Installing Bazel on Windows
This page describes the requirements and steps to install Bazel on Windows. It also includes troubleshooting and other ways to install Bazel, such as using Chocolatey or Scoop.
Installing Bazel
This section covers the prerequisites, environment setup, and detailed steps during installation on Windows.
Step 1: Check your system
Recommended: 64 bit Windows 10, version 1703 (Creators Update) or newer
To check your Windows version:
- Click the Start button.
- Type
winver
in the search box and press Enter. - You should see the About Windows box with your Windows version information.
Also supported:
-
64 bit Windows 7 or newer
-
64 bit Windows Server 2008 R2 or newer
Step 2: Install the prerequisites
Step 3: Download Bazel
Download the Bazel binary (bazel-<version>-windows-x86_64.exe
) from
GitHub.
Alternatively you can:
- Download Bazelisk instead of Bazel. Bazelisk is a Bazel launcher that ensures you always use the latest Bazel release.
- Install Bazel from Chocolatey
- Install Bazel from Scoop
- Build Bazel from source
Step 4: Set up your environment
To make Bazel easily accessible from command prompts or PowerShell by default, you can rename the Bazel binary to bazel.exe
and add it to your default paths.
set PATH=%PATH%;<path to the Bazel binary>
You can also change your system PATH
environment variable to make it permanent. Check out how to set environment variables.
Step 5: Done
You have successfully installed Bazel. To check the installation is correct, try to run:
bazel version
Next, you can check out more tips and guidance here:
Installing compilers and language runtimes
Depending on which languages you want to build, you will need:
-
MSYS2 is a software distro and building platform for Windows. It contains Bash and common Unix tools (like
grep
,tar
,git
).You will need MSYS2 to build, test, or run targets that depend on Bash. Typically these are
genrule
,sh_binary
,sh_test
, but there may be more (e.g. Starlark rules). Bazel shows an error if a build target needs Bash but Bazel could not locate it. -
Common MSYS2 packages
You will likely need these to build and run targets that depend on Bash. MSYS2 does not install these tools by default, so you need to install them manually. Projects that depend on Bash tools in
PATH
need this step (for example TensorFlow).Open the MSYS2 terminal and run this command:
pacman -S zip unzip patch diffutils git
Optional: If you want to use Bazel from CMD or Powershell and still be able to use Bash tools, make sure to add
<MSYS2_INSTALL_PATH>/usr/bin
to yourPATH
environment variable.
-
Build Tools for Visual Studio 2019
You will need this to build C++ code on Windows.
Also supported:
-
Visual Studio 2015 (or newer) with Visual C++ and Windows 10 SDK
-
Visual C++ Build Tools 2015 (or newer) and Windows 10 SDK
-
-
Java SE Development Kit 11 (JDK) for Windows x64
You will need this to build Java code on Windows.
Also supported: Java 8, 9, and 10
-
You will need this to build Python code on Windows.
Also supported: Python 2.7 or newer for Windows x86-64
Troubleshooting
Bazel does not find Bash or bash.exe
Possible reasons:
-
you installed MSYS2 not under the default install path
-
you installed MSYS2 i686 instead of MSYS2 x86_64
-
you installed MSYS instead of MSYS2
Solution:
Ensure you installed MSYS2 x86_64.
If that doesn’t help:
-
Go to Start Menu > Settings.
-
Find the setting “Edit environment variables for your account”
-
Look at the list on the top (“User variables for <username>”), and click the “New…” button below it.
-
For “Variable name”, enter
BAZEL_SH
-
Click “Browse File…”
-
Navigate to the MSYS2 directory, then to
usr\bin
below it.For example, this might be
C:\msys64\usr\bin
on your system. -
Select the
bash.exe
orbash
file and click OK -
The “Variable value” field now has the path to
bash.exe
. Click OK to close the window. -
Done.
If you open a new cmd.exe or PowerShell terminal and run Bazel now, it will find Bash.
Bazel does not find Visual Studio or Visual C++
Possible reasons:
-
you installed multiple versions of Visual Studio
-
you installed and removed various versions of Visual Studio
-
you installed various versions of the Windows SDK
-
you installed Visual Studio not under the default install path
Solution:
-
Go to Start Menu > Settings.
-
Find the setting “Edit environment variables for your account”
-
Look at the list on the top (“User variables for <username>”), and click the “New…” button below it.
-
For “Variable name”, enter
BAZEL_VC
-
Click “Browse Directory…”
-
Navigate to the
VC
directory of Visual Studio.For example, this might be
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community\VC
on your system. -
Select the
VC
folder and click OK -
The “Variable value” field now has the path to
VC
. Click OK to close the window. -
Done.
If you open a new cmd.exe or PowerShell terminal and run Bazel now, it will find Visual C++.
Other ways to install Bazel
Using Chocolatey
-
Install the Chocolatey package manager
-
Install the Bazel package:
choco install bazel
This command will install the latest available version of Bazel and its dependencies, such as the MSYS2 shell. This will not install Visual C++ though.
See Chocolatey installation and package maintenance guide for more information about the Chocolatey package.
Using Scoop
-
Install the Scoop package manager using the following PowerShell command:
iex (new-object net.webclient).downloadstring('https://get.scoop.sh')
-
Install the Bazel package:
scoop install bazel
See Scoop installation and package maintenance guide for more information about the Scoop package.
Build from source
See here.