Panamax is a tool to mirror the Rust and crates.io repositories, for offline usage of rustup
and cargo
.
Panamax is itself available on crates.io, and can be installed via:
$ cargo install --locked panamax
Alternatively, you can clone this repository and cargo build
or cargo run
within it.
Panamax is available as a docker image, so you can run:
$ docker run --rm -it -v /path/to/mirror/:/mirror --user $(id -u) panamaxrs/panamax init /mirror
(Modify /path/to/mirror/mirror.toml as needed)
$ docker run --rm -it -v /path/to/mirror/:/mirror --user $(id -u) panamaxrs/panamax sync /mirror
(Once synced, serve the mirror)
$ docker run --rm -it -v /path/to/mirror/:/mirror --user $(id -u) -p8080:8080 panamaxrs/panamax serve /mirror
Alternatively, you can run panamax in a bare-metal environment like below.
In Panamax, mirrors consist of self-contained directories. To create a mirror directory my-mirror
:
$ panamax init my-mirror
Successfully created mirror base at `my-mirror`.
Make any desired changes to my-mirror/mirror.toml, then run panamax sync my-mirror.
There will now be a my-mirror
directory in your current directory.
Within the directory, you'll find a mirror.toml
file. This file contains the full configuration of the mirror, and while it has sane defaults, you should ensure the values are set to what you want.
The other important parameter to set is the base_url
within the [crates]
section. After cargo
fetches the index, it will try to use this URL to actually download the crates. It's important this value is accurate, or cargo
may not work with the mirror.
You can modify mirror.toml
at any point in time, even after the mirror is synchronized.
Once you have made the changes to mirror.toml
, it is time to synchronize your mirror!
$ panamax sync my-mirror
Syncing Rustup repositories...
[1/5] Syncing rustup-init files... ██████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 27/27 [00:00:06]
[2/5] Syncing latest stable... ████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 602/602 [00:09:02]
[3/5] Syncing latest beta... ████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 524/524 [00:07:29]
[4/5] Syncing latest nightly... ████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 546/546 [00:08:56]
[5/5] Cleaning old files... ████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 546/546 [00:00:00]
Syncing Rustup repositories complete!
Syncing Crates repositories...
[1/3] Fetching crates.io-index... ██████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 1615/1615 [00:00:02]
[2/3] Syncing crates files... ██████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ 6357/6357 [00:00:05]
[3/3] Syncing index and config...
Syncing Crates repositories complete!
Sync complete.
Once this is step completes (without download errors), you will now have a full, synchronized copy of all the files needed to use rustup
and cargo
to their full potential!
This directory can now be copied to a USB or rsync'd somewhere else, or even used in place - perfect for long plane trips!
Additionally, this mirror can continually by synchronized in the future - one recommendation is to run this command in a cronjob once each night, to keep the mirror reasonably up to date.
Optionally, panamax can be told to only grab crates needed to build a singular project.
cargo vendor
is used to create a folder with all needed dependencies,
then a panamax command can parse the created directory and only grab those crates and versions.
# Only grab crates needed for panamax, as an example
$ cargo vendor
$ panamax sync my-mirror vendor
Panamax provides a warp-based HTTP(S) server that can handle serving a Rust mirror fast and at scale. This is the recommended way to serve the mirror.
$ panamax serve my-mirror
Running HTTP on [::]:8080
The server's index page provides all the instructions needed on how to set up a Rust client that uses this mirror.
If you would prefer having these instructions elsewhere, the rest of this README will describe the setup process in more detail.
Additionally, if you would prefer hosting a server with nginx, there is a sample nginx configuration in the repository, at nginx.sample.conf
.
Once you have a mirror server set up and running, it's time to tell your Rust components to use it.
In order to ensure rustup
knows where to look for the Rust components, we need to set some environment variables. Assuming the mirror is hosted at http://panamax.internal/:
export RUSTUP_DIST_SERVER=http://panamax.internal
export RUSTUP_UPDATE_ROOT=http://panamax.internal/rustup
These need to be set whenever rustup
is used, so these should be added to your .bashrc
file (or equivalent).
If you already have rustup
installed, this step isn't necessary, however if you don't have access to https://rustup.rs, the mirror also contains the rustup-init
files needed to install rustup
.
Assuming the mirror is hosted at http://panamax.internal/, you will find the rustup-init
files at http://panamax.internal/rustup/dist/. The rustup-init
file you want depends on your architecture. Assuming you're running desktop Linux on a 64-bit machine:
wget http://panamax.internal/rustup/dist/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/rustup-init
chmod +x rustup-init
./rustup-init
This will let you install rustup
the similarly following the steps from https://rustup.rs. This will also let you use rustup
to keep your Rust installation updated in the future.
Cargo
also needs to be configured to point to the mirror. This can be done by adding the following lines to ~/.cargo/config
(creating the file if it doesn't exist):
[source.my-mirror]
registry = "http://panamax.internal/crates.io-index"
[source.crates-io]
replace-with = "my-mirror"
Cargo
should now be pointing to the correct location to use the mirror.
You've now set up a Rust mirror! In order to make sure everything is set up properly, you can run a simple test:
$ cargo install ripgrep
This will install the grep-like rg
tool (which is a great tool - props to burntsushi!). If cargo
successfully downloads and builds everything, you have yourself a working mirror. Congratulations!
If you need to run Panamax through a proxy, you will need to set your configuration options in two places.
First, you'll need to set the environment variable http_proxy
to something like https://your.proxy:1234
(which can be http or https).
Second, you'll need to set an http proxy in your ~/.gitconfig
, like so:
[http]
proxy = https://your.proxy:1234
With these two parameters set, Panamax should work through an HTTP proxy.
Licensed under the terms of the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0)
See LICENSE-MIT and LICENSE-APACHE for details.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.