angular-docs-cn/docs/BAZEL.md

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Building Angular with Bazel

Note: this doc is for developing Angular, it is not public documentation for building an Angular application with Bazel.

The Bazel build tool (http://bazel.build) provides fast, reliable incremental builds. We plan to migrate Angular's build scripts to Bazel.

Installation

Install Bazel from the distribution, see install instructions. On Mac, just brew install bazel.

Bazel will install a hermetic version of Node, npm, and Yarn when you run the first build.

Installation of ibazel

Install interactive bazel runner / fs watcher via:

yarn global add @bazel/ibazel

Configuration

The WORKSPACE file indicates that our root directory is a Bazel project. It contains the version of the Bazel rules we use to execute build steps, from build_bazel_rules_typescript. The sources on GitHub are published from Google's internal repository (google3).

That repository defines dependencies on specific versions of all the tools. You can run the tools Bazel installed, for example rather than yarn install (which depends on whatever version you have installed on your machine), you can bazel run @yarn//:yarn.

Bazel accepts a lot of options. We check in some options in the .bazelrc file. See the bazelrc doc. For example, if you don't want Bazel to create several symlinks in your project directory (bazel-*) you can add the line build --symlink_prefix=/ to your .bazelrc file.

Building Angular

  • Build a package: bazel build packages/core
  • Build all packages: bazel build packages/...

You can use ibazel to get a "watch mode" that continuously keeps the outputs up-to-date as you save sources. Note this is new as of May 2017 and not very stable yet.

Testing Angular

  • Test package in node: bazel test packages/core/test:test
  • Test package in karma: bazel test packages/core/test:test_web
  • Test all packages: bazel test packages/...

You can use ibazel to get a "watch mode" that continuously keeps the outputs up-to-date as you save sources.

Debugging a Node Test

  • Open chrome at: chrome://inspect
  • Click on Open dedicated DevTools for Node to launch a debugger.
  • Run test: bazel test packages/core/test:test --config=debug

The process should automatically connect to the debugger.

Debugging a Node Test in VSCode

First time setup:

  • Go to Debug > Add configuration (in the menu bar) to open launch.json
  • Add the following to the configurations array:
        {
            "name": "Attach (inspect)",
            "type": "node",
            "request": "attach",
            "port": 9229,
            "address": "localhost",
            "restart": false,
            "sourceMaps": true,
            "localRoot": "${workspaceRoot}",
            "remoteRoot": null
        },
        {
            "name": "Attach (no-sm,inspect)",
            "type": "node",
            "request": "attach",
            "port": 9229,
            "address": "localhost",
            "restart": false,
            "sourceMaps": false,
            "localRoot": "${workspaceRoot}",
            "remoteRoot": null
        },

The easiest way to debug a test for now is to add a debugger statement in the code and launch the bazel corresponding test (bazel test <target> --config=debug).

Bazel will wait on a connection. Go to the debug view (by clicking on the sidebar or Apple+Shift+D on Mac) and click on the green play icon next to the configuration name (ie Attach (inspect)).

Debugging a Karma Test

Debugging Bazel rules

Open external directory which contains everything that bazel downloaded while executing the workspace file:

open $(bazel info output_base)/external

See subcommands that bazel executes (helpful for debugging):

bazel build //packages/core:package -s

To debug nodejs_binary executable paths uncomment find . -name rollup 1>&2 (~ line 96) in

open $(bazel info output_base)/external/build_bazel_rules_nodejs/internal/node_launcher.sh

Stamping

Bazel supports the ability to include non-hermetic information from the version control system in built artifacts. This is called stamping. You can see an overview at https://www.kchodorow.com/blog/2017/03/27/stamping-your-builds/ In our repo, here is how it's configured:

  1. In tools/bazel_stamp_vars.sh we run the git commands to generate our versioning info.
  2. In tools/bazel.rc we register this script as the value for the workspace_status_command flag. Bazel will run the script when it needs to stamp a binary.
  3. In tools/BUILD.bazel we have a target stamp_data with the special stamp=1 attribute, which requests that Bazel run the workspace_status_command. The result is written to a text file that can be used as an input to other rules.

Remote cache

Bazel supports fetching action results from a cache, allowing a clean build to pick up artifacts from prior builds. This makes builds incremental, even on CI. It works because Bazel assigns a content-based hash to all action inputs, which is used as the cache key for the action outputs. Thanks the the hermeticity property, we can skip executing an action if the inputs hash is already present in the cache.

Of course, non-hermeticity in an action can cause problems. At worst, you can fetch a broken artifact from the cache, making your build non-reproducible. For this reason, we are careful to implement our Bazel rules to depend only on their inputs.

Currently we only use remote caching on CircleCI. We could enable it for developer builds as well, which would make initial builds much faster for developers by fetching already-built artifacts from the cache.

This feature is experimental, and developed by the CircleCI team with guidance from Angular. Contact Alex Eagle with questions.

How it's configured:

  1. In .circleci/config.yml, each CircleCI job downloads a proxy binary, which is built from https://github.com/notnoopci/bazel-remote-proxy. The download is done by running .circleci/setup_cache.sh. When the feature graduates from experimental, this proxy will be installed by default on every CircleCI worker, and this step will not be needed.
  2. Next, each job runs the setup-bazel-remote-cache anchor. This starts up the proxy running in the background. In the CircleCI UI, you'll see this step continues running while later steps run, and you can see logging from the proxy process.
  3. Bazel must be configured to connect to the proxy on a local port. This configuration lives in .circleci/bazel.rc and is enabled because we overwrite the system Bazel settings in /etc/bazel.bazelrc with this file.
  4. Each bazel command in .circleci/config.yml picks up and uses the caching flags.

Known issues

Xcode

If you see the following error:

$ bazel build packages/...
ERROR: /private/var/tmp/[...]/external/local_config_cc/BUILD:50:5: in apple_cc_toolchain rule @local_config_cc//:cc-compiler-darwin_x86_64: Xcode version must be specified to use an Apple CROSSTOOL
ERROR: Analysis of target '//packages/core/test/render3:render3' failed; build aborted: Analysis of target '@local_config_cc//:cc-compiler-darwin_x86_64' failed; build aborted

It might be linked to an interaction with VSCode. If closing VSCode fixes the issue, you can add the following line to your VSCode configuration:

"files.exclude": {"bazel-*": true}

source: https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/issues/4603

If VSCode is not the root cause, you might try:

  • Quit VSCode (make sure no VSCode is running).
bazel clean --expunge
sudo xcode-select -s /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer
sudo xcodebuild -license
bazel build //packages/core    # Run a build outside VSCode to pre-build the xcode; then safe to run VSCode

Source: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45276830/xcode-version-must-be-specified-to-use-an-apple-crosstool