IMPORTANT: The Bazel docs have moved! Please update your bookmark to https://bazel.build/rules/faq

You can read about the migration, and let us know what you think.

Frequently Asked Questions

These are some common issues and questions with writing extensions.

Why is my file not produced / my action never executed?

Bazel only executes the actions needed to produce the requested output files.

  • If the file you want has a label, you can request it directly: bazel build //pkg:myfile.txt

  • If the file is in an output group of the target, you may need to specify that output group on the command line: bazel build //pkg:mytarget --output_groups=foo

  • If you want the file to be built automatically whenever your target is mentioned on the command line, add it to your rule’s default outputs by returning a DefaultInfo provider.

See the Rules page for more information.

Why is my implementation function not executed?

Bazel analyzes only the targets that are requested for the build. You should either name the target on the command line, or something that depends on the target.

A file is missing when my action or binary is executed

Make sure that 1) the file has been registered as an input to the action or binary, and 2) the script or tool being executed is accessing the file using the correct path.

For actions, you declare inputs by passing them to the ctx.actions.* function that creates the action. The proper path for the file can be obtained using File.path.

For binaries (the executable outputs run by a bazel run or bazel test command), you declare inputs by including them in the runfiles. Instead of using the path field, use File.short_path, which is file’s path relative to the runfiles directory in which the binary executes.

How can I control which files are built by bazel build //pkg:mytarget?

Use the DefaultInfo provider to set the default outputs.

How can I run a program or do file I/O as part of my build?

A tool can be declared as a target, just like any other part of your build, and run during the execution phase to help build other targets. To create an action that runs a tool, use ctx.actions.run and pass in the tool as the executable parameter.

During the loading and analysis phases, a tool cannot run, nor can you perform file I/O. This means that tools and file contents (except the contents of BUILD and .bzl files) cannot affect how the target and action graphs get created.

What if I need to access the same structured data both before and during the execution phase?

You can format the structured data as a .bzl file. You can load() the file to access it during the loading and analysis phases. You can pass it as an input or runfile to actions and executables that need it during the execution phase.

How should I document Starlark code?

For rules and rule attributes, you can pass a docstring literal (possibly triple-quoted) to the doc parameter of rule or attr.*(). For helper functions and macros, use a triple-quoted docstring literal following the format given here. Rule implementation functions generally do not need their own docstring.

Using string literals in the expected places makes it easier for automated tooling to extract documentation. Feel free to use standard non-string comments wherever it may help the reader of your code.