| --- |
| layout: documentation |
| title: Creating persistent workers |
| --- |
| |
| # Creating Persistent Workers |
| |
| [Persistent workers](persistent-workers.html) can make your build faster. |
| If you have repeated actions in your build that have a high startup cost or |
| would benefit from cross-action caching, you may want to implement your own |
| persistent worker to perform these actions. |
| |
| The Bazel server communicates with the worker using `stdin`/`stdout`. It |
| supports the use of protocol buffers or JSON strings. Support for JSON is |
| experimental and thus subject to change. It is guarded behind the |
| `--experimental_worker_allow_json_protocol` flag. |
| |
| The worker implementation has two parts: |
| |
| * The [worker](#making-the-worker). |
| * The [rule that uses the worker](#making-the-rule-that-uses-the-worker). |
| |
| ## Making the worker |
| |
| A persistent worker upholds a few requirements: |
| |
| * It reads [WorkRequests](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/blob/6d1b9725b1e201ca3f25d8ec2a730a20aab62c6e/src/main/protobuf/worker_protocol.proto#L35) |
| from its `stdin`. |
| * It writes [WorkResponses](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/blob/6d1b9725b1e201ca3f25d8ec2a730a20aab62c6e/src/main/protobuf/worker_protocol.proto#L49) |
| (and only `WorkResponse`s) to its `stdout`. |
| * It accepts the `--persistent_worker` flag. The wrapper must recognize the |
| `--persistent_worker` command-line flag and only make itself persistent if |
| that flag is passed, otherwise it must do a one-shot compilation and exit. |
| |
| If your program upholds these requirements, it can be used as a persistent worker! |
| |
| |
| |
| ### Work requests |
| |
| A `WorkRequest` contains a list of arguments to the worker, a list of |
| path-digest pairs representing the inputs the worker can access (this isn’t |
| enforced, but you can use this info for caching), and a request id, which is 0 |
| for singleplex workers. |
| |
| ```json |
| { |
| “args” : [“--some_argument”], |
| “inputs” : [ |
| { “/path/to/my/file/1” : “fdk3e2ml23d”}, |
| { “/path/to/my/file/2” : “1fwqd4qdd” } |
| ], |
| “request_id” : 12 |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Work responses |
| |
| A `WorkResponse` contains a request id, a zero or nonzero exit |
| code, and an output string that describes any errors encountered in processing |
| or executing the request. The `output` field contains a short |
| description; complete logs may be written to the worker's `stderr`. Because |
| workers may only write `WorkResponses` to `stdout`, it's common for the worker |
| to redirect the `stdout` of any tools it uses to `stderr`. |
| |
| ```json |
| { |
| “exit_code” : 1, |
| “output” : “Action failed with the following message:\nCould not find input |
| file “/path/to/my/file/1”, |
| “request_id” : 12 |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| As per the norm for protobufs, the fields are optional. However, Bazel requires |
| the `WorkRequest` and the corresponding `WorkResponse`, to have the same request |
| id, so the request id must be specified if it is nonzero. This is a valid |
| `WorkResponse`. |
| |
| ```json |
| { |
| “request_id” : 12, |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| **Notes** |
| |
| * Each protocol buffer is preceded by its length in `varint` format (see |
| [`MessageLite.writeDelimitedTo()`](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/reference/java/com/google/protobuf/MessageLite.html#writeDelimitedTo-java.io.OutputStream-). |
| * JSON requests and responses are not preceded by a size indicator. |
| * JSON requests uphold the same structure as the protobuf, but use standard |
| JSON. |
| * Bazel stores requests as protobufs and converts them to JSON using |
| [protobuf's JSON format](https://cs.opensource.google/protobuf/protobuf/+/master:java/util/src/main/java/com/google/protobuf/util/JsonFormat.java) |
| |
| ## Making the rule that uses the worker |
| |
| You'll also need to create a rule that generates actions to be performed by the |
| worker. Making a Starlark rule that uses a worker is just like [creating any other rule](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/tree/master/rules). |
| |
| In addition, the rule needs to contain a reference to the worker itself, and |
| there are some requirements for the actions it produces. |
| |
| ### Referring to the worker |
| The rule that uses the worker needs to contain a field that refers to the worker |
| itself, so you'll need to create an instance of a `\*\_binary` rule to define |
| your worker. If your worker is called `MyWorker.Java`, this might be the |
| associated rule: |
| |
| ```python |
| java_binary( |
| name = “worker”, |
| srcs = [“MyWorker.Java”], |
| ) |
| ``` |
| |
| This creates the "worker" label, which refers to the worker binary. You'll then |
| define a rule that *uses* the worker. This rule should define an attribute that |
| refers to the worker binary. |
| |
| If the worker binary you built is in a package named "work", which is at the top |
| level of the build, this might be the attribute definition: |
| |
| ```python |
| "worker": attr.label( |
| default = Label("//work:worker"), |
| executable = True, |
| cfg = "host", |
| ) |
| ``` |
| |
| `cfg = "host"` indicates that the worker should be built to run on your host |
| platform. |
| |
| ### Work action requirements |
| |
| The rule that uses the worker creates actions for the worker to perform. These |
| actions have a couple of requirements. |
| |
| |
| * The _“arguments”_ field. This takes a list of strings, all but the last |
| of which are arguments passed to the worker upon startup. The last element in |
| the “arguments” list is a `flag-file` (@-preceded) argument. Workers read |
| the arguments from the specified flagfile on a per-WorkRequest basis. Your |
| rule can write non-startup arguments for the worker to this flagfile. |
| |
| * The _“execution-requirements”_ field, which takes a dictionary containing |
| `“supports-workers” : “1”`, `“supports-multiplex-workers” : “1”`, or both. |
| |
| The "arguments" and "execution-requirements" fields are required for all |
| actions sent to workers. Additionally, actions that should be executed by |
| JSON workers need to include `“requires-worker-protocol” : “json”` in the |
| execution requirements field. `“requires-worker-protocol” : “proto”` is also |
| a valid execution requirement, though it’s not required for proto workers, |
| since they are the default. |
| |
| You can also set a `worker-key-mnemonic` in the execution requirements. This |
| may be useful if you're reusing the executable for multiple action types and |
| want to distinguish actions by this worker. |
| |
| * Temporary files generated in the course of the action should be saved to the |
| worker's directory. This enables sandboxing. |
| |
| |
| **Note**: To pass an argument starting with a literal `@`, start the argument |
| with `@@` instead. If an argument is also an external repository label, it will |
| not be considered a flagfile argument. |
| |
| Assuming a rule definition with "worker" attribute described above, in addition |
| to a "srcs" attribute representing the inputs, an "output" attribute |
| representing the outputs, and an "args" attribute representing the worker |
| startup args, the call to `ctx.actions.run` might be: |
| |
| ```python |
| ctx.actions.run( |
| inputs=ctx.files.srcs, |
| outputs=[ctx.attr.output], |
| executable=ctx.attr.worker, |
| mnemonic="someMnemonic", |
| execution_requirements={ |
| “supports-workers” : “1”, |
| “requires-worker-protocol” : “json}, |
| arguments=ctx.attr.args + [“@flagfile”] |
| ) |
| ``` |
| |
| For another example, see [Implementing persistent workers](persistent-workers.html#implementation). |
| |
| ## Examples |
| |
| The Bazel code base uses [Java compiler workers](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/blob/a4251eab6988d6cf4f5e35681fbe2c1b0abe48ef/src/java_tools/buildjar/java/com/google/devtools/build/buildjar/BazelJavaBuilder.java), |
| in addition to an [example JSON worker](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/blob/c65f768fec9889bbf1ee934c61d0dc061ea54ca2/src/test/java/com/google/devtools/build/lib/worker/ExampleWorker.java) that is used in our integration tests. |
| |
| You can use their [scaffolding](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/blob/a4251eab6988d6cf4f5e35681fbe2c1b0abe48ef/src/main/java/com/google/devtools/build/lib/worker/WorkRequestHandler.java) to make any Java-based tool into a worker by passing in the correct |
| callback. |
| |
| For an example of a rule that uses a worker, take a look at Bazel's |
| [worker integration test](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/blob/22b4dbcaf05756d506de346728db3846da56b775/src/test/shell/integration/bazel_worker_test.sh#L106). |
| |
| External contributors have implemented workers in a variety of languages; take a |
| look at [Polyglot implementations of Bazel persistent workers](https://github.com/Ubehebe/bazel-worker-examples). |
| You can [find many more examples on GitHub](https://github.com/search?q=bazel+workrequest&type=Code)! |