful
can additionally build and run your program and standard library
with a sanitizer. This feature is experimental and disabled by default.
The underlying rustc
feature
doesn't play well with procedural macros.
If you see error messages involving procedural macros during the build, they
can sometimes be solved by specifying a target (which can be the same as the host),
e.g., --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
.
To use a sanitizer, pass the command-line flag -Zcareful-sanitizer=<your_sanitizer>
to cargo careful
.
The list of supported sanitizers and targets can be found
here.
If you pass -Zcareful-sanitizer
without specifying a sanitizer, AddressSanitizer
will be used.
By default, when using AddressSanitizer
, cargo careful
will disable memory leak checking by
setting ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=0
in your program's environment, as memory leaks are not
usually a soundness or correctness issue. If you set the ASAN_OPTIONS
environment variable
yourself (to any value, including an empty string), that will override this behavior.
cargo careful
automatically enables Apple's Main Thread Checker on macOS, iOS, tvOS and watchOS targets, whenever the user has Xcode installed.
This helps diagnosing issues with executing thread-unsafe functionality off the main thread on those platforms.
cargo careful
sets the careful
configuration flag, so you can use Rust's compile-time
conditional mechanisms (#[cfg(careful)]
, #[cfg_attr(careful, ...)]
, cfg!(careful)
) to check
whether code is being run carefully.