RustQ

RustQ is Rust template quasiquoting for Elixir. It helps Elixir projects generate Rust from real .rs templates instead of building Rust strings by hand.

Use it for Rustler projects, schema-driven NIF surfaces, or any codegen where you want Rust syntax highlighting, Rust parsing, formatting, and AST-aware placeholder replacement.

Installation

Add RustQ to mix.exs:

{:rustq, "~> 0.1", only: [:dev, :test], runtime: false}

RustQ compiles a Rustler NIF at generation time, so Rust/Cargo must be available where mix rustq.gen or your own codegen task runs.

Generate from real Rust templates

Templates are ordinary Rust with parseable placeholder forms:

use RustQ.Sigil
alias RustQ.Rust
template = ~R"""
pub struct __Resource {
__splice_fields: (),
}
impl __Resource {
__splice_methods!();
pub fn table() -> &'static str {
__expr_table_name!()
}
}
"""
code =
template
|> RustQ.parse!("resource.rs")
|> RustQ.bind(Resource: :User, table_name: {:literal, "users"})
|> RustQ.splice(:fields, [
Rust.field(:id, :i64, vis: :pub),
Rust.field(:name, :String, vis: :pub)
])
|> RustQ.splice(:methods, [
Rust.fn(:new,
vis: :pub,
args: [id: :i64, name: :String],
returns: :Self,
body: "Self { id, name }"
)
])
|> RustQ.codegen!()

For file templates:

RustQ.render_file!("priv/templates/resource.rs",
bind: [Resource: :User],
splice: [fields: [RustQ.Rust.field(:id, :i64, vis: :pub)]]
)

Placeholder forms

RustQ templates stay parseable Rust by using sentinel identifiers and macros:

Rust builders

RustQ.Rust provides small Elixir builders for common Rust fragments:

alias RustQ.Rust
items = [
Rust.use([:std, :sync, :OnceLock]),
Rust.const(:TABLE, {:ref, :str}, Rust.expr(Rust.literal("users")), vis: :pub),
Rust.struct(:User,
vis: :pub,
derive: [:Clone, :Debug],
fields: [Rust.field(:id, :i64, vis: :pub)]
)
]

Use Rust.raw/1, Rust.item/1, Rust.impl_item/1, Rust.stmt/1, Rust.expr/1, and Rust.arm/1 when hand-written Rust is clearer than a builder.

Rustler helpers

RustQ.Rustler generates common Rustler code as Rust fragments:

RustQ.Rustler.atoms([:ok, :error, {"r#type", "type"}])
RustQ.Rustler.cached_atoms([:ok, node_changes: "nodeChanges"])
RustQ.Rustler.nif(:add,
args: [a: :i64, b: :i64],
returns: :i64,
body: "a + b"
)
RustQ.Rustler.term_helpers(type_key: "atoms::r#type()")
RustQ.Rustler.term_decoder(:ProgramInput,
fields: [
body: [type: {:vec, "Term<'a>"}, key: "atoms::body()", required: true]
]
)

Safe term builders use Term<'a>:

RustQ.Rustler.term_builders(include: [:map_from_terms, :struct_from_terms])

Low-level raw NIF_TERM helpers are explicit:

RustQ.Rustler.nif_term_builders(include: [:map_from_nif_terms, :struct_from_nif_terms])

Rustler schema DSL

For larger Elixir struct surfaces, define a schema once and generate Rust NIF structs plus tagged enums:

defmodule MyApp.Codegen.ContentSchema do
use RustQ.Rustler.Schema
schema MyApp.Content do
default_attrs ["allow(dead_code)"]
node Text do
field :text, :String
field :size, {:option, :String}
end
node Paragraph do
field :body, {:vec, Content}
end
tagged_enum Content do
variants :all
unknown :unknown_content_variant
end
end
end

Optionality is part of the Rust type ({:option, :String}), not a separate boolean flag.

Generated files with rustq.exs

Create rustq.exs in your project root:

use RustQ.Config
alias RustQ.Rustler
require_file "lib/my_app/codegen/content_schema.ex"
rust "native/my_nif/src/generated_term_helpers.rs" do
Rustler.term_helpers(type_key: "atoms::r#type()")
end
rust "native/my_nif/src/generated_content.rs" do
MyApp.Codegen.ContentSchema.rust_items()
end

The manifest is ordinary Elixir, so use aliases, helper functions, modules, and macros to keep project-specific codegen readable.

Then run:

mix rustq.gen
mix rustq.gen --check
mix rustq.gen term_helpers

Path-only targets infer their name from the file name and strip a leading generated_, so generated_term_helpers.rs is selectable as term_helpers.

Use mix rustq.gen --check in CI to fail when generated files are stale.

Fragment validation

You can validate individual Rust fragments in the same contexts RustQ splices:

RustQ.valid_fragment?(:field, "pub id: i64")
RustQ.parse_fragment!(:arm, RustQ.Rust.arm("Some(value)", "value"))

License

MIT