96 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
96 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
# Using `canary-rs`
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[`canary-rs`](https://git.tebibyte.media/canary/canary-rs) is the reference
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implementation for Canary. It is written in Rust, and is licensed under the
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LGPLv3.
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`canary-rs` is the central hub for Canary's development. It includes host-side
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Rust code, helper crates for Canary hosts, wrapper crates for scripts
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authored in Rust, and even the source code for the documentation that you're
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currently reading.
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`canary-rs` provides a graphical "sandbox" that embeds the Canary runtime
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into a lightweight graphical app. It has two purposes: first, to give
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script authors a playground independent of a larger framework to safely debug,
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benchmark, and experiment with their scripts, and second, to give Canary
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embedders a live, functioning example of how Canary can be integrated into their
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applications.
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# Running the `canary-rs` sandbox
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The sandbox requires a Canary script to run. If you don't already have one,
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you can follow [these instructions](optional-building-the-sword-art-online-demonstration-ui-script)
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to build the example script provided by `canary-rs`.
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## Building the sandbox
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To build the sandbox from source, first make sure that you have
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[installed the standard Rust toolchain](https://www.rustlang.org/tools/install),
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including `rustup`, `rustc`, and `cargo`, as well as a frontend to
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[Git](https://git-scm.com/). This guide assumes that you are using the Git
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command-line interface (CLI).
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Next, clone the upstream repository:
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```sh
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$ git clone https://git.tebibyte.media/canary/canary-rs.git
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$ cd canary-rs
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```
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Then, run `cargo` to build the sandbox package:
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```sh
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$ cargo build --release -p canary_sandbox
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```
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Now, the sandbox can be ran with a script:
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```sh
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$ cargo run --release -p canary_sandbox -- <path-to-script>
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```
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## (Optional) Building the Sword Art Online demonstration UI script
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`canary-rs` provides an example of a fully-functioning script which, optionally,
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can be built and loaded into the sandbox to ensure its functioning.
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To build it, you must first follow [the instructions above](#building-the-test-harness)
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to clone and build the sandbox and to set up the Rust toolchain.
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Then, add the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target so that Rust can compile to
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WebAssembly:
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```sh
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$ rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown
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```
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Next, compile the example script:
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```sh
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$ cargo build --release -p sao-ui-rs --target wasm32-unknown-unknown
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```
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The path to the built example script is `target/wasm32-unknown-unknown/release/sao_ui_rs.wasm`.
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Now it can be run using the sandbox:
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```sh
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$ cargo run --release -p canary_sandbox -- target/wasm32-unknown-unknown/release/sao_ui_rs.wasm
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```
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# Using `canary-rs` as a Rust library
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***WARNING***: `canary-rs` is still in alpha development so both its API and its
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version number are unstable. It is not recommended to use it in your own
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projects unless you are involved with Canary's development.
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`canary-rs` is not yet available on [crates.io](https://crates.io), so to add it
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as a dependency, you must add its [upstream git repository](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/specifying-dependencies.html#specifying-dependencies-from-git-repositories)
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instead:
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```toml
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[dependencies]
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canary = { git = "https://git.tebibyte.media/canary/canary-rs", rev = "deadbeef" }
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```
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Because `canary-rs` is still under active development, it is recommended to
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pull a fixed, specific commit using the `rev` key. That can be a specific tag,
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some point in the commit history, or whatever the latest commit on `main` is.
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[Tebibyte Media](https://tebibyte.media) is not capable of hosting rustdocs yet,
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so to learn how the API works, you can read the source code for the test
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harness, or dig through the source code itself.
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