IntelliJ IDEA 2024.3 Help

Rust

The Rust plugin equips IntelliJ IDEA with full-fledged Rust support. This guide overviews the basic procedures to get you started. You can find more information about the supported features in RustRover documentation.

Install Rust plugin

  1. Launch IntelliJ IDEA. On the Welcome screen, click Plugins.

    If you already have a project opened, go to Settings (Ctrl+Alt+S) | Plugins.

  2. Select the Marketplace tab and search for the Rust plugin.

    Installing Rust plugin from Settings
  3. Click Install and wait for the download to complete.

    Restart the IDE if prompted.

The plugin will be activated automatically. To double-check it is active, navigate to Help | Register and select Rust in the left-hand pane.

Activating Rust plugin from the Licences dialog

Install Rust toolchain

To develop in Rust, you need several basic tools: a compiler, a package manager, a formatter, and so on. A set of these tools is referred to as a toolchain. You will also need the Rust Standard Library.

If you have already opened a project and the Rust toolchain is missing, you will see a notification banner right above the editor:

No Rust toolchain configured notification
  1. Click Set up toolchain.

    Alternatively, open IDE settings (Ctrl+Alt+S) and select Languages & Frameworks | Rust.

  2. If the Rust toolchain is not detected, Toolchain version will display N/A. Click the Install Rustup button – IntelliJ IDEA will attempt to install both the toolchain and the standard library.

    Rust toolchain settings
  3. Once the installation is complete, IntelliJ IDEA will automatically detect its location, populating the Toolchain version and the Standard library path.

  4. Click OK to apply the settings.

Open or create a Rust project

You have three options to start working on a Rust project.

Create a new Cargo project

  1. Launch IntelliJ IDEA.

    Do one of the following:

    • Click New Project on the Welcome screen.

    • Select File | New | Project from the main menu.

    • Click the Project widget in the main window header and selectProject widget in the main window header and select New Project.

      Create a new project using the Project widget
  2. In the left-hand pane, make sure Rust is selected.

  3. Specify the project location and name.

  4. Specify the location of the Rust toolchain and standard library.

    If the toolchain and standard library are installed, IntelliJ IDEA will detect them automatically. Otherwise, you will be suggested to download Rustup.

    Install Rustup from the New Project wizard
  5. Select the desired project template and click Create.

New project wizard

Open a local Cargo project

  1. In the main menu, go to File | Open. In the file chooser, select the directory containing the root Cargo.toml file (or Cargo.toml itself) and click Open:

    Open a project (not as file)
  2. In the dialog that opens, select Open as project.

    Open a project
  3. When opening the project for the first time, IntelliJ IDEA will prompt you to confirm that you consider it safe.

    Untrusted project

    Click Trust Project if you are certain the project poses no threats and you would like to enable all IDE features. If you have any doubts, select Preview in Safe Mode. For more information, refer to Project security.

Open a project

Clone a repository from VCS

  1. In the main menu, go to File | New | Project from Version Control or click Get from VCS on the Welcome screen.

  2. Specify the repository URL and the destination directory. Click Clone:

    Cloning a repo

Explore the workspace and features

The plugin's feature set is designed to simplify the Rust development process. Let's take a closer look at what it has to offer.

Syntax highlighting and code reference

To help you quickly read and understand Rust code, the plugin provides highlighting, Inlay hints, macro expansion, quick access to documentation, and more.

Interactive inlay hints

Here are some shortcuts you may find useful:

Action

Shortcut

Expand macro

Alt+Enter

Go to declaration

Ctrl+Click

Get type info

Ctrl+Shift+P

Quick documentation

Ctrl+Q

Quick definition

Ctrl+Shift+I

For more information, refer to RustRover documentation.

Code analysis and error reporting

To help you fight errors and inconsistencies in code, the plugin offers built-in inspections and integrates with external linters.

For a summary of all detected problems, use the Inspections widget in the upper-right corner of the editor. To see the details, click the widget and refer to the Problems tool window (or select View | Tool Windows | Problems):

Code analysis results: Problems tool window and Inspections widget

For more information, refer to Code inspections and External linters in RustRover documentation.

Formatting

You can easily format your code using either the IDE's built-in formatter (enabled by default) or Rustfmt.

Enable (or disable) Rustfmt instead of the built-in formatter

  1. Open settings by pressing Ctrl+Alt+S and navigate to Languages & Frameworks | Rust | Rustfmt.

  2. To enable Rustfmt, set the Use Rustfmt instead of built-in formatter checkbox. To disable Rustfmt, clear the checkbox.

    Enabling rustfmt instead of the build-in formatter
  3. Click OK to apply the changes.

Reformat a file

  1. Open the file you want to reformat in the editor.

  2. Press Ctrl+Alt+Shift+L or select Code | Reformat File.

  3. In the Reformat File dialog, select additional options if necessary and click Run.

    Reformat file dialog

For more information, refer to Reformat code and Rustfmt.

The Cargo tool window

The Cargo tool window is designed to help you with Cargo tasks. By default, it is pinned to the tool windows bar. You can show or hide it by clicking the window indicator on the sidebar the Rust icon (alternatively, select View | Tool Windows | Cargo from the main menu).

Cargo tool window

For more information, refer to RustRover documentation.

Sharing code in Playground

You can share your code in Rust Playground without leaving the editor.

Share in Playground

  1. Select the code fragment you'd like to share (otherwise, the IDE will copy the whole file).

  2. Right-click and choose Rust | Share in Playground.

IntelliJ IDEA will create a GitHub Gist and display a notification popup with a link to the playground.

Sharing code in Playground

For more features, refer to RustRover documentation.

Build and run

Use the Build action to compile your code and Run to execute it. There are several ways to perform these actions:

Build/run Rust code

  • To build or run a particular target, open the Cargo tool window (View | Tool Windows | Cargo) and double-click the target.

    Running a target from Cargo tool window
  • To run from a particular entry point, locate it in the editor, click Execute button in the gutter, and select Run:

    Run from the gutter menu
  • To run a particular file or module, open the Project view, right-click the necessary file or module, and select Run:

    Run file from the context menu in Project view
  • If you want to build or run code using a predefined configuration (with custom parameters and settings), select it in the switcher on the main toolbar and:

    • click Build button to build (Ctrl+F9)

    • click Execute button to run (Shift+F10)

    Build icon on the main toolbar
  • You can always build/run using a Cargo command.

For more information, refer to RustRover documentation.

Debug

Rust plugin provides a full-fledged debugger – with breakpoints, variable monitoring, stepping, memory and disassembly views, and other handy features.

Start a debug session

  • To start debugging from a particular entry point, locate it in the editor, click Run icon in the gutter, and select Debug:

    Debug gutter option
  • To debug code using a predefined configuration (with custom parameters and settings), select it in the configuration switcher on the main toolbar and click Run icon:

    Initiating debug from the toolbar
  • You can always start a debug session by running a Cargo command.

For more information, refer to Start the debugger session.

Learn how to perform basic debugging actions from these guides:

Debug session

For more information, refer to RustRover documentation.

Test

You will likely support your code with tests, doctests, and/or benchmarks. Here are a few quick ways to run them:

Run test(s), doctest(s), or benchmark(s)

  • To run a single test or doctest, open it in the editor, click Run icon in the gutter, and select Run:

    Running a test using the gutter icon
  • To run a test/benchmark target, open the Cargo tool window (View | Tool Windows | Cargo) and double-click the target:

    Running a target from Cargo tool window
  • You can always run tests using a Cargo command.

The Run tool window will open, automatically displaying the results:

Test runner window

For more information, refer to RustRover documentation.

Run with code coverage

The plugin provides code coverage analysis for Rust code.

Run with Code Coverage

To get code coverage statistics, do one of the following:

  • Locate the desired entry point, click Execute button in the gutter, and select Run with Coverage:

    Running with coverage from Project view
  • Locate the necessary file in Project view, right-click, and select Run with Coverage:

    Running with coverage using gutter menu
  • If you want to run a predefined configuration (with custom parameters and settings), select it in the switcher on the main toolbar, then press Run icon and select Run with Coverage:

    Running a configuration with coverage

The Coverage tool window (View | Tool Windows | Coverage) will open, automatically displaying the results:

Coverage tool window

For more information, refer to Code coverage.

To learn more about Rust support, refer to RustRover documentation or contact our support team.

Rust plugin vs. RustRover

Differences in the feature set

RustRover

CLion+Rust plugin

IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate+Rust plugin

Debugger

For Linux, both LLDB and GDB are available. For macOS, only LLDB is available. For Windows, LLDB is supported for MSVC, GDB is supported for GNU. Learn more

For Windows and Linux, both LLDB and GDB are available. For macOS, only LLDB is available.

Allows to debug on-chip

For Windows and Linux, both LLDB and GDB are available (Native Debugging Support free plugin required). For macOS, only LLDB is available.

Profiler

Available on macOS, Linux, and WSL

Available on macOS, Linux, and WSL

Valgrind Memcheck

Available on Linux, WSL, and macOS (10.12 or later)

Database support

Language support

RustRover

CLion+Rust plugin

IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate+Rust plugin

Rust

Java, Groovy, Kotlin

C/C++, Objective С/С++

Python

Via free plugin

JavaScript, TypeScript

HTML, CSS

Sass, SCSS, Less

XML, JSON, YAML, XSLT, XPath

Markdown

Last modified: 17 September 2024