Versions:

  • 2025.3.5
  • 2025.3.4
  • 2025.3.3
  • 2025.3.2
  • 2025.3.1
  • 2025.3
  • 2025.2.5
  • 2025.2.4.1
  • 2025.2.4
  • 2025.2.3
  • 2025.2.2
  • 2025.2.1
  • 2025.2
  • 2025.1.5
  • 2025.1.4
  • 2025.1.3
  • 2025.1.2
  • 2025.1.1
  • 2025.1
  • 2024.3.8
  • 2024.3.7
  • 2024.3
  • 2024.2
  • 2024.1.8
  • EAP

RustRover is a cross-platform integrated development environment created by JetBrains s.r.o. specifically for the Rust programming language, offering first-class support for Rust-related technologies and positioned within the Developer Tools / IDE category. The current release, version 2025.3.5, continues a lineage that has already reached twenty-five public iterations, reflecting JetBrains’ commitment to incremental refinement and feature expansion. Built on the same robust architecture that underlies other JetBrains IDEs, RustRover provides a unified workspace where developers can write, analyze, test, and debug Rust code with minimal context switching; its engine natively understands Cargo workspaces, macro expansion, async syntax, and lifetime annotations, allowing for accurate code completion, real-time error highlighting, and automated refactorings that respect Rust’s ownership rules. Typical use cases span systems programming, embedded firmware, WebAssembly modules, network services, and high-performance backend components, making the IDE equally valuable for kernel hackers, game-engine authors, and cloud engineers who demand memory safety without garbage-collection overhead. Deep integration with rust-analyzer, Clippy, and std-aware completion shortens feedback loops, while built-in profilers, flame-graph viewers, and Cargo-based run configurations streamline performance tuning. The environment also supports collaborative features such as shared debugging sessions, code-with-me streaming, and team-wide inspection profiles, enabling geographically distributed contributors to maintain consistent code quality. RustRover is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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