Bazel has a tremendously large number of flags. Many are obscure, many are important to use, and many have an undesirable default value.
This rule generates a custom bazelrc
file that matches your Bazel version and makes it convenient to vendor into your repo.
We call this a "preset".
Note
Preset changes can cause behavior changes in your repo that are undesirable or even break the build. Since vendoring is required, changes will be code-reviewed when they arrive in your repo, rather than as an invisible side-effect of updating the version of bazelrc-presets. For this reason, this rule does not strictly follow Semantic Versioning.
Bazel options may be stored in *.bazelrc
files, in several places on disk.
Read the Bazel bazelrc documentation.
🎙️ This rule was featured on the Aspect Insights podcast:
- Add
bazelrc-preset.bzl
to yourMODULE.bazel
file. - Call it from a BUILD file, for example in
tools/BUILD
:
load("@bazelrc-preset.bzl", "bazelrc_preset")
bazelrc_preset(
name = "preset",
strict = True, # Enable this to opt-in to flags that are flipped in the upcoming major release
)
-
Create the preset by running
bazel run //tools:preset.update
. Note that you don't need to remember the command. A test targetpreset.update_test
is also created, which prints the command if the file is missing or has outdated contents. -
Import it into your project's
/.bazelrc
file. We suggest you add it at the top, so that project-specific flags may override values. See https://bazel.build/configure/best-practices#bazelrc-file
You can copy this template to get started:
########################
# Import bazelrc presets
import %workspace%/tools/preset.bazelrc
...
########################
# Project-specific flags
# This is also a place to override settings from the presets
...
########################
# User preferences
# Load any settings & overrides specific to the current user from `user.bazelrc`.
# This file should appear in `.gitignore` so that settings are not shared with team members.
# This should be last statement in this config so the user configuration overrides anything above.
try-import %workspace%/user.bazelrc
- Some flags are enabled only under a given config.
For example, many flags apply only when running on CI.
Configure your CI system to always pass
--config=ci
when running Bazel (for example, put it in the system bazelrc on CI runner machines).
Bazel major releases include flag-flips.
Bazelisk provides extra command-line options to migrate to stricter flags. A common migration pattern is:
- Run
bazelisk --migrate build --nobuild //...
to try upgrading new strict flags. - For flags that don't work, either
- disable them by explicitly setting the value in your .bazelrc
- fix the issues they report
- Add
common --@bazelrc-preset.bzl//:strict
to the project.bazelrc
. This is a superset of runningbazelisk --strict build ...
If your project defines specific flags that users should set, you can define them in your project as follows:
- Define your own flags using the same data structure as
flags.bzl
ortests/extra_test_presets.bzl
. - Add a
bazelrc_preset_test
to make sure your presets format is correct.
bazelrc_preset_test(
name = "test_project_preset",
extra_presets = CUSTOM_PROJECT_PRESETS,
)
- Any user of your project can now consume your presets and add them to their presets
load("@my_project//:flags.bzl", "CUSTOM_PROJECT_PRESETS")
bazelrc_preset(
name = "preset",
extra_presets = CUSTOM_PROJECT_PRESETS
)
This was originally a feature of Aspect's bazel-lib: https://github.com/bazel-contrib/bazel-lib/tree/main/.aspect/bazelrc
This rule is maintained by the Rules Authors SIG, see bazel-contrib/SIG-rules-authors#106