0.0.0 - This version is safe to use because it has no known security vulnerabilities at this time. Find out if your coding project uses this component and get notified of any reported security vulnerabilities with Meterian-X Open Source Security Platform
Maintain your licence declarations and avoid unwanted licences to protect your IP the way you intended.
Apache-2.0 - Apache License 2.0|
NOTE: If you're building a new Datadog library/profiler or want to contribute to Datadog's existing tools, you've come to the right place! Otherwise, this is possibly not the droid you were looking for. |
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See CONTRIBUTING.md.
Build libdatadog as usual with cargo build.
You can generate a release using the builder crate. This will trigger all the necessary steps to create the libraries, binaries, headers and package config files needed to use a pre-built libdatadog binary in a (non-rust) project.
Here's one example of using the builder crate:
mkdir output-folder
cargo run --bin release -- --out output-foldercbindgen 0.29cmake and protoc
This project uses cargo-nextest to run tests.
cargo nextest runThe simplest way to install cargo-nextest is to use cargo install like this.
cargo install --locked 'cargo-nextest@0.9.96'Dev Containers allow you to use a Docker container as a full-featured development environment with VS Code.
We provide two Dev Container configurations:
Ctrl+Shift+P or Cmd+Shift+P on macOS) and select "Dev Containers: Reopen in Container".The container includes all necessary dependencies for building and testing libdatadog.
A dockerfile is provided to run tests in a Ubuntu linux environment. This is particularly useful for running and debugging linux-only tests on macOS.
To build the docker image, from the root directory of the libdatadog project run
docker build -f local-linux.Dockerfile -t libdatadog-linux .To start the docker container, you can run
docker run -it --privileged -v "$(pwd)":/libdatadog -v cargo-cache:/home/user/.cargo libdatadog-linuxThis will:
/libdatadog.cargo-cache to cache the cargo dependencies at ~/.cargo. This is helpful to avoid re-downloading dependencies every time you start the container, but isn't absolutely necessary.The $CARGO_TARGET_DIR environment variable is set to /libdatadog/docker-linux-target in the container, so cargo will use the target directory in the mounted volume to avoid conflicts with the host's default target directory of libdatadog/target.
Tracing integration tests require docker to be installed and running. If you don't have docker installed or you want to skip these tests, you can run:
cargo nextest run -E '!test(tracing_integration_tests::)'