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Cargo build hangs with " Blocking waiting for file lock on the registry index" after building parity from source

I followed the readme instructions for building Parity from source and then executed:

cargo build --release
~/.cargo/bin/cargo build --release

as instructed, both of which returned the following message while the prompt hung:

 Blocking waiting for file lock on the registry index

I'm on a Mac.

The problem for me was that my rust-analyzer vscode plugin was indexing. Once it finished, running cargo run worked fine.
I've the same problem on Linux when using Rustler to use Rust codes in Elixir. The problem resolved by removing ~/.cargo/.package-cache as mentioned it this issue github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/9742.
My problem was that I installed both Rust and rust-analyzer on VS Code at the same time. The problem was fixed after I removed either of the extensions. Hope this helps!

R
Russel Winder

Running cargo clean seems to fix the problem.


Seems less hacky, but for some reason only the accepted answer solved my problem. Is it doing the same?
@FelixJassler No. It deletes the entire target folder of the project you run this command for, unlike the accepted answer.
t
the Tin Man

I had the same issue and got around it by using

rm -rf ~/.cargo/registry/index/*

I suggest looking at 'Cargo build hangs with " Blocking waiting for file lock on the registry index" after building parity from source' first.


Worked for me after 30s of waiting, without doing anything.
I had to remove ~/.cargo/.package-cache as well.
For me, I suspect it's the rust-analyzer extension in VS Code. While it's downloading its components (after I open the project) I get the blocking problem.
worked for me after deleting both .cargo/registry/index and .package-cache
I removed rm -rf ~/.cargo/registry/cache/* for Error Blocking waiting for file lock on package cache to make it work.
t
the Tin Man

This happens when you run two compilations of the same project at the same time. The compiler uses a lock file to avoid having data race issues.

There are some possibilities:

If you ran the two compilations yourself, the solution is obvious: you need to cancel one of them.

If you use an IDE that automatically compiles your project: you can wait for the job to be finished or close the IDE. If it does not work, this is probably because of RLS hanging out. You can run pkill rls to solve the issue.

As a last resort, you can force the removal of the lock using rm -rf ~/.cargo/registry/index/* as said in jvatic's answer.


This is correct, in my case it was the cargo extension in VS Code which was automatically compiling my project
Same as @HomamBahrani. I think this answer reveal the root cause should be ranked higher.
My apologizes but where is this .cargo/registry/index/ located? I can't seem to find it in the project directory, the only folders there are src, target and .gitignore
@AbdullahAshraf It's not in your project, it's in your home, like /home/user/.cargo/registry/index
@Boiethios Thanks for helping out. I forgot to mention but I'm on windows. Also, it worked after waiting for about 3-5 minutes. Since then, there was no wait.
W
Wilfried Kopp

It is important to ensure you have no other rls or cargo running. sudo pkill rls cargo is a good way to ensure they are not.


In my case it was just the cargo process that was still running. Killing that process fixed it for me.
For me, neither the most popular answer nor the accepted answer worked. But this worked.
b
bmdelacruz

Removing rm $CARGO_HOME/.package-cache worked for me.

I accidentally hit ctrl+z instead of ctrl+c while executing cargo run and the next execution of cargo run showed me Blocking waiting for file lock on the registry index. I removed the said file and then it worked again.

Edit:
If you accidentally hit ctrl+z like me, you can unsuspend the cargo run process by running fg instead of deleting the package cache file. ctrl+z actually sends a SIGTSTP signal to the process and that process will be suspended until you tell it to continue. See this answer for more info.


I have closed my IDE while compiling. This solution was fixed my issue.
Yup, I had ^Z inside Neovim and it must have been in the middle of some cargo check (or similar) pass when I did so.
t
the Tin Man

You usually get this error when you run the cargo build command twice at the same time. If you are using an IDE check if a plugin is running a cargo command in the background, this was the case for me with VS Code.


F
Fuji

My issue was the IDE was running cargo and had locked the directory. Try closing your IDE


P
PPP

My VSCode intellisense was working on a build. Make sure your intellisense is not builing. It displays a little gear icon spinning on bottom. Happens mostly when you update Cargo.toml


b
bendeg

Same issue in VScode : if you've installed RLS

File | Preferences | Settings Search for "rls" In "rust" extension, uncheck "Start RLS automatically when opening a file or project"

Re-open your project, and it should be solved.


H
Heartbit

I fixed this issue by running the following commands:

Search for all rust related processes by $ ps aux | grep rls Stop all of them one by one with $ sudo kill -9


This is what happened to me. The rustc process was not responding and locking the directory. None of the other answers worked and came here to add a reply explaining the same.
S
Shepmaster

Before removing the Cargo registry index as suggested in the accepted answer, make sure no other process is currently compiling Parity or any other Rust package.


L
Luke Schoen

I tried to create a Polkadot Node by following the Readme instructions.

I was able to build it by running the following commands (copy/paste into Bash Terminal):

git clone https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot;
cd polkadot; git checkout master;
rustup update nightly;
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown --toolchain nightly;
rustup update stable;
rustup default stable;
cargo install --git https://github.com/alexcrichton/wasm-gc --force;
cargo install --git https://github.com/pepyakin/wasm-export-table.git --force;
brew install openssl; brew upgrade openssl;
rustc --version; cargo --version;
./build.sh;
cargo build;
cargo run -- --help;
./target/debug/polkadot --help;

I then tried to run a Polkadot Node with the following commands (which are equivalent):

./target/debug/polkadot -- --chain=dev --validator --key Alice -d /tmp/alice;
cargo run -- --chain=dev --validator --key Alice -d /tmp/alice;

But instead it showed the following:

Blocking waiting for file lock on the git checkouts
Blocking waiting for file lock on build directory

I found it was caused by CLion (Jetbrains IDE).

I solved the problem by closing CLion. I used Visual Studio Code editor instead, which also allows for debugging Rust code with breakpoints


The short answer is: If you have a Jetbrains IDE open, try closing it. Happened to me on Linux + IDEA.
D
Dolphin

I am using this command in macOS Monterey 12.4:

rm -rf ~/.cargo/.package-cache

then rerun the build command, works.


L
Levit Kanner

if you ever hit "Blocking waiting for file lock on package cache",

Run the command below and run cargo again. rm $CARGO_HOME/.package-cache


O
Osoro

Finally. And I absolutely mean finally when all fails and you want a quick out. Restart your machine. Perhaps it's also the rust-analyzer taking way too long so don't open vscode on reboot, use your terminal instead.


M
Mahdad

it's work for me on the linux (ubuntu) :

$ rm ~/.cargo/.package-cache

a
ax39T-Venom

You Should Temporarily Stop the rls Process.


There is an existing answer that covers this. Can you expand on this answer?
G
Gabe

On the risk of coming late to the party, while cargo, rls or rust-analyzer are responsible for the lock to avoid data races. An underlying issue maybe the number of inotify filewatchers.

Usually they work fine by spawning a new watcher and wait their turn but if they run out of watchers space this can be a problem. Agreeing to all the above solutions but suggesting to check the number of max_user_watches

# view current settings
cat /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches

# increasing it, /etc/sysctl.conf
fs.inotify.max_user_watches=524288

# The new value can then be loaded in by running s
$sudo sysctl -p.

n
nilinswap

Problem was another process using cargo. I could not find the process to kill so I restarted my local machine and it worked.


M
M-Cat

What worked for me

For me, I found that the issue was caused by configuring my target dir:

[build]
target-dir = ".cargo/target"

in my .cargo/config.

What didn't work

I ran cargo build --release -vv and saw a message that didn't appear without the -vv flag:

Blocking waiting for file lock on build directory

I thought this a big clue so I tried stuff like disabling my file backups. I also tried all the answers on this page with no luck.


s
super IT guy

For me rust analyzer didn't stop and closing the IDE didn't help. But instead of shutting the computer just close the IDE and go into task manager (this is at least for windows). In task manager under details tab you can find any cargo processes that may be running and kill them there. Then you can reopen IDE and you should be back to normal.


R
Ralph Bisschops

You can point your IDE to use a different path when building the code. This will prevent conflicts with locks in the future. Add the following compile flags to the IDE:

--target-dir target/rls/

In VSCode use the following setting:

"rust-analyzer.runnables.extraArgs": [
  "--target-dir",
  "target/rls/"
]

https://i.stack.imgur.com/IxElQ.png


A
Ankit Kumar

I think you should use cargo clean and re-run the cargo run command and wait for some time. This usually happens when you try to use a new module in your code by adding it into Cargo.toml file.


t
takeItIzzy

If you are sure that there is no other cargo process executing, but this problem still occur frequently, it might be your network problem.


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