Android Rules

android_binary

android_binary(name, deps, srcs, aapt_version, assets, assets_dir, compatible_with, crunch_png, custom_package, debug_key, densities, deprecation, dex_shards, dexopts, distribs, enable_data_binding, features, incremental_dexing, inline_constants, instruments, javacopts, licenses, main_dex_list, main_dex_list_opts, main_dex_proguard_specs, manifest, manifest_values, multidex, nocompress_extensions, plugins, proguard_apply_dictionary, proguard_apply_mapping, proguard_generate_mapping, proguard_specs, resource_configuration_filters, resource_files, restricted_to, shrink_resources, tags, testonly, visibility)

Produces Android application package files (.apk).

Implicit output targets

  • name.apk: An Android application package file signed with debug keys and zipaligned, it could be used to develop and debug your application. You cannot release your application when signed with the debug keys.
  • name_unsigned.apk: An unsigned version of the above file that could be signed with the release keys before release to the public.
  • name_deploy.jar: A Java archive containing the transitive closure of this target.

    The deploy jar contains all the classes that would be found by a classloader that searched the runtime classpath of this target from beginning to end.

  • name_proguard.jar: A Java archive containing the result of running ProGuard on the name_deploy.jar. This output is only produced if proguard_specs attribute is specified.
  • name_proguard.map: A mapping file result of running ProGuard on the name_deploy.jar. This output is only produced if proguard_specs attribute is specified and proguard_generate_mapping or shrink_resources is set.

Examples

Examples of Android rules can be found in the examples/android directory of the Bazel source tree.

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; optional

The list of other libraries to be linked in to the binary target. Permitted library types are: android_library, java_library with android constraint and cc_library wrapping or producing .so native libraries for the Android target platform.
srcs

List of labels; optional

The list of source files that are processed to create the target.

srcs files of type .java are compiled. For readability's sake, it is not good to put the name of a generated .java source file into the srcs. Instead, put the depended-on rule name in the srcs, as described below.

srcs files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule or build extension.)

aapt_version

String; optional; default is "auto"

Select the version of aapt for this rule.
Possible values:
  • aapt_version = "aapt": Use aapt. This is the current default behaviour, and should be used for production binaries.
  • aapt_version = "aapt2": Use aapt2. This is the new resource packaging system that provides improved incremental resource processing, smaller apks and more.
  • aapt_version = "auto": aapt is controlled by the --android_aapt flag.
assets

List of labels; optional

The list of assets to be packaged. This is typically a glob of all files under the assets directory. You can also reference other rules (any rule that produces files) or exported files in the other packages, as long as all those files are under the assets_dir directory in the corresponding package.
assets_dir

String; optional

The string giving the path to the files in assets. The pair assets and assets_dir describe packaged assets and either both attributes should be provided or none of them.
crunch_png

Boolean; optional; default is 1

Do PNG crunching (or not). This is independent of nine-patch processing, which is always done. Currently only supported for local resources (not android_resources).
custom_package

String; optional

Java package for which java sources will be generated. By default the package is inferred from the directory where the BUILD file containing the rule is. You can specify a different package but this is highly discouraged since it can introduce classpath conflicts with other libraries that will only be detected at runtime.
debug_key

Label; optional; default is @bazel_tools//tools/android:debug_keystore

File containing the debug keystore to be used to sign the debug apk. Usually you do not want to use a key other than the default key, so this attribute should be omitted.

WARNING: Do not use your production keys, they should be strictly safeguarded and not kept in your source tree.

densities

List of strings; optional

Densities to filter for when building the apk. This will strip out raster drawable resources that would not be loaded by a device with the specified screen densities, to reduce APK size. A corresponding compatible-screens section will also be added to the manifest if it does not already contain a superset listing.
dex_shards

Integer; optional; default is 1

Number of shards dexing should be decomposed into. This is makes dexing much faster at the expense of app installation and startup time. The larger the binary, the more shards should be used. 25 is a good value to start experimenting with.

Note that each shard will result in at least one dex in the final app. For this reason, setting this to more than 1 is not recommended for release binaries.

dexopts

List of strings; optional

Additional command-line flags for the dx tool when generating classes.dex. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.
enable_data_binding

Boolean; optional; default is 0

If true, this rule processes data binding expressions in layout resources included through the resource_files attribute. Without this setting, data binding expressions produce build failures.

To build an Android app with data binding, you must also do the following:

  1. Set this attribute for all Android rules that transitively depend on this one. This is because dependers inherit the rule's data binding expressions through resource merging. So they also need to build with data binding to parse those expressions.
  2. Add a deps = entry for the data binding runtime library to all targets that set this attribute. The location of this library depends on your depot setup.
incremental_dexing

Integer; optional; nonconfigurable; default is -1

Force the target to be built with or without incremental dexing, overriding defaults and --incremental_dexing flag.
inline_constants

Boolean; optional; default is 0

Let the compiler inline the constants defined in the generated java sources. This attribute must be set to 0 for all android_library rules used directly by an android_binary, and for any android_binary that has an android_library in its transitive closure.
instruments

Label; optional

The android_binary target to instrument.

If this attribute is set, this android_binary will be treated as a test application for instrumentation tests. An android_instrumentation_test target can then specify this target in its test_app attribute.

javacopts

List of strings; optional

Extra compiler options for this target. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

main_dex_list

Label; optional

A text file contains a list of class file names. Classes defined by those class files are put in the primary classes.dex. e.g.:
          android/support/multidex/MultiDex$V19.class
          android/support/multidex/MultiDex.class
          android/support/multidex/MultiDexApplication.class
          com/google/common/base/Objects.class
                    
Must be used with multidex="manual_main_dex".
main_dex_list_opts

List of strings; optional

Command line options to pass to the main dex list builder. Use this option to affect the classes included in the main dex list.
main_dex_proguard_specs

List of labels; optional

Files to be used as the Proguard specifications to determine classes that must be kept in the main dex. Only allowed if the multidex attribute is set to legacy.
manifest

Label; optional

The name of the Android manifest file, normally AndroidManifest.xml. Must be defined if resource_files or assets are defined.
manifest_values

Dictionary: String -> String; optional

A dictionary of values to be overridden in the manifest. Any instance of ${name} in the manifest will be replaced with the value corresponding to name in this dictionary. applicationId, versionCode, versionName, minSdkVersion, targetSdkVersion and maxSdkVersion will also override the corresponding attributes of the manifest and uses-sdk tags. packageName will be ignored and will be set from either applicationId if specified or the package in manifest. When manifest_merger is set to legacy, only applicationId, versionCode and versionName will have any effect.
multidex

String; optional; default is "off"

Whether to split code into multiple dex files.
Possible values:
  • native: Split code into multiple dex files when the dex 64K index limit is exceeded. Assumes native platform support for loading multidex classes at runtime. This works with only Android L and newer.
  • legacy: Split code into multiple dex files when the dex 64K index limit is exceeded. Assumes multidex classes are loaded through application code (i.e. no native platform support).
  • manual_main_dex: Split code into multiple dex files when the dex 64K index limit is exceeded. The content of the main dex file needs to be specified by providing a list of classes in a text file using the main_dex_list attribute.
  • off: Compile all code to a single dex file, even if it exceeds the index limit.
nocompress_extensions

List of strings; optional

A list of file extension to leave uncompressed in apk.
plugins

List of labels; optional

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in the plugins attribute will be run whenever this target is built. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the result jar of the target.
proguard_apply_dictionary

Label; optional

File to be used as a mapping for proguard. A line separated file of "words" to pull from when renaming classes and members during obfuscation.
proguard_apply_mapping

Label; optional

File to be used as a mapping for proguard. A mapping file generated by proguard_generate_mapping to be re-used to apply the same mapping to a new build.
proguard_generate_mapping

Boolean; optional; nonconfigurable; default is 0

Whether to generate Proguard mapping file. The mapping file will be generated only if proguard_specs is specified. This file will list the mapping between the original and obfuscated class, method, and field names.

WARNING: If this attribute is used, the Proguard specification should contain neither -dontobfuscate nor -printmapping.

proguard_specs

List of labels; optional

Files to be used as Proguard specification. This file will describe the set of specifications to be used by Proguard.
resource_configuration_filters

List of strings; optional

A list of resource configuration filters, such 'en' that will limit the resources in the apk to only the ones in the 'en' configuration.
resource_files

List of labels; optional

The list of resources to be packaged. This is typically a glob of all files under the res directory.
Generated files (from genrules) can be referenced by Label here as well. The only restriction is that the generated outputs must be under the same "res" directory as any other resource files that are included.
shrink_resources

Integer; optional; default is -1

Whether to perform resource shrinking. Resources that are not used by the binary will be removed from the APK. This is only supported for rules using local resources (i.e. the manifest and resource_files attributes) and requires ProGuard. It operates in mostly the same manner as the Gradle resource shrinker (https://developer.android.com/studio/build/shrink-code.html#shrink-resources).

Notable differences:

  • resources in values/ will be removed as well as file based resources
  • uses strict mode by default
  • removing unused ID resources is not supported
If resource shrinking is enabled, name_files/resource_shrinker.log will also be generated, detailing the analysis and deletions performed.

Possible values:

  • shrink_resources = 1: Turns on Android resource shrinking
  • shrink_resources = 0: Turns off Android resource shrinking
  • shrink_resources = -1: Shrinking is controlled by the --android_resource_shrinking flag.

aar_import

aar_import(name, deps, data, aar, compatible_with, deprecation, distribs, exports, features, licenses, restricted_to, tags, testonly, visibility)

This rule allows the use of .aar files as libraries for android_library and android_binary rules.

Examples

    aar_import(
        name = "google-vr-sdk",
        aar = "gvr-android-sdk/libraries/sdk-common-1.10.0.aar",
    )

    android_binary(
        name = "app",
        manifest = "AndroidManifest.xml",
        srcs = glob(["**.java"]),
        deps = [":google-vr-sdk"],
    )

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

aar

Label; required

The .aar file to provide to the Android targets that depend on this target.
exports

List of labels; optional

Targets to export to rules that depend on this rule. See java_library.exports.

android_library

android_library(name, deps, srcs, data, assets, assets_dir, compatible_with, custom_package, deprecation, distribs, enable_data_binding, exported_plugins, exports, exports_manifest, features, idl_import_root, idl_parcelables, idl_preprocessed, idl_srcs, inline_constants, javacopts, licenses, manifest, neverlink, plugins, proguard_specs, resource_files, restricted_to, tags, testonly, visibility)

This rule compiles and archives its sources into a .jar file. The Android runtime library android.jar is implicitly put on the compilation class path.

Implicit output targets

  • libname.jar: A Java archive.
  • libname-src.jar: An archive containing the sources ("source jar").
  • name.aar: An android 'aar' bundle containing the java archive and resources of this target. It does not contain the transitive closure.

Examples

Examples of Android rules can be found in the examples/android directory of the Bazel source tree.

The following example shows how to set idl_import_root. Let //java/bazel/helloandroid/BUILD contain:

android_library(
    name = "parcelable",
    srcs = ["MyParcelable.java"], # bazel.helloandroid.MyParcelable

    # MyParcelable.aidl will be used as import for other .aidl
    # files that depend on it, but will not be compiled.
    idl_parcelables = ["MyParcelable.aidl"] # bazel.helloandroid.MyParcelable

    # We don't need to specify idl_import_root since the aidl file
    # which declares bazel.helloandroid.MyParcelable
    # is present at java/bazel/helloandroid/MyParcelable.aidl
    # underneath a java root (java/).
)

android_library(
    name = "foreign_parcelable",
    srcs = ["src/android/helloandroid/OtherParcelable.java"], # android.helloandroid.OtherParcelable
    idl_parcelables = [
        "src/android/helloandroid/OtherParcelable.aidl" # android.helloandroid.OtherParcelable
    ],

    # We need to specify idl_import_root because the aidl file which
    # declares android.helloandroid.OtherParcelable is not positioned
    # at android/helloandroid/OtherParcelable.aidl under a normal java root.
    # Setting idl_import_root to "src" in //java/bazel/helloandroid
    # adds java/bazel/helloandroid/src to the list of roots
    # the aidl compiler will search for imported types.
    idl_import_root = "src",
)

# Here, OtherInterface.aidl has an "import android.helloandroid.CallbackInterface;" statement.
android_library(
    name = "foreign_interface",
    idl_srcs = [
        "src/android/helloandroid/OtherInterface.aidl" # android.helloandroid.OtherInterface
        "src/android/helloandroid/CallbackInterface.aidl" # android.helloandroid.CallbackInterface
    ],

    # As above, idl_srcs which are not correctly positioned under a java root
    # must have idl_import_root set. Otherwise, OtherInterface (or any other
    # interface in a library which depends on this one) will not be able
    # to find CallbackInterface when it is imported.
    idl_import_root = "src",
)

# MyParcelable.aidl is imported by MyInterface.aidl, so the generated
# MyInterface.java requires MyParcelable.class at compile time.
# Depending on :parcelable ensures that aidl compilation of MyInterface.aidl
# specifies the correct import roots and can access MyParcelable.aidl, and
# makes MyParcelable.class available to Java compilation of MyInterface.java
# as usual.
android_library(
    name = "idl",
    idl_srcs = ["MyInterface.aidl"],
    deps = [":parcelable"],
)

# Here, ServiceParcelable uses and thus depends on ParcelableService,
# when it's compiled, but ParcelableService also uses ServiceParcelable,
# which creates a circular dependency.
# As a result, these files must be compiled together, in the same android_library.
android_library(
    name = "circular_dependencies",
    srcs = ["ServiceParcelable.java"],
    idl_srcs = ["ParcelableService.aidl"],
    idl_parcelables = ["ServiceParcelable.aidl"],
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; optional

The list of other libraries to link against. Permitted library types are: android_library, java_library with android constraint and cc_library wrapping or producing .so native libraries for the Android target platform.
srcs

List of labels; optional

The list of .java or .srcjar files that are processed to create the target.

srcs files of type .java are compiled. For readability's sake, it is not good to put the name of a generated .java source file into the srcs. Instead, put the depended-on rule name in the srcs, as described below.

srcs files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule or build extension.)

If srcs is omitted, then any dependency specified in deps is exported from this rule (see java_library's exports for more information about exporting dependencies). However, this behavior will be deprecated soon; try not to rely on it.

assets

List of labels; optional

The list of assets to be packaged. This is typically a glob of all files under the assets directory. You can also reference other rules (any rule that produces files) or exported files in the other packages, as long as all those files are under the assets_dir directory in the corresponding package.
assets_dir

String; optional

The string giving the path to the files in assets. The pair assets and assets_dir describe packaged assets and either both attributes should be provided or none of them.
custom_package

String; optional

Java package for which java sources will be generated. By default the package is inferred from the directory where the BUILD file containing the rule is. You can specify a different package but this is highly discouraged since it can introduce classpath conflicts with other libraries that will only be detected at runtime.
enable_data_binding

Boolean; optional; default is 0

If true, this rule processes data binding expressions in layout resources included through the resource_files attribute. Without this setting, data binding expressions produce build failures.

To build an Android app with data binding, you must also do the following:

  1. Set this attribute for all Android rules that transitively depend on this one. This is because dependers inherit the rule's data binding expressions through resource merging. So they also need to build with data binding to parse those expressions.
  2. Add a deps = entry for the data binding runtime library to all targets that set this attribute. The location of this library depends on your depot setup.
exported_plugins

List of labels; optional

The list of java_plugins (e.g. annotation processors) to export to libraries that directly depend on this library.

The specified list of java_plugins will be applied to any library which directly depends on this library, just as if that library had explicitly declared these labels in plugins.

exports

List of labels; optional

The closure of all rules reached via exports attributes are considered direct dependencies of any rule that directly depends on the target with exports.

The exports are not direct deps of the rule they belong to.

exports_manifest

Integer; optional; default is 1

Whether to export manifest entries to android_binary targets that depend on this target. uses-permissions attributes are never exported.
idl_import_root

String; optional

Package-relative path to the root of the java package tree containing idl sources included in this library.

This path will be used as the import root when processing idl sources that depend on this library.

When idl_import_root is specified, both idl_parcelables and idl_srcs must be at the path specified by the java package of the object they represent under idl_import_root. When idl_import_root is not specified, both idl_parcelables and idl_srcs must be at the path specified by their package under a Java root.

See examples.

idl_parcelables

List of labels; optional

List of Android IDL definitions to supply as imports. These files will be made available as imports for any android_library target that depends on this library, directly or via its transitive closure, but will not be translated to Java or compiled.

Only .aidl files that correspond directly to .java sources in this library should be included (e.g., custom implementations of Parcelable), otherwise idl_srcs should be used.

These files must be placed appropriately for the aidl compiler to find them. See the description of idl_import_root for information about what this means.

idl_preprocessed

List of labels; optional

List of preprocessed Android IDL definitions to supply as imports. These files will be made available as imports for any android_library target that depends on this library, directly or via its transitive closure, but will not be translated to Java or compiled.

Only preprocessed .aidl files that correspond directly to .java sources in this library should be included (e.g., custom implementations of Parcelable), otherwise use idl_srcs for Android IDL definitions that need to be translated to Java interfaces and use idl_parcelable for non-preprcessed AIDL files.

idl_srcs

List of labels; optional

List of Android IDL definitions to translate to Java interfaces. After the Java interfaces are generated, they will be compiled together with the contents of srcs.

These files will be made available as imports for any android_library target that depends on this library, directly or via its transitive closure.

These files must be placed appropriately for the aidl compiler to find them. See the description of idl_import_root for information about what this means.

inline_constants

Boolean; optional; default is 0

Let the compiler inline the constants defined in the generated java sources. This attribute must be set to 0 for all android_library rules used directly by an android_binary, and for any android_binary that has an android_library in its transitive closure.
javacopts

List of strings; optional

Extra compiler options for this target. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

manifest

Label; optional

The name of the Android manifest file, normally AndroidManifest.xml. Must be defined if resource_files or assets are defined.

Boolean; optional; default is 0

Only use this library for compilation and not at runtime. The outputs of a rule marked as neverlink will not be used in .apk creation. Useful if the library will be provided by the runtime environment during execution.
plugins

List of labels; optional

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in the plugins attribute will be run whenever this target is built. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the result jar of the target.
proguard_specs

List of labels; optional

Files to be used as Proguard specification. These will describe the set of specifications to be used by Proguard. If specified, they will be added to any android_binary target depending on this library. The files included here must only have idempotent rules, namely -dontnote, -dontwarn, assumenosideeffects, and rules that start with -keep. Other options can only appear in android_binary's proguard_specs, to ensure non-tautological merges.
resource_files

List of labels; optional

The list of resources to be packaged. This is typically a glob of all files under the res directory.
Generated files (from genrules) can be referenced by Label here as well. The only restriction is that the generated outputs must be under the same "res" directory as any other resource files that are included.

android_instrumentation_test

android_instrumentation_test(name, data, args, compatible_with, deprecation, distribs, features, flaky, licenses, local, restricted_to, shard_count, size, support_apks, tags, target_device, test_app, testonly, timeout, toolchains, visibility)

An android_instrumentation_test rule runs Android instrumentation tests. It will start an emulator, install the application being tested, the test application, and any other needed applications, and run the tests defined in the test package.

The test_app attribute specifies the android_binary which contains the test. This android_binary in turn specifies the android_binary application under test through its instruments attribute.

Example

# java/com/samples/hello_world/BUILD

android_library(
    name = "hello_world_lib",
    srcs = ["Lib.java"],
    manifest = "LibraryManifest.xml",
    resource_files = glob(["res/**"]),
)

# The app under test
android_binary(
    name = "hello_world_app",
    manifest = "AndroidManifest.xml",
    deps = [":hello_world_lib"],
)
# javatests/com/samples/hello_world/BUILD

android_library(
    name = "hello_world_test_lib",
    srcs = ["Tests.java"],
    deps = [
      "//java/com/samples/hello_world:hello_world_lib",
      ...  # test dependencies such as Espresso and Mockito
    ],
)

# The test app
android_binary(
    name = "hello_world_test_app",
    instruments = "//java/com/samples/hello_world:hello_world_app",
    manifest = "AndroidManifest.xml",
    deps = ["hello_world_test_lib"],
)

android_instrumentation_test(
    name = "hello_world_uiinstrumentation_tests",
    target_device = ":some_target_device",
    test_app = ":hello_world_test_app",
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

support_apks

List of labels; optional

Other APKs to install on the device before the instrumentation test starts.
target_device

Label; required

The android_device the test should run on.

To run the test on an emulator that is already running or on a physical device, use these arguments: --test_output=streamed --test_arg=--device_broker_type=LOCAL_ADB_SERVER --test_arg=--device_serial_number=$device_identifier

test_app

Label; required

The android_binary target containing the test classes. The android_binary target must specify which target it is testing through its instruments attribute.
toolchains

List of labels; optional

The set of toolchains that supply "Make variables" that this target can use in some of its attributes. Some rules have toolchains whose Make variables they can use by default.

android_local_test

android_local_test(name, deps, srcs, data, aapt_version, args, compatible_with, custom_package, deprecation, features, flaky, javacopts, jvm_flags, licenses, local, manifest, manifest_values, plugins, resource_jars, resource_strip_prefix, restricted_to, runtime_deps, shard_count, size, stamp, tags, test_class, testonly, timeout, toolchains, visibility)

This rule is for unit testing android_library rules locally (as opposed to on a device). It works with the Android Robolectric testing framework. See the Android Robolectric site for details about writing Robolectric tests.

Implicit output targets

  • name.jar: A Java archive of the test.
  • name-src.jar: An archive containing the sources ("source jar").
  • name_deploy.jar: A Java deploy archive suitable for deployment (only built if explicitly requested).

Examples

To use Robolectric with android_local_test, add Robolectric's repository to your WORKSPACE file:

http_archive(
    name = "robolectric",
    urls = ["https://github.com/robolectric/robolectric/archive/<COMMIT>.tar.gz"],
    strip_prefix = "robolectric-<COMMIT>",
    sha256 = "<HASH>",
)
load("@robolectric//bazel:robolectric.bzl", "robolectric_repositories")
robolectric_repositories()
This pulls in the maven_jar rules needed for Robolectric. Then each android_local_test rule should depend on @robolectric//bazel:robolectric. See example below.

android_local_test(
    name = "SampleTest",
    srcs = [
        "SampleTest.java",
    ],
    manifest = "LibManifest.xml",
    deps = [
        ":sample_test_lib",
        "@robolectric//bazel:robolectric",
    ],
)

android_library(
    name = "sample_test_lib",
    srcs = [
         "Lib.java",
    ],
    resource_files = glob(["res/**"]),
    manifest = "AndroidManifest.xml",
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; optional

The list of libraries to be tested as well as additional libraries to be linked in to the target. All resources, assets and manifest files declared in Android rules in the transitive closure of this attribute are made available in the test.

The list of allowed rules in deps are android_library, aar_import, java_import, java_library, and java_lite_proto_library.

srcs

List of labels; optional

The list of source files that are processed to create the target. Required except in special case described below.

srcs files of type .java are compiled. For readability's sake, it is not good to put the name of a generated .java source file into the srcs. Instead, put the depended-on rule name in the srcs, as described below.

srcs files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule or build extension.)

All other files are ignored, as long as there is at least one file of a file type described above. Otherwise an error is raised.

The srcs attribute is required and cannot be empty, unless runtime_deps is specified.

aapt_version

String; optional; default is "auto"

Select the version of aapt for this rule.
Possible values:
  • aapt_version = "aapt": Use aapt. This is the current default behaviour, and should be used for production binaries.
  • aapt_version = "aapt2": Use aapt2. This is the new resource packaging system that provides improved incremental resource processing, smaller apks and more.
  • aapt_version = "auto": aapt is controlled by the --android_aapt flag.
custom_package

String; optional

Java package in which the R class will be generated. By default the package is inferred from the directory where the BUILD file containing the rule is. If you use this attribute, you will likely need to use test_class as well.
javacopts

List of strings; optional

Extra compiler options for this library. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

jvm_flags

List of strings; optional

A list of flags to embed in the wrapper script generated for running this binary. Subject to $(location) and "Make variable" substitution, and Bourne shell tokenization.

The wrapper script for a Java binary includes a CLASSPATH definition (to find all the dependent jars) and invokes the right Java interpreter. The command line generated by the wrapper script includes the name of the main class followed by a "$@" so you can pass along other arguments after the classname. However, arguments intended for parsing by the JVM must be specified before the classname on the command line. The contents of jvm_flags are added to the wrapper script before the classname is listed.

Note that this attribute has no effect on *_deploy.jar outputs.

manifest

Label; optional

The name of the Android manifest file, normally AndroidManifest.xml. Must be defined if resource_files or assets are defined or if any of the manifests from the libraries under test have a minSdkVersion tag in them.
manifest_values

Dictionary: String -> String; optional

A dictionary of values to be overridden in the manifest. Any instance of ${name} in the manifest will be replaced with the value corresponding to name in this dictionary. applicationId, versionCode, versionName, minSdkVersion, targetSdkVersion and maxSdkVersion will also override the corresponding attributes of the manifest and uses-sdk tags. packageName will be ignored and will be set from either applicationId if specified or the package in the manifest. It is not necessary to have a manifest on the rule in order to use manifest_values.
plugins

List of labels; optional

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in this attribute will be run whenever this rule is built. A library may also inherit plugins from dependencies that use exported_plugins. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the resulting jar of this rule.
resource_jars

List of labels; optional

Set of archives containing Java resources.

If specified, the contents of these jars are merged into the output jar.

resource_strip_prefix

String; optional

The path prefix to strip from Java resources.

If specified, this path prefix is stripped from every file in the resources attribute. It is an error for a resource file not to be under this directory. If not specified (the default), the path of resource file is determined according to the same logic as the Java package of source files. For example, a source file at stuff/java/foo/bar/a.txt will be located at foo/bar/a.txt.

runtime_deps

List of labels; optional

Libraries to make available to the final binary or test at runtime only. Like ordinary deps, these will appear on the runtime classpath, but unlike them, not on the compile-time classpath. Dependencies needed only at runtime should be listed here. Dependency-analysis tools should ignore targets that appear in both runtime_deps and deps.
stamp

Integer; optional; default is 0

Enable link stamping. Whether to encode build information into the binary. Possible values:
  • stamp = 1: Stamp the build information into the binary. Stamped binaries are only rebuilt when their dependencies change. Use this if there are tests that depend on the build information.
  • stamp = 0: Always replace build information by constant values. This gives good build result caching.
  • stamp = -1: Embedding of build information is controlled by the --[no]stamp flag.
test_class

String; optional

The Java class to be loaded by the test runner.

This attribute specifies the name of a Java class to be run by this test. It is rare to need to set this. If this argument is omitted, the Java class whose name corresponds to the name of this android_local_test rule will be used. The test class needs to be annotated with org.junit.runner.RunWith.

toolchains

List of labels; optional

The set of toolchains that supply "Make variables" that this target can use in some of its attributes. Some rules have toolchains whose Make variables they can use by default.

android_device

android_device(name, cache, compatible_with, default_properties, deprecation, distribs, features, horizontal_resolution, licenses, platform_apks, ram, restricted_to, screen_density, system_image, tags, testonly, vertical_resolution, visibility, vm_heap)

This rule creates an android emulator configured with the given specifications. This emulator may be started via a bazel run command or by executing the generated script directly. It is encouraged to depend on existing android_device rules rather than defining your own.

This rule is a suitable target for the --run_under flag to bazel test and bazel run. It starts an emulator, copies the target being tested/run to the emulator, and tests it or runs it as appropriate.

android_device supports creating KVM images if the underlying system_image is X86 based and is optimized for at most the I686 CPU architecture. To use KVM add tags = ['requires-kvm'] to the android_device rule.

Implicit output targets

  • name_images/userdata.dat: Contains image files and snapshots to start the emulator
  • name_images/emulator-meta-data.pb: Contains serialized information necessary to pass on to the emulator to restart it.

Examples

The following example shows how to use android_device. //java/android/helloandroid/BUILD contains

android_device(
    name = "nexus_s",
    cache = 32,
    default_properties = "nexus_s.properties",
    horizontal_resolution = 480,
    ram = 512,
    screen_density = 233,
    system_image = ":emulator_images_android_16_x86",
    vertical_resolution = 800,
    vm_heap = 32,
)

filegroup(
    name = "emulator_images_android_16_x86",
    srcs = glob(["androidsdk/system-images/android-16/**"]),
)

//java/android/helloandroid/nexus_s.properties contains:

ro.product.brand=google
ro.product.device=crespo
ro.product.manufacturer=samsung
ro.product.model=Nexus S
ro.product.name=soju

This rule will generate images and a start script. You can start the emulator locally by executing bazel run :nexus_s -- --action=start. The script exposes the following flags:

  • --adb_port: The port to expose adb on. If you wish to issue adb commands to the emulator this is the port you will issue adb connect to.
  • --emulator_port: The port to expose the emulator's telnet management console on.
  • --enable_display: Starts the emulator with a display if true (defaults to false).
  • --action: Either start or kill.
  • --apks_to_install: a list of apks to install on the emulator.

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

cache

Integer; required; default is 0

The size in megabytes of the emulator's cache partition. The minimum value of this is 16 megabytes.
default_properties

Label; optional

A single properties file to be placed in /default.prop on the emulator. This allows the rule author to further configure the emulator to appear more like a real device (In particular controlling its UserAgent strings and other behaviour that might cause an application or server to behave differently to a specific device). The properties in this file will override read only properties typically set by the emulator such as ro.product.model.
horizontal_resolution

Integer; required; default is 0

The horizontal screen resolution in pixels to emulate. The minimum value is 240.
platform_apks

List of labels; optional

A list of apks to be installed on the device at boot time.
ram

Integer; required; default is 0

The amount of ram in megabytes to emulate for the device. This is for the entire device, not just for a particular app installed on the device. The minimum value is 64 megabytes.
screen_density

Integer; required; default is 0

The density of the emulated screen in pixels per inch. The minimum value of this is 30 ppi.
system_image

Label; required

A filegroup containing the following files:
  • system.img: The system partition
  • kernel-qemu: The Linux kernel the emulator will load
  • ramdisk.img: The initrd image to use at boot time
  • userdata.img: The initial userdata partition
  • source.properties: A properties file containing information about the images
These files are part of the android sdk or provided by third parties (for example Intel provides x86 images).
vertical_resolution

Integer; required; default is 0

The vertical screen resolution in pixels to emulate. The minimum value is 240.
vm_heap

Integer; required; default is 0

The size in megabytes of the virtual machine heap Android will use for each process. The minimum value is 16 megabytes.

android_ndk_repository

android_ndk_repository(name, api_level, path)

Configures Bazel to use an Android NDK to support building Android targets with native code. NDK versions 10 up to 16 are currently supported.

Note that building for Android also requires an android_sdk_repository rule in your WORKSPACE file.

For more information, read the full documentation on using Android NDK with Bazel.

Examples

android_ndk_repository(
    name = "androidndk",
)

The above example will locate your Android NDK from $ANDROID_NDK_HOME and detect the highest API level that it supports.

android_ndk_repository(
    name = "androidndk",
    path = "./android-ndk-r12b",
    api_level = 24,
)

The above example will use the Android NDK located inside your workspace in ./android-ndk-r12b. It will use the API level 24 libraries when compiling your JNI code.

cpufeatures

The Android NDK contains the cpufeatures library which can be used to detect a device's CPU at runtime. The following example demonstrates how to use cpufeatures with Bazel.

# jni.cc
#include "ndk/sources/android/cpufeatures/cpu-features.h"
...
# BUILD
cc_library(
    name = "jni",
    srcs = ["jni.cc"],
    deps = ["@androidndk//:cpufeatures"],
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

api_level

Integer; optional; nonconfigurable; default is 0

The Android API level to build against. If not specified, the highest API level installed will be used.
path

String; optional; nonconfigurable

An absolute or relative path to an Android NDK. Either this attribute or the $ANDROID_NDK_HOME environment variable must be set.

The Android NDK can be downloaded from the Android developer site .

android_sdk_repository

android_sdk_repository(name, api_level, build_tools_version, path)

Configures Bazel to use a local Android SDK to support building Android targets.

Examples

The minimum to set up an Android SDK for Bazel is to put an android_sdk_repository rule named "androidsdk" in your WORKSPACE file and set the $ANDROID_HOME environment variable to the path of your Android SDK. Bazel will use the highest Android API level and build tools version installed in the Android SDK by default.
android_sdk_repository(
    name = "androidsdk",
)

To ensure reproducible builds, the path, api_level and build_tools_version attributes can be set to specific values. The build will fail if the Android SDK does not have the specified API level or build tools version installed.

android_sdk_repository(
    name = "androidsdk",
    path = "./sdk",
    api_level = 19,
    build_tools_version = "25.0.0",
)

The above example also demonstrates using a workspace-relative path to the Android SDK. This is useful if the Android SDK is part of your Bazel workspace (e.g. if it is checked into version control).

Support Libraries

The Support Libraries are available in the Android SDK Manager as "Android Support Repository". This is a versioned set of common Android libraries, such as the Support and AppCompat libraries, that is packaged as a local Maven repository. android_sdk_repository generates Bazel targets for each of these libraries that can be used in the dependencies of android_binary and android_library targets.

The names of the generated targets are derived from the Maven coordinates of the libraries in the Android Support Repository, formatted as @androidsdk//${group}:${artifact}-${version}. The following example shows how an android_library can depend on version 25.0.0 of the v7 appcompat library.

android_library(
    name = "lib",
    srcs = glob(["*.java"]),
    manifest = "AndroidManifest.xml",
    resource_files = glob(["res/**"]),
    deps = ["@androidsdk//com.android.support:appcompat-v7-25.0.0"],
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

api_level

Integer; optional; nonconfigurable; default is 0

The Android API level to build against by default. If not specified, the highest API level installed will be used.

The API level used for a given build can be overridden by the android_sdk flag. android_sdk_repository creates an android_sdk target for each API level installed in the SDK with name @androidsdk//:sdk-${level}, whether or not this attribute is specified. For example, to build against a non-default API level: bazel build --android_sdk=@androidsdk//:sdk-19 //java/com/example:app.

To view all android_sdk targets generated by android_sdk_repository , you can run bazel query "kind(android_sdk, @androidsdk//...)".

build_tools_version

String; optional; nonconfigurable

The version of the Android build tools to use from within the Android SDK. If not specified, the latest build tools version installed will be used.

Bazel requires build tools version 26.0.1 or later.

path

String; optional; nonconfigurable

An absolute or relative path to an Android SDK. Either this attribute or the $ANDROID_HOME environment variable must be set.

The Android SDK can be downloaded from the Android developer site.