Using the Bazel CI

Bazel CI tests Bazel and a variety of open-source projects that use Bazel.

We also use the projects using Bazel to validate Bazel changes.

The Bazel CI:

  • runs presubmit tests (on a pending change)
  • runs postsubmit tests (on the master branch)
  • handles the release project of Bazel

If you wish to add or modify a configuration for one of the projects on Bazel CI, see the project owner documentation.

Postsubmit

The CI uses the GitHub API and handles test runs automatically if bazel-io has write access to the repository.

The result of a build can be one of:

  • Success (job is green)

  • Unstable (job is yellow), if some tests failed.

    The Blue Ocean View1 shows the failing platforms in Pipeline view and the list of failing tests in Tests view.

  • Failed (job is red), if compilation failed or configuration files are broken.

    The Blue Ocean View1 shows the build breakage. If it doesn't, you should look at the full console log.

1 The Open Blue Ocean view is a Jenkins UI. There's a link to it on the default Jenkins UI, on the left side in the Job view.

Tips:

  • Test logs are available under the artifacts list via the URL <joburl>/artifact.

    Example: https://ci.bazel.build/job/bazel-tests/lastCompletedBuild/artifact/

  • Flaky tests can be analyzed with the Test Results Analyzer

    The analyzer is available in the normal job view on the side menu (the one which shows the test's history).

  • The “Pipeline Steps” button on the side menu on a job view lets you examine each step of the Jenkins pipeline.

    Looking for the enclosing workspace or node start step of another step gives you access to the workspace of that step.

Current limitations:

  • Jenkins Blue Ocean UI has no good way to mark an unstable steps.

    If a platform stage fails without clear sub-step failing, look for the last shell step in the platform stage view.

  • Tests are not ordered by platforms in the test view.

Presubmit

The Bazel CI can run presubmit tests for changes from GitHub and from Gerrit.

GitHub pull requests

A GitHub pull request is tested when:

  • a pull request admin comments “test this please” or “retest this please”
  • an admin pushes a Pull Request

Pull request admins are the people from:

Jenkins considers those people to be admins whose visibility is public. To make someone public:

  1. go to the Bazel organization page (or the Google organization page respectively)
  2. find the person's name and change their visibility to public

To test pull requests, bazel-io needs write access to the repository. This is always the case if the repository is in the bazelbuild organization, otherwise you may need to grant access.

Gerrit code reviews

A Gerrit code review is tested when someone marks the code review as Presubmit-Ready+1.

Marking the code review as presubmit ready:

  • automatically adds “Bazel CI” as a reviewer
  • updates the review thread with the link to the test results
  • marks the code review as Verified+1 or Verified-1 depending on the result of the test

To retrigger a test, simply reset the Presubmit-Ready label.

You can read the output the same way as of the postsubmit.

Global tests

The Bazel CI can also do a “global test”.

A global test:

  1. builds Bazel from a branch
  2. uses the resulting Bazel binary to run all the other jobs on the Bazel CI
  3. produces a report comparing the global test results of this binary and of the latest release of Bazel

This report is at https://ci.bazel.build/job/bazel/job/<nightly|release|presubmit>/<buildNumber>/Downstream_projects/. For example for the last nigthly run it will be at https://ci.bazel.build/job/bazel/job/nightly/lastBuild/Downstream_projects/ .

The way to read that report is as follows:

  • Newly failing jobs are problematic.

    They are likely to indicate a failure due to a Bazel change. These make the build to be unstable (yellow).

  • Already failing jobs may be fine.

    They mean that the job result is no worse than before. It is usually safe to ignore these failure, but we should aim to have none of them, because they might hide new regressions.

  • Passing jobs are safe to ignore.

Release process

In addition to testing all the jobs, the Global test handles pushing artifacts that are created by a release branch to GCS and to the GitHub release system.