You can't.
One of the conscious design choices with Rust is "no code before main
", thus there is no support for this sort of thing. Fundamentally, you need to have code somewhere that you explicitly call that registers the applets.
Rust programs that need to do something like this will just list all the possible implementations explicitly and construct a single, static array of them. Something like this:
pub const APPLETS: &'static [Applet] = [
Applet { name: "foo", call: ::applets::foo::foo_call },
Applet { name: "bar", call: ::applets::bar::bar_call },
];
(Sometimes, the repetitive elements can be simplified with macros, i.e. in this example, you could change it so that the name is only mentioned once.)
Theoretically, you could do it by doing what languages like D do behind the scenes, but would be platform-specific and probably require messing with linker scripts and/or modifying the compiler.
Aside: What about #[test]
? #[test]
is magic and handled by the compiler. The short version is: it does the job of finding all the tests in a crate and building said giant list, which is then used by the test runner which effectively replaces your main
function. No, there's no way you can do anything similar.
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