*Bazel is very much a work in progress. We'd love if you tried it out, but there are many rough edges. Please feel free to [give us feedback](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/bazel-discuss)!* # Bazel *{Fast, Correct} - Choose two* Bazel is an build tool that builds code quickly and reliably. It executes as few build steps as possible by tracking dependencies and outputs, controls the build environment to keep builds hermetic, and uses its knowledge of dependencies to parallelize builds. This README file contains instructions for building and running Bazel. ## System Requirements Supported platforms: * Ubuntu Linux * Mac OS X (experimental only) Java: * Java JDK 8 or later ## Getting Bazel 1. Clone the Bazel repo from GitHub: $ cd $HOME $ git clone https://github.com/google/bazel/ ## Building Bazel ### Building Bazel on Ubuntu To build Bazel on Ubuntu: 1. Install required package: $ sudo apt-get install libarchive-dev 2. Build Bazel: $ cd bazel $ ./compile.sh ### Building Bazel on OS X (experimental) Using Bazel on Mac OS X requires: * Xcode and Xcode command line tools * MacPorts or Homebrew for installing required packages To build Bazel on Mac OS X: 1. Install required packages: $ port install protobuf-cpp libarchive or $ brew install protobuf libarchive 2. Build Bazel: $ cd bazel $ ./compile.sh ## Running Bazel The Bazel executable is located at `/output/bazel`. You must run Bazel from within a _workspace directory_. Bazel provides a default workspace directory with sample `BUILD` files and source code in `/base_workspace`. The default workspace contains files and directories that must be present in order for Bazel to work. If you want to build from source outside the default workspace directory, copy the entire `base_workspace` directory to the new location before adding your `BUILD` and source files. Build a sample Java application: $ cp -R $HOME/bazel/base_workspace $HOME/my_workspace $ cd $HOME/my_workspace $ $HOME/bazel/output/bazel build //examples/java:hello-world _Note: on OS X, you must specify \-\-cpu=darwin to build Java programs (e.g., bazel build --cpu=darwin //examples/java:hello-world)._ The build output is located in `$HOME/my_workspace/bazel-bin/examples/java/`. Run the sample application: $ $HOME/my_workspace/bazel-bin/examples/java/hello-world