--- layout: documentation title: Compiling Bazel from Source --- # Compiling Bazel from Source (bootstrapping) You can build Bazel from source without using an existing Bazel binary by doing the following: 1. Ensure that JDK 8, Python, Bash, zip, and the usual C++ build toolchain are installed on your system. * On systems based on Debian packages (Debian, Ubuntu): you can install OpenJDK 8 and Python by running the following command in a terminal: ```sh sudo apt-get install build-essential openjdk-8-jdk python zip ``` * On Windows: you need additional software and the right OS version. See the [Windows page](windows.html). 2. Download and unpack Bazel's distribution archive. Download `bazel--dist.zip` from the [release page](https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/releases). **Note:** There is a **single, architecture-independent** distribution archive. There are no architecture-specific or OS-specific distribution archives. We recommend to also verify the signature made by our [release key](https://bazel.build/bazel-release.pub.gpg) 48457EE0. The distribution archive contains generated files in addition to the versioned sources, so this step _cannot_ be short cut by checking out the source tree. 3. Build Bazel using `./compile.sh`. * On Unix-like systems (e.g. Ubuntu, macOS), do the following steps in a shell session: 1. `cd` into the directory where you unpacked the distribution archive 2. run `bash ./compile.sh` * On Windows, do following steps in the MSYS2 shell: 1. `cd` into the directory where you unpacked the distribution archive 2. run `./compile.sh` Once you have a Bazel binary, you no longer need to use the MSYS2 shell. You can run Bazel from the Command Prompt (`cmd.exe`) or PowerShell. The output will be `output/bazel` on Unix-like systems (e.g. Ubuntu, macOS) and `output/bazel.exe` on Windows. This is a self-contained Bazel binary. You can copy it to a directory on the `PATH` (such as `/usr/local/bin` on Linux) or use it in-place.