Rust is a general purpose programming language that is somewhat similar to C++. Rust is used in the development of many softwares which includes gaming engines, browsers and Operating Systems. In this tutorial, we will see how to install Rust on Ubuntu.
Prerequisites
- A Linux or Ubuntu server with initial Ubuntu server setup
- A user with root privileges
Step 1 – Installing Rust on Ubuntu using rustup tool
There are many ways to install Rust but we recommend installation using rustup tool.
Execute the given command and Rust’s latest version
$ curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.3 https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
Output
ashish@ubuntu:~$ curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.3 https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
info: downloading installer
Welcome to Rust!
This will download and install the official compiler for the Rust
programming language, and its package manager, Cargo.
Rustup metadata and toolchains will be installed into the Rustup
home directory, located at:
/home/sammy/.rustup
This can be modified with the RUSTUP_HOME environment variable.
The Cargo home directory is located at:
/home/sammy/.cargo
This can be modified with the CARGO_HOME environment variable.
The cargo, rustc, rustup and other commands will be added to
Cargo's bin directory, located at:
/home/sammy/.cargo/bin
This path will then be added to your PATH environment variable by
modifying the profile files located at:
/home/sammy/.profile
/home/sammy/.bashrc
You can uninstall at any time with rustup self uninstall and
these changes will be reverted.
Current installation options:
default host triple: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
default toolchain: stable (default)
profile: default
modify PATH variable: yes
1) Proceed with installation (default)
2) Customize installation
3) Cancel installation
>
Note: Here we are using the default option 1. If you want to customize your installation, you can proceed with option 2
Output
info: profile set to 'default'
info: default host triple is x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
info: syncing channel updates for 'stable-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu'
info: latest update on 2023-01-10, rust version 1.66.1 (90743e729 2023-01-10)
info: downloading component 'cargo'
info: downloading component 'clippy'
info: downloading component 'rust-docs'
info: downloading component 'rust-std'
info: downloading component 'rustc'
67.4 MiB / 67.4 MiB (100 %) 40.9 MiB/s in 1s ETA: 0s
info: downloading component 'rustfmt'
info: installing component 'cargo'
6.6 MiB / 6.6 MiB (100 %) 5.5 MiB/s in 1s ETA: 0s
info: installing component 'clippy'
info: installing component 'rust-docs'
19.1 MiB / 19.1 MiB (100 %) 2.4 MiB/s in 7s ETA: 0s
info: installing component 'rust-std'
30.0 MiB / 30.0 MiB (100 %) 5.6 MiB/s in 5s ETA: 0s
info: installing component 'rustc'
67.4 MiB / 67.4 MiB (100 %) 5.9 MiB/s in 11s ETA: 0s
info: installing component 'rustfmt'
info: default toolchain set to 'stable-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu'
stable-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu installed - rustc 1.66.1 (90743e729 2023-01-10)
Rust is installed now. Great!
To get started you may need to restart your current shell.
This would reload your PATH environment variable to include
Cargo's bin directory ($HOME/.cargo/bin).
To configure your current shell, run:
source "$HOME/.cargo/env"
ashish@ubuntu:~$
Execute the below command to add Rust directory to PATH variable
$ source $HOME/.cargo/env
Step 2 – Verify the Installation
Lets verify the Rust installation by checking the version.
$ rustc --version
Output
ashish@ubuntu:~$ rustc --version
rustc 1.66.1 (90743e729 2023-01-10)
Step 3 – Installing Compiler
Rust needs a compiler to join the output to one file. If left uninstalled you may get the following error
error: linker `cc` not found
|
= note: No such file or directory (os error 2)
error: aborting due to previous error
So, lets install the package, but before that lets update the apt packages
$ apt update
$ apt upgrade
Install build-package package
$ sudo apt install build-essential
Step 4 – Creating important directories
Final step is to create some important directories
$ mkdir ~/rustprojects
$ cd ~/rustprojects
$ mkdir testdir
$ cd testdir
Thats all, now you can start preparing your codes.