commit | 386f242788a3d0189e6882466105c57ec1149d20 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Yue Gan <yueg@google.com> | Thu Apr 14 08:27:41 2016 +0000 |
committer | Dmitry Lomov <dslomov@google.com> | Thu Apr 14 11:10:23 2016 +0000 |
tree | 5e583adb39bdb2a1f806c054f410b63eec7bb901 | |
parent | 7c50909b0f91026e4319f1ac6b9c2459484c0004 [diff] |
Automated [] rollback of commit 525fa71b0d6f096e9bfb180f688a4418c4974eb4. *** Reason for rollback *** Contributor finds some bugs and after fixing some bugs there are more bugs to fix now. *** Original change description *** Mount whole directories into the sandbox when possible This halves the overhead with sandboxing enabled vs disabled for a test that basically only mounts a bunch of files out of a directory, and slows that same test with a single extra file added to the directory (but not mounted) by only ~4%. The test is <https://gist.github.com/bsilver8192/10527a862ce16bb7f79a> with 30000 inputs moved to a subdirectory and on... *** ROLLBACK_OF=119138157 -- MOS_MIGRATED_REVID=119828267
{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.