Bazel is still in Beta and new releases may include backward incompatible changes. As we make changes and polish the extension mechanism, old features may be removed and new features that are not backward compatible may be added.
Backward incompatible changes are introduced gradually:
false
.true
. You can still use the flag to disable the change.To check if your code will be compatible with future releases you can:
--all_incompatible_changes
. This flag enables all backward incompatible changes, and so you can ensure your code is compatible with upcoming changes.The following are the backward incompatible changes that are implemented and guarded behind flags in the current release:
We are removing the +
operator on dictionaries. This includes the +=
form where the left-hand side is a dictionary. This is done to improve compatibility with Python. A possible workaround is to use the .update
method instead.
--incompatible_disallow_dict_plus
false
Previously, the load
statement could appear anywhere in a .bzl
file so long as it was at the top level. With this change, for .bzl
files, load
must appear at the beginning of the file, i.e. before any other non-load
statement.
--incompatible_bzl_disallow_load_after_statement
false
When the flag is set to true, depset
objects are not treated as iterable. This prohibits directly iterating over depsets in for
loops, taking its size via len()
, and passing it to many functions such as list
, tuple
, min
, max
, sorted
, all
, and any
. It does not prohibit checking for emptiness by converting the depset to a boolean.
The goal of this change is to avoid accidental iteration on depset
, which can be expensive. If you really need to iterate over a depset, you can call the .to_list()
method to obtain a flattened list of its contents.
deps = depset() [x.path for x in deps] # deprecated [x.path for x in deps.to_list()] # recommended sorted(deps) # deprecated sorted(deps.to_list()) # recommended
--incompatible_depset_is_not_iterable
false
To merge two sets, the following examples used to be supported, but are now deprecated:
depset1 + depset2 # deprecated depset1 | depset2 # deprecated depset1.union(depset2) # deprecated
The recommended solution is to use the depset
constructor:
depset(transtive=[depset1, depset2])
See the depset documentation
for more information.
--incompatible_depset_union
false
When the flag is set to true, string
objects are not treated as iterable. This affects for
loops and many functions, e.g. list
, tuple
, min
, max
, sorted
, all
, and any
. String iteration has been a source of errors and confusion, such as this error:
def my_macro(name, srcs): for src in srcs: # do something with src # equivalent to: my_macro("hello", ["f", "o", "o", ".", "c", "c"]) my_macro( name = "hello", srcs = "foo.cc", )
String indexing and len
are still allowed. If you need to iterate over a string, you may explicitly use:
my_string = "hello world" for i in range(len(my_string)): char = my_string[i] # do something with char
--incompatible_string_is_not_iterable
false
//
Integer division operator is now //
instead of /
. This aligns with Python 3 and it highlights the fact it is a floor division.
x = 7 / 2 # deprecated x = 7 // 2 # x is 3
--incompatible_disallow_slash_operator
false
The current package name should be retrieved by calling package_name()
in BUILD files or native.package_name()
in .bzl files. The old way of referring to the magic PACKAGE_NAME
variable bends the language since it is neither a parameter, local variable, nor global variable.
Likewise, the magic REPOSITORY_NAME
variable is replaced by repository_name()
and native.repository_name()
. Both deprecations use the same flag.
--incompatible_package_name_is_a_function
true
The FileType function is going away. The main use-case was as an argument to the rule function. It's no longer needed, you can simply pass a list of strings to restrict the file types the rule accepts.
--incompatible_disallow_filetype
false
This change removes the old methods for registering actions within rules, and requires that you use the new methods instead. The deprecated methods and their replacements are as follows.
ctx.new_file(...)
--> ctx.actions.declare_file(...)
ctx.experimental_new_directory(...)
--> ctx.actions.declare_directory(...)
ctx.action(...)
--> either ctx.actions.run(...)
or ctx.actions.run_shell(...)
ctx.file_action(...)
--> ctx.actions.write(...)
ctx.empty_action(...)
--> ctx.actions.do_nothing(...)
ctx.template_action(...)
--> ctx.actions.expand_template(...)
--incompatible_new_actions_api
false
The Args object returned by ctx.actions.args()
has dedicated methods for appending the contents of a list or depset to the command line. Previously these use cases were lumped into its add()
method, resulting in a more cluttered API.
With this flag, add()
only works for scalar values, and its deprecated parameters are disabled. To add many arguments at once you must use add_all()
or add_joined()
instead.
--incompatible_disallow_old_style_args_add
false
When set, the result of range(...)
function is a lazy range
type instead of a list
. Because of this repetitions using *
operator are no longer supported and range
slices are also lazy range
instances.
--incompatible_range_type
false
This flag disables certain deprecated resource fields on ObjcProvider.
--incompatible_objc_provider_resources
false
When set, the native git_repository
and new_git_repository
rules are disabled. The Starlark versions
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:git.bzl", "git_repository", "new_git_repository")
should be used instead. These are drop-in replacements of the corresponding native rules, however with the additional requirement that all label arguments be provided as a fully qualified label (usually starting with @//
), for example: build_file = "@//third_party:repo.BUILD"
.
--incompatible_remove_native_git_repository
false
When set, the native http_archive
and all related rules are disabled. The Starlark version
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:http.bzl", "http_archive")
should be used instead. This is a drop-in replacement, however with the additional requirement that all label arguments be provided as fully qualified labels (usually starting with @//
). The Starlark http_archive
is also a drop-in replacement for the native new_http_archive
(with the same proviso). http.bzl
also provides http_jar
and http_file
(the latter only supports the urls
parameter, not url
).
--incompatible_remove_native_http_archive
false
When set, java_common.create_provider
and certain arguments to JavaInfo
are deprecated. The deprecated arguments are: actions
, sources
, source_jars
, use_ijar
, java_toolchain
, and host_javabase
.
Example migration from create_provider
:
# Before provider = java_common.create_provider( ctx.actions, compile_time_jars = [output_jar], use_ijar = True, java_toolchain = ctx.attr._java_toolchain, transitive_compile_time_jars = transitive_compile_time, transitive_runtime_jars = transitive_runtime_jars, ) # After compile_jar = java_common.run_ijar( ctx.actions, jar = output_jar, target_label = ctx.label, java_toolchain = ctx.attr._java_toolchain, ) provider = JavaInfo( output_jar = output_jar, compile_jar = compile_jar, deps = deps, runtime_deps = runtime_deps, )
Example migration from deprecated JavaInfo
arguments:
# Before provider = JavaInfo( output_jar = my_jar, use_ijar = True, sources = my_sources, deps = my_compile_deps, runtime_deps = my_runtime_deps, actions = ctx.actions, java_toolchain = my_java_toolchain, host_javabase = my_host_javabase, ) # After my_ijar = java_common.run_ijar( ctx.actions, jar = my_jar, target_label = ctx.label, java_toolchain, my_java_toolchain, ) my_source_jar = java_common.pack_sources( ctx.actions, sources = my_sources, java_toolchain = my_java_toolchain, host_javabase = my_host_javabase, ) provider = JavaInfo( output_jar = my_jar, compile_jar = my_ijar, source_jar = my_source_jar, deps = my_compile_deps, runtime_deps = my_runtime_deps, )
A tool is an input coming from an attribute of type label
where the attribute has been marked executable = True
. In order for an action to run a tool, it needs access to its runfiles.
Under the old API, tools are passed to ctx.actions.run()
and ctx.actions.run_shell()
via their inputs
parameter. Bazel scans this argument (which may be a large depset) to find all the inputs that are tools, and adds their runfiles automatically.
In the new API, tools are instead passed to a dedicated tools
parameter. The inputs
are not scanned. If a tool is accidentally put in inputs
instead of tools
, the action will fail during the execution phase with an error due to missing runfiles. This may be somewhat cryptic.
To support a gradual transition, all actions with a tools
argument are opted into the new API, while all actions without a tools
argument still follow the old one. In the future (when this flag is removed), all actions will use the new API unconditionally.
This flag turns on a safety check that is useful for migrating existing code. The safety check applies to all actions that do not have a tools
argument. It scans the inputs
looking for tools, and if it finds any, it raises an error during the analysis phase that clearly identifies the offending tools.
In the rare case that your action requires a tool as input, but does not actually run the tool and therefore does not need its runfiles, the safety check will fail even though the action would have succeeded. In this case, you can bypass the check by adding a (possibly empty) tools
argument to your action. Note that once an action has been modified to take a tools
argument, you will no longer get helpful analysis-time errors for any remaining tools that should have been migrated from inputs
.
--incompatible_no_support_tools_in_action_inputs
false
Previously, directories created by ctx.actions.declare_directory
expanded to the path of the directory when added to an Args
object.
With this flag enabled, directories are instead replaced by the full file contents of that directory when passed to args.add_all()
or args.add_joined()
. (Directories may not be passed to args.add()
.)
If you want the old behavior on a case-by-case basis (perhaps your tool can handle directories on the command line), you can pass expand_directories=False
to the args.add_all()
or args.add_joined()
call.
d = ctx.action.declare_directory(“dir”) # ... Some action runs and produces [“dir/file1”, “dir/file2”] ... f = ctx.action.declare_file(“file”) args = ctx.action.args() args.add_all([d, f]) -> Used to expand to ["dir", "file"] Now expands to [“dir/file1”, “dir/file2”, “file”]
--incompatible_expand_directories
false
When the flag is set, use a saner way to resolve variables. The previous behavior was buggy in a number of subtle ways. See the proposal for background and examples.
The proposal is not fully implemented yet.
--incompatible_static_name_resolution
false
If false, Bazel constructs an in-memory //tools/defaults package based on the command line options. If true, //tools/defaults:* is resolved from file system as a regular package.
--incompatible_disable_tools_defaults_package
false
//tools/default
was initially created as virtual in-memory package. It generates content dynamically based on current configuration. There is no need of having //tools/defaults
any more as LateBoundAlias can do dynamic configuration-based label resolving. Also, having //tools/default
makes negative impact on performance, and introduces unnecessary code complexity.
All references to //tools/defaults:*
targets should be removed or replaced to corresponding target in @bazel_tools//tools/jdk:
and @bazel_tools//tools/cpp:
packages.
Targets in //tools/default
will not exist any more. If you have any references inside your BUILD or *.bzl files to any of its, then bazel will fail to resolve.
Please replace all occurrences:
//tools/defaults:jdk
@bazel_tools//tools/jdk:current_java_runtime
@bazel_tools//tools/jdk:current_host_java_runtime
//tools/defaults:java_toolchain
@bazel_tools//tools/jdk:current_java_toolchain
//tools/defaults:crosstool
@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:current_cc_toolchain
@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:current_cc_host_toolchain
@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:current_libc_top
These targets will not be supported any more:
//tools/defaults:coverage_report_generator
//tools/defaults:coverage_support
If true, Bazel will stop retrieving the value of compiler
from the cpp configuration when --compiler
is not specified. This will cause a config_setting
that have values = {"compiler": "x"}
to not work properly when --compiler
is not specified at command line.
The former behavior can be achieved by changing the config_setting
to use flag_values = {"@bazel_tools/tools/cpp:compiler": "x"}
instead:
# Before config_setting( name = "cpu_x_compiler_y", values = { "cpu": "x", "compiler": "y", }, ) # After config_setting( name = "cpu_x_compiler_y", values = { "cpu": "x", }, flag_values = { "@bazel_tools/tools/cpp:compiler": "y", }, )
--incompatible_disable_late_bound_option_defaults
false
0.18.0