--- layout: documentation title: Rules --- # Rules A rule defines a series of [actions](#actions) that Bazel should perform on inputs to get a set of outputs. For example, a C++ binary rule might take a set of `.cpp` files (the inputs), run `g++` on them (the action), and return an executable file (the output). Note that, from Bazel's perspective, `g++` and the standard C++ libraries are also inputs to this rule. As a rule writer, you must consider not only the user-provided inputs to a rule, but also all of the tools and libraries required to execute the actions. Before creating or modifying any rule, make sure you are familiar with the [evaluation model](concepts.md). You must understand the three phases of execution and the differences between macros and rules. A few rules are built into Bazel itself. These *native rules*, such as `cc_library` and `java_binary`, provide some core support for certain languages. By defining your own rules, you can add similar support for languages and tools that Bazel does not support natively. Rules defined in .bzl files work just like native rules. For example, their targets have labels, can appear in `bazel query`, and get built whenever they are needed for a `bazel build` command or similar. When defining your own rule, you get to decide what attributes it supports and how it generates its outputs. The exact behavior of a rule during the [analysis phase](concepts.md#evaluation-model) is governed by its `implementation` function. This function does not run any external commands. Rather, it registers [actions](#actions) that will be used later during the execution phase to build the rule's outputs, if they are needed. Rules also produce and pass along information that may be useful to other rules, in the form of [providers](#providers). ## Rule creation In a `.bzl` file, use the [rule](lib/globals.html#rule) function to create a new rule and store it in a global variable: ```python my_rule = rule(...) ``` The rule can then be loaded in `BUILD` files: ```python load('//some/pkg:whatever.bzl', 'my_rule') ``` [See example](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/tree/master/rules/empty). ## Attributes An attribute is a rule argument, such as `srcs` or `deps`. You must list the names and schemas of all attributes when you define a rule. Attribute schemas are created using the [attr](lib/attr.html) module. ```python sum = rule( implementation = _impl, attrs = { "number": attr.int(default = 1), "deps": attr.label_list(), }, ) ``` In a `BUILD` file, call the rule to create targets of this type: ```python sum( name = "my-target", deps = [":other-target"], ) sum( name = "other-target", ) ``` Here `other-target` is a dependency of `my-target`, and therefore `other-target` will be analyzed first. There are two special kinds of attributes: * *Dependency attributes*, such as `attr.label` and `attr.label_list`, declare a dependency from the target that owns the attribute to the target whose label appears in the attribute's value. This kind of attribute forms the basis of the target graph. * *Output attributes*, such as `attr.output` and `attr.output_list`, declare an output file that the target generates. Although they refer to the output file by label, they do not create a dependency relationship between targets. Output attributes are used relatively rarely, in favor of other ways of declaring output files that do not require the user to specify a label. Both dependency attributes and output attributes take in label values. These may be specified as either [`Label`](lib/Label.html) objects or as simple strings. If a string is given, it will be converted to a `Label` using the [constructor](lib/Label.html#Label). The repository, and possibly the path, will be resolved relative to the defined target. If an attribute schema is defined in the rule but no value for that attribute is given when the rule is instantiated, then the rule implementation function will see a placeholder value in `ctx.attr`. The placeholder value depends on the type of attribute. If the schema specifies a `default` value, that value will be used instead of the placeholder. The schema may also specify `mandatory=True`, in which case it is illegal for the user to not give an explicit value. It is not useful for an attribute schema with `mandatory` to also have a `default`. The following attributes are automatically added to every rule: `deprecation`, `features`, `name`, `tags`, `testonly`, `visibility`. Test rules also have the following attributes: `args`, `flaky`, `local`, `shard_count`, `size`, `timeout`. ### Private Attributes and Implicit Dependencies A dependency attribute with a default value is called an *implicit dependency*. The name comes from the fact that it is a part of the target graph that the user does not specify in a BUILD file. Implicit dependencies are useful for hard-coding a relationship between a rule and a tool (such as a compiler), since most of the time a user is not interested in specifying what tool the rule uses. From the rule's point of view, the tool is still an input, just like any source file or other dependency. Sometimes we want to not only provide a default value, but prevent the user from overriding this default. To do this, you can make the attribute *private* by giving it a name that begins with an underscore (`_`). Private attributes must have default values. It generally only makes sense to use private attributes for implicit dependencies. ```python metal_binary = rule( implementation = _metal_binary_impl, attrs = { "srcs": attr.label_list(), "_compiler": attr.label( default = Label("//tools:metalc"), allow_single_file = True, executable = True, ), }, ) ``` In this example, every target of type `metal_binary` will have an implicit dependency on the compiler `//tools:metalc`. This allows `metal_binary`'s implementation function to generate actions that invoke the compiler, even though the user did not pass its label as an input. Since `_compiler` is a private attribute, we know for sure that `ctx.attr._compiler` will always point to `//tools:metalc` in all targets of this rule type. Alternatively, we could have named the attribute `compiler` without the underscore and kept the default value. This lets users substitute a different compiler if necessary, but requires no awareness of the compiler's label otherwise. ## Implementation function Every rule requires an `implementation` function. This function contains the actual logic of the rule and is executed strictly in the [analysis phase](concepts.md#evaluation-model). As such, the function is not able to actually read or write files. Rather, its main job is to emit [actions](#actions) that will run later during the execution phase. Implementation functions take exactly one parameter: a [rule context](lib/ctx.html), conventionally named `ctx`. It can be used to: * access attribute values and obtain handles on declared input and output files; * create actions; and * pass information to other targets that depend on this one, via [providers](#providers). The most common way to access attribute values is by using `ctx.attr.`, though there are several other fields besides `attr` that provide more convenient ways of accessing file handles, such as `ctx.file` and `ctx.outputs`. The name and the package of a rule are available with `ctx.label.name` and `ctx.label.package`. The `ctx` object also contains some helper functions. See its [documentation](lib/ctx.html) for a complete list. Rule implementation functions are usually private (i.e., named with a leading underscore) because they tend not to be reused. Conventionally, they are named the same as their rule, but suffixed with `_impl`. See [an example](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/attributes/printer.bzl) of declaring and accessing attributes. ## Targets Each call to a build rule returns no value but has the side effect of defining a new target; this is called instantiating the rule. The dependencies of the new target are any other targets whose labels are mentioned in its dependency attributes. In the following example, the target `//mypkg:y` depends on the targets `//mypkg:x` and `//mypkg:z.foo`. ```python # //mypkg:BUILD my_rule( name = "x", ) # Assuming that my_rule has attributes "deps" and "srcs", # of type attr.label_list() my_rule( name = "y", deps = [":x"], srcs = [":z.foo"], ) ``` Dependencies are represented at analysis time as [`Target`](lib/Target.html) objects. These objects contain the information produced by analyzing a target -- in particular, its [providers](#providers). The current target can access its dependencies' `Target` objects within its rule implementation function by using `ctx.attr`. ## Files Files are represented by the [`File`](lib/File.html) type. Since Bazel does not perform file I/O during the analysis phase, these objects cannot be used to directly read or write file content. Rather, they are passed to action-emitting functions to construct pieces of the action graph. See [`ctx.actions`](lib/actions.html) for the available kinds of actions. A file can either be a source file or a generated file. Each generated file must be an output of exactly one action. Source files cannot be the output of any action. Some files, including all source files, are addressable by labels. These files have `Target` objects associated with them. If a file's label appears within a dependency attribute (for example, in a `srcs` attribute of type `attr.label_list`), the `ctx.attr.` entry for it will contain the corresponding `Target`. The `File` object can be obtained from this `Target`'s `files` field. This allows the file to be referenced in both the target graph and the action graph. During the analysis phase, a rule's implementation function can create additional output files. Since all labels have to be known during the loading phase, these additional output files are not associated with labels or `Target`s. Generally these are intermediate files needed for a later compilation step, or auxiliary outputs that don't need to be referenced in the target graph. Even though these files don't have a label, they can still be passed along in a [`provider`](#providers) to make them available to other depending targets at analysis time. A generated file that is addressable by a label is called a *predeclared output*. There are multiple ways for a rule to introduce a predeclared output: * If the rule declares an [`outputs`](lib/globals.html#rule.outputs) dict in its call to `rule()`, then each entry in this dict becomes an output. The output's label is chosen automatically as specified by the entry, usually by substituting into a string template. This is the most common way to define outputs. * The rule can have an attribute of type [`output`](lib/attr.html#output) or [`output_list`](lib/attr.html#output_list). In this case the user explicitly chooses the label for the output when they instantiate the rule. * **(Deprecated)** If the rule is marked [`executable`](lib/globals.html#rule.executable) or [`test`](lib/globals.html#rule.test), an output is created with the same name as the rule instance itself. (Technically, the file has no label since it would clash with the rule instance's own label, but it is still considered a predeclared output.) By default, this file serves as the binary to run if the target appears on the command line of a `bazel run` or `bazel test` command. See [Executable rules](#executable-rules-and-test-rules) below. All predeclared outputs can be accessed within the rule's implementation function under the [`ctx.outputs`](lib/ctx.html#outputs) struct; see that page for details and restrictions. Non-predeclared outputs are created during analysis using the [`ctx.actions.declare_file`](lib/actions.html#declare_file) and [`ctx.actions.declare_directory`](lib/actions.html#declare_directory) functions. Both kinds of outputs may be passed along in providers. Although the input files of a target -- those files passed through dependency attributes -- can be accessed indirectly via `ctx.attr`, it is more convenient to use `ctx.file` and `ctx.files`. For output files that are predeclared using output attributes (attributes of type `attr.output` or `attr.output_list`), `ctx.attr` will only return the label, and you must use `ctx.outputs` to get the actual `File` object. [See example of predeclared outputs](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/predeclared_outputs/hash.bzl) ## Actions An action describes how to generate a set of outputs from a set of inputs, for example "run gcc on hello.c and get hello.o". When an action is created, Bazel doesn't run the command immediately. It registers it in a graph of dependencies, because an action can depend on the output of another action (e.g. in C, the linker must be called after compilation). In the execution phase, Bazel decides which actions must be run and in which order. All functions that create actions are defined in [`ctx.actions`](lib/actions.html): * [ctx.actions.run](lib/actions.html#run), to run an executable. * [ctx.actions.run_shell](lib/actions.html#run_shell), to run a shell command. * [ctx.actions.write](lib/actions.html#write), to write a string to a file. * [ctx.actions.expand_template](lib/actions.html#expand_template), to generate a file from a template. Actions take a set (which can be empty) of input files and generate a (non-empty) set of output files. The set of input and output files must be known during the [analysis phase](concepts.md#evaluation-model). It might depend on the value of attributes and information from dependencies, but it cannot depend on the result of the execution. For example, if your action runs the unzip command, you must specify which files you expect to be inflated (before running unzip). Actions are comparable to pure functions: They should depend only on the provided inputs, and avoid accessing computer information, username, clock, network, or I/O devices (except for reading inputs and writing outputs). This is important because the output will be cached and reused. **If an action generates a file that is not listed in its outputs**: This is fine, but the file will be ignored and cannot be used by other rules. **If an action does not generate a file that is listed in its outputs**: This is an execution error and the build will fail. This happens for instance when a compilation fails. **If an action generates an unknown number of outputs and you want to keep them all**, you must group them in a single file (e.g., a zip, tar, or other archive format). This way, you will be able to deterministically declare your outputs. **If an action does not list a file it uses as an input**, the action execution will most likely result in an error. The file is not guaranteed to be available to the action, so if it **is** there, it's due to coincidence or error. **If an action lists a file as an input, but does not use it**: This is fine. However, it can affect action execution order, resulting in sub-optimal performance. Dependencies are resolved by Bazel, which will decide which actions are executed. It is an error if there is a cycle in the dependency graph. Creating an action does not guarantee that it will be executed: It depends on whether its outputs are needed for the build. ## Configurations Imagine that you want to build a C++ binary and target a different architecture. The build can be complex and involve multiple steps. Some of the intermediate binaries, like the compilers and code generators, have to run on your machine (the host); some of the binaries such the final output must be built for the target architecture. For this reason, Bazel has a concept of "configurations" and transitions. The topmost targets (the ones requested on the command line) are built in the "target" configuration, while tools that should run locally on the host are built in the "host" configuration. Rules may generate different actions based on the configuration, for instance to change the cpu architecture that is passed to the compiler. In some cases, the same library may be needed for different configurations. If this happens, it will be analyzed and potentially built multiple times. By default, Bazel builds the dependencies of a target in the same configuration as the target itself, i.e. without transitioning. When a target depends on a tool, the label attribute will specify a transition to the host configuration. This causes the tool and all of its dependencies to be built for the host machine, assuming those dependencies do not themselves have transitions. For each dependency attribute, you can decide whether the dependency target should be built in the same configuration, or transition to the host configuration (using `cfg`). If a dependency attribute has the flag `executable=True`, the configuration must be set explicitly. [See example](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/actions_run/execute.bzl) In general, sources, dependent libraries, and executables that will be needed at runtime can use the same configuration. Tools that are executed as part of the build (e.g., compilers, code generators) should be built for the host configuration. In this case, specify `cfg="host"` in the attribute. Otherwise, executables that are used at runtime (e.g. as part of a test) should be built for the target configuration. In this case, specify `cfg="target"` in the attribute. ## Configuration Fragments Rules may access [configuration fragments](lib/skylark-configuration-fragment.html) such as `cpp`, `java` and `jvm`. However, all required fragments must be declared in order to avoid access errors: ```python def _impl(ctx): # Using ctx.fragments.cpp would lead to an error since it was not declared. x = ctx.fragments.java ... my_rule = rule( implementation = _impl, fragments = ["java"], # Required fragments of the target configuration host_fragments = ["java"], # Required fragments of the host configuration ... ) ``` `ctx.fragments` only provides configuration fragments for the target configuration. If you want to access fragments for the host configuration, use `ctx.host_fragments` instead. ## Providers Providers are pieces of information that a rule exposes to other rules that depend on it. This data can include output files, libraries, parameters to pass on a tool's command line, or anything else the depending rule should know about. Providers are the only mechanism to exchange data between rules, and can be thought of as part of a rule's public interface (loosely analogous to a function's return value). A rule can only see the providers of its direct dependencies. If there is a rule `top` that depends on `middle`, and `middle` depends on `bottom`, then we say that `middle` is a direct dependency of `top`, while `bottom` is a transitive dependency of `top`. In this case, `top` can see the providers of `middle`. The only way for `top` to see any information from `bottom` is if `middle` re-exports this information in its own providers; this is how transitive information can be accumulated from all dependencies. In such cases, consider using [depsets](depsets.md) to hold the data more efficiently without excessive copying. Providers can be declared using the [provider()](lib/globals.html#provider) function: ```python TransitiveDataInfo = provider(fields=["value"]) ``` Rule implementation function can then construct and return provider instances: ```python def rule_implementation(ctx): ... return [TransitiveDataInfo(value=5)] ``` `TransitiveDataInfo` acts both as a constructor for provider instances and as a key to access them. A [target](lib/Target.html) serves as a map from each provider that the target supports, to the target's corresponding instance of that provider. A rule can access the providers of its dependencies using the square bracket notation (`[]`): ```python def dependent_rule_implementation(ctx): ... n = 0 for dep_target in ctx.attr.deps: n += dep_target[TransitiveDataInfo].value ... ``` All targets have a [`DefaultInfo`](lib/globals.html#DefaultInfo) provider that can be used to access some information relevant to all targets. Providers are only available during the analysis phase. Examples of usage: * [mandatory providers](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/mandatory_provider/sum.bzl) * [optional providers](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/optional_provider/sum.bzl) * [providers with depsets](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/depsets/foo.bzl) This examples shows how a library and a binary rule can pass information. ### Migrating from Legacy Providers Historically, Bazel providers were simple fields on the `Target` object. They were accessed using the dot operator, and they were created by putting the field in a struct returned by the rule's implementation function. *This style is deprecated and should not be used in new code;* see below for information that may help you migrate. The new provider mechanism avoids name clashes. It also supports data hiding, by requiring any code accessing a provider instance to retrieve it using the provider symbol. For the moment, legacy providers are still supported. A rule can return both legacy and modern providers as follows: ```python def _myrule_impl(ctx): ... legacy_data = struct(x="foo", ...) modern_data = MyInfo(y="bar", ...) # When any legacy providers are returned, the top-level returned value is a struct. return struct( # One key = value entry for each legacy provider. legacy_info = legacy_data, ... # All modern providers are put in a list passed to the special "providers" key. providers = [modern_data, ...]) ``` If `dep` is the resulting `Target` object for an instance of this rule, the providers and their contents can be retrieved as `dep.legacy_info.x` and `dep[MyInfo].y`. In addition to `providers`, the returned struct can also take several other fields that have special meaning (and that do not create a corresponding legacy provider). * The fields `files`, `runfiles`, `data_runfiles`, `default_runfiles`, and `executable` correspond to the same-named fields of [`DefaultInfo`](lib/globals.html#DefaultInfo). It is not allowed to specify any of these fields while also returning a `DefaultInfo` modern provider. * The field `output_groups` takes a struct value and corresponds to an [`OutputGroupInfo`](lib/globals.html#OutputGroupInfo). * The field `instrumented_files` is for [code coverage instrumentation](#code-coverage-instrumentation). It does not yet have a modern provider equivalent. If you need it, you cannot yet migrate away from legacy providers. ## Runfiles Runfiles are a set of files used by the (often executable) output of a rule during runtime (as opposed to build time, i.e. when the binary itself is generated). During the [execution phase](concepts.md#evaluation-model), Bazel creates a directory tree containing symlinks pointing to the runfiles. This stages the environment for the binary so it can access the runfiles during runtime. [See example](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/runfiles/execute.bzl) Runfiles can be added manually during rule creation and/or collected transitively from the rule's dependencies: ```python def _rule_implementation(ctx): ... transitive_runfiles = depset(transitive= [dep.transitive_runtime_files for dep in ctx.attr.special_dependencies]) runfiles = ctx.runfiles( # Add some files manually. files = [ctx.file.some_data_file], # Add transitive files from dependencies manually. transitive_files = transitive_runfiles, # Collect runfiles from the common locations: transitively from srcs, # deps and data attributes. collect_default = True, ) # Add a field named "runfiles" to the DefaultInfo provider in order to actually # create the symlink tree. return [DefaultInfo(runfiles=runfiles)] ``` Note that non-executable rule outputs can also have runfiles. For example, a library might need some external files during runtime, and every dependent binary should know about them. Also note that if an action uses an executable, the executable's runfiles can be used when the action executes. Normally, the relative path of a file in the runfiles tree is the same as the relative path of that file in the source tree or generated output tree. If these need to be different for some reason, you can specify the `root_symlinks` or `symlinks` arguments. The `root_symlinks` is a dictionary mapping paths to files, where the paths are relative to the root of the runfiles directory. The `symlinks` dictionary is the same, but paths are implicitly prefixed with the name of the workspace. ```python ... runfiles = ctx.runfiles( root_symlinks = {"some/path/here.foo": ctx.file.some_data_file2} symlinks = {"some/path/here.bar": ctx.file.some_data_file3} ) # Creates something like: # sometarget.runfiles/ # some/ # path/ # here.foo -> some_data_file2 # / # some/ # path/ # here.bar -> some_data_file3 ``` If `symlinks` or `root_symlinks` is used, be careful not to map two different files to the same path in the runfiles tree. This will cause the build to fail with an error describing the conflict. To fix, you will need to modify your `ctx.runfiles` arguments to remove the collision. This checking will be done for any targets using your rule, as well as targets of any kind that depend on those targets. ## Requesting output files A single target can have several output files. When a `bazel build` command is run, some of the outputs of the targets given to the command are considered to be *requested*. Bazel only builds these requested files and the files that they directly or indirectly depend on. (In terms of the action graph, Bazel only executes the actions that are reachable as transitive dependencies of the requested files.) Every target has a set of *default outputs*, which are the output files that normally get requested when that target appears on the command line. For example, a target `//pkg:foo` of `java_library` type has in its default outputs a file `foo.jar`, which will be built by the command `bazel build //pkg:foo`. Any predeclared output can be explicitly requested on the command line. This can be used to build outputs that are not default outputs, or to build some but not all default outputs. For example, `bazel build //pkg:foo_deploy.jar` and `bazel build //pkg:foo.jar` will each just build that one file (along with its dependencies). See an [example](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/implicit_output/hash.bzl) of a rule with non-default predeclared outputs. In addition to default outputs, there are *output groups*, which are collections of output files that may be requested together. For example, if a target `//pkg:mytarget` is of a rule type that has a `debug_files` output group, these files can be built by running `bazel build //pkg:mytarget --output_groups=debug_files`. See the [command line reference](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/command-line-reference.html#flag--output_groups) for details on the `--output_groups` argument. Since non-predeclared outputs don't have labels, they can only be requested by appearing in the default outputs or an output group. You can specify the default outputs and output groups of a rule by returning the [`DefaultInfo`](lib/DefaultInfo.html) and [`OutputGroupInfo`](lib/OutputGroupInfo.html) providers from its implementation function. ```python def _myrule_impl(ctx): name = ... binary = ctx.actions.declare_file(name) debug_file = ctx.actions.declare_file(name + ".pdb") # ... add actions to generate these files return [DefaultInfo(files = depset([binary])), OutputGroupInfo(debug_files = depset([debug_file]), all_files = depset([binary, debug_file]))] ``` These providers can also be retrieved from dependencies using the usual syntax `[DefaultInfo]` and `[OutputGroupInfo]`, where `` is a `Target` object. Note that even if a file is in the default outputs or an output group, you may still want to return it in a custom provider in order to make it available in a more structured way. For instance, you could pass headers and sources along in separate fields of your provider. ## Code coverage instrumentation A rule can use the `instrumented_files` provider to provide information about which files should be measured when code coverage data collection is enabled: ```python def _rule_implementation(ctx): ... return struct(instrumented_files = struct( # Optional: File extensions used to filter files from source_attributes. # If not provided, then all files from source_attributes will be # added to instrumented files, if an empty list is provided, then # no files from source attributes will be added. extensions = ["ext1", "ext2"], # Optional: Attributes that contain source files for this rule. source_attributes = ["srcs"], # Optional: Attributes for dependencies that could include instrumented # files. dependency_attributes = ["data", "deps"])) ``` [ctx.configuration.coverage_enabled](lib/configuration.html#coverage_enabled) notes whether coverage data collection is enabled for the current run in general (but says nothing about which files specifically should be instrumented). If a rule implementation needs to add coverage instrumentation at compile-time, it can determine if its sources should be instrumented with [ctx.coverage_instrumented](lib/ctx.html#coverage_instrumented): ```python # Are this rule's sources instrumented? if ctx.coverage_instrumented(): # Do something to turn on coverage for this compile action ``` Note that function will always return false if `ctx.configuration.coverage_enabled` is false, so you don't need to check both. If the rule directly includes sources from its dependencies before compilation (e.g. header files), it may also need to turn on compile-time instrumentation if the dependencies' sources should be instrumented. In this case, it may also be worth checking `ctx.configuration.coverage_enabled` so you can avoid looping over dependencies unnecessarily: ```python # Are this rule's sources or any of the sources for its direct dependencies # in deps instrumented? if ctx.configuration.coverage_enabled: if (ctx.coverage_instrumented() or any([ctx.coverage_instrumented(dep) for dep in ctx.attr.deps]): # Do something to turn on coverage for this compile action ``` ## Executable rules and test rules Executable rules define targets that can be invoked by a `bazel run` command. Test rules are a special kind of executable rule whose targets can also be invoked by a `bazel test` command. Executable and test rules are created by setting the respective [`executable`](lib/globals.html#rule.executable) or [`test`](lib/globals.html#rule.test) argument to true when defining the rule. Test rules (but not necessarily their targets) must have names that end in `_test`. Non-test rules must not have this suffix. Both kinds of rules must produce an executable output file (which may or may not be predeclared) that will be invoked by the `run` or `test` commands. To tell Bazel which of a rule's outputs to use as this executable, pass it as the `executable` argument of a returned `DefaultInfo` provider. The action that generates this file must set the executable bit on the file. For a `ctx.actions.run()` or `ctx.actions.run_shell()` action this should be done by the underlying tool that is invoked by the action. For a `ctx.actions.write()` action it is done by passing the argument `is_executable=True`. As legacy behavior, executable rules have a special `ctx.outputs.executable` predeclared output. This file serves as the default executable if you do not specify one using `DefaultInfo`; it must not be used otherwise. This output mechanism is deprecated because it does not support customizing the executable file's name at analysis time. See examples of an [executable rule](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/executable/fortune.bzl) and a [test rule](https://github.com/bazelbuild/examples/blob/master/rules/test_rule/line_length.bzl). Test rules inherit the following attributes: `args`, `flaky`, `local`, `shard_count`, `size`, `timeout`. The defaults of inherited attributes cannot be changed, but you can use a macro with default arguments: ```python def example_test(size="small", **kwargs): _example_test(size=size, **kwargs) _example_test = rule( ... ) ```