Jarjar the third-party dependencies of the Jacoco test runner, except on Windows. This way, we don't need a new release to make coverage collection happen.

This is the fifth try on commit 823091f7516abf7d854021edc765daf1467f1647 . This time, it's disabled on Windows because two bugs (#2306 and #2342) collude to make it impossible to run Java binaries during the build on Windows and jarjar is a Java binary.

Tested by building //src:bazel on a Windows machine with --output_base=<something with a $ sign in it>. I also verified that the genrule gets run by adding an "exit 1" at its beginning.

Fifth time is the charm! Hopefully we don't get to seven.

--
PiperOrigin-RevId: 144818587
MOS_MIGRATED_REVID=144818587
2 files changed
tree: b6081bc1c499ee51a910d96fc92e21ced953a516
  1. examples/
  2. scripts/
  3. site/
  4. src/
  5. third_party/
  6. tools/
  7. .gitattributes
  8. .gitignore
  9. AUTHORS
  10. BUILD
  11. CHANGELOG.md
  12. combine_distfiles.sh
  13. compile.sh
  14. CONTRIBUTING.md
  15. CONTRIBUTORS
  16. ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md
  17. LICENSE.txt
  18. README.md
  19. WORKSPACE
README.md

Bazel (Beta)

{Fast, Correct} - Choose two

Bazel is a build tool that builds code quickly and reliably. It is used to build the majority of Google‘s software, and thus it has been designed to handle build problems present in Google’s development environment, including:

  • A massive, shared code repository, in which all software is built from source. Bazel has been built for speed, using both caching and parallelism to achieve this. Bazel is critical to Google's ability to continue to scale its software development practices as the company grows.

  • An emphasis on automated testing and releases. Bazel has been built for correctness and reproducibility, meaning that a build performed on a continuous build machine or in a release pipeline will generate bitwise-identical outputs to those generated on a developer's machine.

  • Language and platform diversity. Bazel's architecture is general enough to support many different programming languages within Google, and can be used to build both client and server software targeting multiple architectures from the same underlying codebase.

Find more background about Bazel in our FAQ.

Getting Started

About the Bazel project

Build Status