This is a binding to the Signal client code in rust/, implemented on top of the C FFI produced by rust/bridge/ffi/. It's set up as a CocoaPod for integration into the Signal iOS client and as a Swift Package for local development.
-
Make sure you are using
use_frameworks!
in your Podfile. LibSignalClient is a Swift pod and as such cannot be compiled as a plain library. -
Add 'LibSignalClient' and 'SignalCoreKit' as dependencies in your Podfile, as well as the prebuild checksum for the latest release. You can find the checksum in the GitHub Releases for the project.
pod 'LibSignalClient', git: 'https://github.com/signalapp/libsignal.git' pod 'SignalCoreKit', git: 'https://github.com/signalapp/SignalCoreKit.git' ENV['LIBSIGNAL_FFI_PREBUILD_CHECKSUM'] = '...'
-
Use
pod install
orpod update
to build the Rust library for all targets. You may be prompted to install Rust dependencies (cbindgen
,rust-src
). -
Build as usual. The Rust library will automatically be linked into the built LibSignalClient.framework.
Instead of a git-based dependency, use a path-based dependency to treat LibSignalClient as a development pod. Since prepare_command
s are not run for path-based dependencies, you will need to build the Rust library yourself. (Xcode should prompt you to do this if you forget.)
CARGO_BUILD_TARGET=x86_64-apple-ios swift/build_ffi.sh --release
The CocoaPod is configured to use the release build of the Rust library.
If validating LibSignalClient locally, use the following invocation:
pod lib lint \
--platforms=ios \
--include-podspecs=../SignalCoreKit/SignalCoreKit.podspec \
--skip-import-validation \
--verbose
You will also need to have SignalCoreKit checked out; the above command assumes you have checked it out as a sibling directory to libsignal.
When exposing new APIs to Swift, you will need to add the --generate-ffi
flag to your
build_ffi.sh
invocation.
-
Build the Rust library using
swift/build_ffi.sh
. The Swift Package.swift is configured to use the debug build of the Rust library. -
Use
swift build
andswift test
as usual from within theswift/
directory.
When exposing new APIs to Swift, you will need to add the --generate-ffi
flag to your
build_ffi.sh
invocation.
...is not supported. In theory we could make this work through the use of a custom pkg-config file and requiring clients to set PKG_CONFIG_PATH
(or install the Rust build products), but since Signal itself does not use this configuration it's considered extra maintenance burden. Development as a package is supported as a lightweight convenience (as well as a cross-platform one), but the CocoaPods build is considered the canonical one.
Rust targets for Mac Catalyst are still in tier 3 support, so we use the experimental -Zbuild-std
flag to build the standard library.
In order to compile for these platforms you will need to:
- Install the standard library component with
rustup component add rust-src
- If not using Cocoapods, add the
--build-std
flag to yourbuild_ffi.sh
invocation