this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2024
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Rust

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Wormhole

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I would like to share a bash script I made for when you want to simply run a rust script once and delete it. Instead of having compile the script with rustc, running the binary and then deleting the binary, you can achive all of this with this bash script below.

The first argument will be the rust script file name. The .rs file extension is optional. The rest of the arguments are passed into the executed binary.

Simply name the bash script to something like rust-run.sh.

#!/bin/bash

#Get file path from first parameter
path=$(dirname "$1")

#Get file name from first parameter
fileName=$(basename "$1")
fileName="${fileName%'.rs'}"

#Compile executable and save it in the same directory as the rust script
rustc "${path}/${fileName}.rs" -o "${path}/${fileName}"

#If rustc commands retuned any errors, unable to compile the rust script
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
    return
fi

#Execute compilled executable and pass the rest of the parameters into the executable
"${path}/${fileName}" ${*:2}

#Delete compillled executable
rm "${path}/${fileName}"

If someone wants to rewrite this in rust or add these features into the rustc, feel free to do so.

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[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I admire the willingness to share your work, but this is easier to do with a disposable one-liner at the prompt that you can repeat with an up arrow and a carriage return, if needed.

Sure, this script would be perfect for something like a cron job, but that would raise quite a few more questions as to why you would complie on a fixed schedule.

I can think of a few edge-cases where this script would be useful, but it just seems like it adds extra steps where extra steps might not be needed.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

It could be done with a one liner in the terminal but adding arguments when running the binary will be in the middle of the command, not at the end of the command.

Also the usecase for me is for sample scripts I have. This makes it easy to compile, run and delete the binary.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

If it's useful to you, that is great.

Will rustc not just overwrite the old binary? If you are just doing a cleanup task, that's cool. If nuking the last binary is important, then just do it first:

rm ./code; rustc ./code.rs -o ./code; ./code -mah args

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 weeks ago

Or a makefile / justfile would be good too.

I put those on each directory and do just run to pick up the thing I was working on quickly.