| --- |
| layout: documentation |
| title: Test Encyclopedia |
| --- |
| <h1>Writing tests</h1> |
| |
| <p class="lead">An Exhaustive Specification of the Test Execution Environment</p> |
| |
| <h2>Background</h2> |
| |
| <p>The Bazel BUILD language includes rules which can be used to define |
| automated test programs in many languages.</p> |
| |
| <p>Tests are run using <code><a href="bazel-user-manual.html#test">bazel test</a></code>. |
| |
| Users may also execute test binaries directly. This is allowed but not endorsed, as such |
| an invocation will not adhere to the mandates described below.</p> |
| |
| <p>Tests should be <i>hermetic</i>: that is, they ought to access only those |
| resources on which they have a declared dependency. If tests are not properly |
| hermetic then they do not give historically reproducible results. This could be a |
| significant problem for culprit finding (determining which change broke a test), |
| release engineering auditability, and resource isolation of tests (automated |
| testing frameworks ought not DDOS a server because some tests happen to |
| talk to it).<p> |
| |
| <h2>Objective</h2> |
| |
| <p>The goal of this document is to formally establish the runtime environment |
| for and expected behavior of Bazel tests. It will also impose requirements on |
| the test runner and the build system. |
| |
| Our intent is to help test authors avoid relying on unspecified |
| behavior, and thus give the testing infrastructure more freedom to make |
| implementation changes. We will also take the opportunity to tighten up some |
| holes which currently allow many tests to pass despite not being |
| properly hermetic, deterministic, and reentrant.</p> |
| |
| <p>This document is intended to be both normative and authoritative. If |
| this specification and the implemented behavior of test runner disagree, the |
| specification takes precedence.</p> |
| |
| |
| <h3>Purpose of Tests</h3> |
| |
| <p>The purpose of Bazel tests is to confirm some property of the source files |
| checked into the repository. (In this document, "source files" includes test data, |
| golden outputs, and anything else kept under version control.) One |
| user writes a test to assert an invariant which they expect to be maintained. |
| Other users execute the test later to check whether the invariant has been |
| broken. If the test depends on any variables other than source files |
| (non-hermetic), its value is diminished, because the later users cannot be sure |
| their changes are at fault when the test stops passing.</p> |
| |
| <p>Therefore the outcome of a test must depend only on:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>source files on which the test has a declared dependency</li> |
| <li>products of the build system on which the test has a declared dependency</li> |
| <li>resources whose behavior is guaranteed by the test runner to remain constant</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>Currently, such behavior is not enforced. However, test runners reserve the |
| right to add such enforcement in the future.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Role of the Build System</h3> |
| |
| <p>Test rules are analogous to binary rules in that each must yield an |
| executable program. For some languages, this is a stub program which combines |
| a language-specific harness with the test code. Test rules must produce other |
| outputs as well. In addition to the primary test executable, the test runner |
| will need a manifest of <b>runfiles</b>, input files which should be made |
| available to the test at runtime, and it may need information about the type, |
| size, and tags of a test.</p> |
| |
| <p>The build system may use the runfiles to deliver code as well as data. (This |
| might be used as an optimization to make each test binary smaller by sharing |
| files across tests, e.g. through the use of dynamic linking.) The build system |
| should ensure that the generated executable loads these files via the runfiles |
| image provided by the test runner, rather than hardcoded references to absolute |
| locations in the source or output tree.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Role of the Test Runner</h3> |
| |
| <p>From the point of view of the test runner, each test is a program which can |
| be invoked with <code>execve()</code>. There may be other ways to execute |
| tests; for example, an IDE might allow the execution of Java tests in-process. |
| However, the result of running the test as a standalone process must be |
| considered authoritative. If a test process runs to completion and terminates |
| normally with an exit code of zero, the test has passed. Any other result is |
| considered a test failure. In particular, writing any of the strings |
| <code>PASS</code> or <code>FAIL</code> to stdout has no significance to the test |
| runner.</p> |
| |
| <p>If a test takes too long to execute, exceeds some resource limit, or the test |
| runner otherwise detects prohibited behavior, it may choose to kill the test |
| and treat the run as a failure. The runner must not report the test as passing |
| after sending a signal to the test process or any children thereof.</p> |
| |
| <p id="timeout">The whole test target (not individual methods or tests) is given a |
| limited amount of time to run to completion. The time limit for a test is based |
| on its timeout attribute according to the following table:</p> |
| |
| <table class="table table-bordered table-striped table-condensed"> |
| <thead> |
| <tr><th>timeout</th><th>Time Limit (sec.)</th></tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr><td><code>short</code></td><td>60</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>moderate</code></td><td>300</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>long</code></td><td>900</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>eternal</code></td><td>3600</td></tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p id="size">Tests which do not explicitly specify a timeout have one implied based on the |
| test's <code>size</code> as follows:</p> |
| |
| <table class="table table-bordered table-striped table-condensed"> |
| <thead> |
| <tr><th>size</th><th>Implied timeout label</th></tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr><td><code>small</code></td><td>short</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>medium</code></td><td>moderate</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>large</code></td><td>long</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>enormous</code></td><td>eternal</td></tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| <p>For example a "large" test with no explicit timeout setting will be allotted |
| 900 seconds to run. A "medium" test with a timeout of "short" will be allotted |
| 60 seconds.</p> |
| |
| <p>All combinations of <code>size</code> and <code>timeout</code> labels are |
| legal, so an "enormous" test may be declared to have a timeout of "short". |
| Presumably it would do some really horrible things very quickly.</p> |
| <p>Tests may return arbitrarily fast regardless of timeout. A test is not |
| penalized for an overgenerous timeout, although a warning may be issued: you |
| should generally set your timeout as tight as you can without incurring any |
| flakiness.</p> |
| |
| <p>There is also a recommended lower bound for test timeouts as follows: </p> |
| |
| <table class="table table-bordered table-striped table-condensed"> |
| <thead> |
| <tr><th>size</th><th>Time minimum (sec.)</th></tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr><td><code>short</code></td><td>0</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>moderate</code></td><td>30</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>long</code></td><td>300</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>eternal</code></td><td>900</td></tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p>For example, if a "moderate" test completes in 5.5s, consider setting |
| <code>timeout</code>="short" or <code>size</code>="small". Using the bazel |
| <code>--test_verbose_timeout_warnings</code> command line option will show the |
| tests whose specified size is too big.</p> |
| |
| <p>Test sizes and timeouts are specified in the BUILD file according to the specification |
| <a href="be/common-definitions.html#common-attributes-tests">here</a>. |
| Any test that does not specify a recognized size will default to being a medium |
| test.</p> |
| |
| <p>Tests can be parallelized via test sharding. See |
| <a href="user-manual.html#sharding-strategy"><code>--test_sharding_strategy</code></a> |
| and |
| <a href="be/common-definitions.html#common-attributes-tests"><code>shard_count</code></a> |
| to enable test sharding. When sharding is enabled, the test runner is launched |
| once per shard. The environment variable |
| <a href="#initial-conditions"><code>TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS</code></a> is the number |
| of shards, and |
| <a href="#initial-conditions"><code>TEST_SHARD_INDEX</code></a> is the shard |
| index, beginning at 0. Runners use this information to select which tests to |
| run - for example, using a round-robin strategy. Not all test runners support sharding. |
| If a runner supports sharding, it must create or update the last modified date |
| of the file specified by |
| <a href="#initial-conditions"><code>TEST_SHARD_STATUS_FILE</code></a>. |
| Otherwise, Bazel assumes it does not support sharding and will not launch |
| additional runners.</p> |
| |
| <p>If the main process of a test exits, but some of its children are still |
| running, the test runner should consider the run complete and count it as a |
| success or failure based on the exit code observed from the main process. The |
| test runner may kill any stray processes. Tests should not leak processes in |
| this fashion.</p> |
| |
| <p>When executing a test, the test runner must establish certain initial |
| conditions.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Initial Conditions</h3> |
| |
| <p>The test runner must invoke each test with the path to the test |
| executable in <code>argv[0]</code>. This path must be relative and |
| beneath the test's current directory (which is in the runfiles tree, |
| see below). |
| The test runner should not pass any other arguments to a |
| test unless the user explicitly requests it.</p> |
| |
| <p>The initial environment block shall be composed as follows:</p> |
| |
| <table class="table table-bordered table-striped table-condensed"> |
| <thead> |
| <tr><th>Variable</th><th>Value</th><th>Status</th></tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| |
| <tr><td><code>HOME</code></td><td>value of <code>$TEST_TMPDIR</code></td><td>recommended</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LANG</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LANGUAGE</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_ALL</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_COLLATE</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_CTYPE</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_MESSAGES</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_MONETARY</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_NUMERIC</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LC_TIME</code></td><td><i>unset</i></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</code></td><td>colon-separated list of directories containing shared libraries</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>JAVA_RUNFILES</code></td><td>value of <code>$TEST_SRCDIR</code></td><td>deprecated</td></tr> |
| |
| <tr><td><code>LOGNAME</code></td><td>value of <code>$USER</code></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| |
| <tr><td><code>PATH</code></td><td><code>/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin:.</code></td><td>recommended</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>PWD</code></td><td><code>$TEST_SRCDIR/<i>workspace-name</i></code></td><td>recommended</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>SHLVL</code></td><td><code>2</code></td><td>recommended</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_PREMATURE_EXIT_FILE</code></td><td>absolute path to a private file in a writable directory (used for catching calls to exit())</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td><code>TEST_RANDOM_SEED</code></td> |
| <td>If the <code class='flag'>--runs_per_test</code> option is used, TEST_RANDOM_SEED |
| is set to the <var>run number</var> (starting with 1) for each individual test run.</td> |
| <td>optional</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_TARGET</code></td><td>The name of the target being tested</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_SIZE</code></td><td>The test <a href="#size"><code>size</code></a></td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_TIMEOUT</code></td><td>The test <a href="#timeout"><code>timeout</code></a></td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_SHARD_INDEX</code></td><td>shard index, if sharding is used</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_SHARD_STATUS_FILE</code></td><td>path to file to touch to indicate support for sharding</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_SRCDIR</code></td><td>absolute path to the base of the runfiles tree</td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_TOTAL_SHARDS</code></td><td>total shard count, if sharding is used</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_TMPDIR</code></td><td>absolute path to a private writable directory</td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_UNDECLARED_OUTPUTS_DIR</code></td><td>absolute path to a private writable directory (used to write undeclared test outputs)</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_UNDECLARED_OUTPUTS_ANNOTATIONS_DIR</code></td><td>absolute path to a private writable directory (used to write undeclared test output annotation .part files). |
| |
| </td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_WARNINGS_OUTPUT_FILE</code></td><td>absolute path to a private file in a writable directory (used to write test target warnings)</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TESTBRIDGE_TEST_ONLY</code></td><td>value of <a href="user-manual.html#flag--test_filter"><code>--test_filter</code></a>, if specified</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| |
| <tr><td><code>TZ</code></td><td><code>UTC</code></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>USER</code></td><td>value of <code>getpwuid(getuid())->pw_name</code></td><td>required</td></tr> |
| |
| <tr><td><code>XML_OUTPUT_FILE</code></td><td>Location of the <code>ANT</code>-like XML output file</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| <tr><td><code>TEST_WORKSPACE</code></td><td>the local repository's workspace name</td><td>optional</td></tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| <br> |
| <p>The environment may contain additional entries. Tests should not depend on the |
| presence, absence, or value of any environment variable not listed above.</p> |
| |
| <p>The initial working directory shall be <code>$TEST_SRCDIR/$TEST_WORKSPACE</code>.</p> |
| <p> The current process id, process group id, session id, and parent process |
| id are unspecified. The process may or may not be a process group leader or a |
| session leader. The process may or may not have a controlling terminal. The |
| process may have zero or more running or unreaped child processes. The process |
| should not have multiple threads when the test code gains control.</p> |
| |
| <p>File descriptor 0 (stdin) shall be open for reading, but what it is attached |
| to is unspecified. Tests must not read from it. File descriptors 1 (stdout) |
| and 2 (stderr) shall be open for writing, but what they are attached to is |
| unspecified. It could be a terminal, a pipe, a regular file, or anything else |
| to which characters can be written. They may share an entry in the open file |
| table (meaning that they cannot seek independently). Tests should not inherit |
| any other open file descriptors.</p> |
| |
| <p>The initial umask shall be 022 or 027.</p> |
| |
| <p>No alarm or interval timer shall be pending.</p> |
| |
| <p>The initial mask of blocked signals shall be empty. All signals shall be set |
| to their default action.</p> |
| |
| <p>The initial resource limits, both soft and hard, should be set as follows:</p> |
| |
| <table class="table table-bordered table-striped table-condensed"> |
| <thead> |
| <tr><th>Resource</th><th>Limit</th></tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_AS</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_CORE</td><td>unspecified</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_CPU</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_DATA</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_FSIZE</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_LOCKS</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_MEMLOCK</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE</td><td>unspecified</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_NICE</td><td>unspecified</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_NOFILE</td><td>at least 1024</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_NPROC</td><td>unspecified</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_RSS</td><td>unlimited</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_RTPRIO</td><td>unspecified</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_SIGPENDING</td><td>unspecified</td></tr> |
| <tr><td>RLIMIT_STACK</td><td>unlimited, or 2044KB <= rlim <= 8192KB</td></tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p>The initial process times (as returned by <code>times()</code>) and resource |
| utilization (as returned by <code>getrusage()</code>) are unspecified.</p> |
| |
| <p>The initial scheduling policy and priority are unspecified.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Role of the Host System</h3> |
| |
| <p>In addition to the aspects of user context under direct control of the |
| test runner, the operating system on which tests execute must satisfy certain |
| properties for a test run to be valid.</p> |
| |
| <h4>Filesystem</h4> |
| |
| <p> |
| The root directory observed by a test may or may not be the real root directory.<br> |
| <code>/proc</code> shall be mounted.<br> |
| All build tools shall be present at the absolute paths under <code>/usr</code> used by a local installation.<br> |
| Paths starting with <code>/home</code> may not be available. Tests should not access any such paths.<br> |
| <code>/tmp</code> and <code>/export/hda3/tmp</code> shall be writable, but tests should avoid using these paths.<br> |
| |
| Tests must not assume that any constant path is available for their exclusive use.<br> |
| Tests must not assume that atimes are enabled for any mounted filesystem.<br> |
| </p> |
| |
| <h4>Users and groups</h4> |
| |
| <p>The users root, nobody, and unittest must exist. The groups root, nobody, |
| and eng must exist.</p> |
| |
| <p>Tests must be executed as a non-root user. The real and effective user ids |
| must be equal; likewise for group ids. Beyond this, the current user id, group |
| id, user name, and group name are unspecified. The set of supplementary group |
| ids is unspecified.</p> |
| |
| <p>The current user id and group id must have corresponding names which can be |
| retrieved with <code>getpwuid()</code> and <code>getgrgid()</code>. The same |
| may not be true for supplementary group ids.</p> |
| |
| <p>The current user must have a home directory. It may not be writable. Tests |
| must not attempt to write to it.</p> |
| |
| <h4>Networking</h4> |
| |
| <p>The hostname is unspecified. It may or may not contain a dot. Resolving |
| the hostname must give an IP address of the current host. Resolving the |
| hostname cut after the first dot must also work. The hostname localhost must |
| resolve.</p> |
| |
| <h4>Other resources</h4> |
| |
| <p>Tests are granted at least one CPU core. Others may be available but this |
| is not guaranteed. Other performance aspects of this core are not specified. |
| You can increase the reservation to a higher number of CPU cores by adding the |
| tag "cpu:n" (where n is a positive number) to a test rule. If a machine has |
| less total CPU cores than requested, Bazel will still run the test. If a test |
| uses sharding, each individual shard will reserve the number of CPU cores |
| specified here.</p> |
| |
| <p>Tests may create subprocesses, but not process groups or sessions.</p> |
| |
| <p>There is a limit on the number of input files a test may consume. This limit |
| is subject to change, but is currently in the range of tens of thousands of inputs. |
| |
| </p> |
| |
| <h4>Time and date</h4> |
| |
| <p>The current time and date are unspecified. The system timezone is unspecified. |
| |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>X Windows may or may not be available. Tests that need an X server should |
| start Xvfb.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Test interaction with the filesystem</h3> |
| <p>All file paths specified in test environment variables point to |
| somewhere on the local filesystem, unless otherwise specified.</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Tests should create files only within the directories specified by |
| <code>$TEST_TMPDIR</code> and <code>$TEST_UNDECLARED_OUTPUTS_DIR</code> |
| (if set).<br> |
| These directories will be initially empty.<br> |
| Tests must not attempt to remove, chmod, or otherwise alter these directories.<br> |
| These directories may be a symbolic links.<br> |
| The filesystem type of <code>$TEST_TMPDIR/.</code> remains unspecified.<br> |
| Tests may also write .part files to the <code>$TEST_UNDECLARED_OUTPUTS_ANNOTATIONS_DIR</code> |
| to annotate undeclared output files.</p> |
| |
| <p>Tests must access inputs through the <b>runfiles</b> mechanism, or other |
| parts of the execution environment which are specifically intended to make |
| input files available. |
| |
| Tests must not access other outputs of the |
| build system at paths inferred from the location of their own executable.</p> |
| |
| <p>It is unspecified whether the runfiles tree contains regular files, symbolic |
| links, or a mixture. The runfiles tree may contain symlinks to directories. |
| Tests should avoid using paths containing <code>..</code> components within the |
| runfiles tree.</p> |
| |
| <p>No directory, file, or symlink within the runfiles tree (including paths |
| which traverse symlinks) should be writable. (It follows that the initial |
| working directory should not be writable.) Tests must not assume that any part |
| of the runfiles is writable, or owned by the current user (i.e. chmod and chgrp |
| may fail).</p> |
| |
| <p>The runfiles tree (including paths which traverse symlinks) must not change |
| during test execution. Parent directories and filesystem mounts must not change |
| in any way which affects the result of resolving a path within the runfiles |
| tree.</p> |
| |
| <p>In order to catch early exit, a test may create a file at the path specified by |
| <code>TEST_PREMATURE_EXIT_FILE</code> upon start and remove it upon exit. If |
| Bazel sees the file when the test finishes, it will assume that the test exited |
| prematurely and mark it as having failed.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Tag conventions</h3> |
| |
| <p> |
| Some tags in the test rules have a special |
| meaning. |
| </p> |
| |
| <table class="table table-bordered table-striped table-condensed"> |
| <thead> |
| <tr><th>Tag</th><th>Meaning</th></tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>exclusive</code></th> |
| |
| <td>run no other test at the same time</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>external</code></th> |
| <td>test has an external dependency; disable test caching</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>large</code></th> |
| <td><code>test_suite</code> convention; suite of large tests</td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>manual*</code></th> |
| |
| <td>don't include test target in wildcard target patterns like <code>:...</code>, <code>:*</code>, or <code>:all</code>)</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>medium</code></th> |
| |
| <td><code>test_suite</code> convention; suite of medium tests</td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>small</code></th> |
| <td><code>test_suite</code> convention; suite of small tests</td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| <tr> |
| <th><code>smoke</code></th> |
| <td> |
| <code>test_suite</code> convention; means it should be run before committing code changes |
| into the version control system |
| </td> |
| </tr> |
| |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| |
| *Note: bazel <code>query</code> does not respect the manual tag. |
| <h3>Runfiles</h3> |
| |
| <p>In the following, assume there is a *_binary() rule labeled <code>//foo/bar:unittest</code>, |
| with a run-time dependency on the rule labeled <code>//deps/server:server</code>.</p> |
| |
| <h4>Location</h4> |
| <p>The runfiles directory for a target <code>//foo/bar:unittest</code> is the directory |
| <code>$(WORKSPACE)/$(BINDIR)/foo/bar/unittest.runfiles</code>. This path is referred to as the |
| <code>runfiles_dir</code>.</p> |
| |
| <h4>Dependencies</h4> |
| <p>The runfiles directory is declared as a compile-time dependency of the *_binary() rule. |
| The runfiles directory itself depends on the set of BUILD files that affect the *_binary() rule |
| or any of its compile-time or run-time dependencies. Modifying source files does not affect the |
| structure of the runfiles directory, and thus does not trigger any rebuilding.</p> |
| |
| <h4>Contents</h4> |
| <p>The runfiles directory contains the following:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><b>Symlinks to run-time dependencies</b>: each OutputFile and CommandRule that is a run-time |
| dependency of the *_binary() rule is represented by one symlink in the runfiles directory. |
| The name of the symlink is <code>$(WORKSPACE)/package_name/rule_name</code>. For example, the |
| symlink for server would be named <code>$(WORKSPACE)/deps/server/server</code>, and the full path |
| would be <code>$(WORKSPACE)/foo/bar/unittest.runfiles/$(WORKSPACE)/deps/server/server</code>. |
| The destination of the symlink is the OutputFileName() of the OutputFile or CommandRule, |
| expressed as an absolute path. Thus, the destination of the symlink might be |
| <code>$(WORKSPACE)/linux-dbg/deps/server/42/server</code>.</li> |
| <li><b>Symlinks to sub-runfiles</b>: for every *_binary() Z that is a run-time depdendency of |
| *_binary() C, there is a second link in the runfiles directory of C to the runfiles of Z. |
| The name of the symlink is <code>$(WORKSPACE)/package_name/rule_name.runfiles</code>. |
| The target of the symlink is the runfiles directory. I.e. all subprograms share a common |
| runfiles directory.</li> |
| </ul> |
| |