- Cleanup .travis.yml - Loops over std/no_std targets - Remove deprecated/useless keys - No more `cd`, we just use `--package`. - Improve tests - Main `getrandom` tests are now unit test modules instead of integration tests, making the code cleaner. - The custom RNG crates now use this common module as part of their integration tests. - No more weird test-only features needed to get the crate to build. Signed-off-by: Joe Richey <joerichey@google.com>
getrandom
A Rust library for retrieving random data from (operating) system source. It is
assumed that system always provides high-quality cryptographically secure random
data, ideally backed by hardware entropy sources. This crate derives its name
from Linux's getrandom
function, but is cross platform, roughly supporting
the same set of platforms as Rust's std
lib.
This is a low-level API. Most users should prefer using high-level random-number
library like rand
.
Usage
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
getrandom = "0.2"
Then invoke the getrandom
function:
fn get_random_buf() -> Result<[u8; 32], getrandom::Error> {
let mut buf = [0u8; 32];
getrandom::getrandom(&mut buf)?;
Ok(buf)
}
Features
This library is no_std
for every supported target. However, getting randomness
usually requires calling some external system API. This means most platforms
will require linking against system libraries (i.e. libc
for Unix,
Advapi32.dll
for Windows, Security framework on iOS, etc...).
For the wasm32-unknown-unknown
target, one of the following features should be
enabled:
By default, compiling getrandom
for an unsupported target will result in
a compilation error. If you want to build an application which uses getrandom
for such target, you can either:
- Use
[replace]
or[patch]
section in yourCargo.toml
to switch to a custom implementation with a support of your target.
Minimum Supported Rust Version
This crate requires Rust 1.32.0 or later.
License
The getrandom
library is distributed under either of
at your option.