This repository hosts a remote caching and execution system, compatible with the build systems Bazel, buck2, pants, and more.
Background information on the status of caching and remote execution in bazel can be found in the bazel documentation.
File issues here for bugs or feature requests, and ask questions via build team slack in the #buildfarm channel.
All commandline options override corresponding config settings.
Run via
$ docker run -d --rm --name buildfarm-redis -p 6379:6379 redis:7.2.4
redis-cli config set stop-writes-on-bgsave-error no
Run via
$ bazelisk run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-server -- <logfile> <configfile>
Ex: bazelisk run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-server -- --jvm_flag=-Djava.util.logging.config.file=$PWD/examples/logging.properties $PWD/examples/config.minimal.yml
logfile
has to be in the standard java util logging format and passed as a --jvm_flag=-Dlogging.config=file:
configfile
has to be in yaml format.
Run via
$ bazelisk run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-shard-worker -- <logfile> <configfile>
Ex: bazelisk run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-shard-worker -- --jvm_flag=-Djava.util.logging.config.file=$PWD/examples/logging.properties $PWD/examples/config.minimal.yml
logfile
has to be in the standard java util logging format and passed as a --jvm_flag=-Dlogging.config=file:
configfile
has to be in yaml format.
To use the example configured buildfarm with bazel (version 1.0 or higher), you can configure your .bazelrc
as follows:
$ cat .bazelrc
$ build --remote_executor=grpc://localhost:8980
Then run your build as you would normally do.
Buildfarm uses Java's Logging framework and outputs all routine behavior to the NICE Level.
You can use typical Java logging configuration to filter these results and observe the flow of executions through your running services.
An example logging.properties
file has been provided at examples/logging.properties for use as follows:
$ bazel run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-server -- --jvm_flag=-Djava.util.logging.config.file=$PWD/examples/logging.properties $PWD/examples/config.minimal.yml
and
$ bazel run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-shard-worker -- --jvm_flag=-Djava.util.logging.config.file=$PWD/examples/logging.properties $PWD/examples/config.minimal.yml
To attach a remote debugger, run the executable with the --debug=<PORT>
flag. For example:
$ bazel run //src/main/java/build/buildfarm:buildfarm-server -- --debug=5005 $PWD/examples/config.minimal.yml
Most third-party dependencies (e.g. protobuf, gRPC, ...) are managed automatically via
rules_jvm_external. These dependencies are enumerated in
the WORKSPACE with a maven_install
artifacts
parameter.
Things that aren't supported by rules_jvm_external
are being imported as manually managed remote repos via
the WORKSPACE
file.
Buildfarm can be used as an external repository for composition into a deployment of your choice. See also the documentation site in the Worker Execution Environment section.
Add the following to your MODULE.bazel
to get access to buildfarm targets, filling in the <COMMIT-SHA>
values:
bazel_dep(name = "build_buildfarm")
git_override(
module_name = "build_buildfarm",
commit = "<COMMIT-SHA>",
remote = "https://github.com/buildfarm/buildfarm.git",
)
# Transitive!
# TODO: remove this after https://github.com/bazelbuild/remote-apis/pull/293 is merged
bazel_dep(name = "remoteapis", version = "eb433accc6a666b782ea4b787eb598e5c3d27c93")
archive_override(
module_name = "remoteapis",
integrity = "sha256-68wzxNAkPZ49/zFwPYQ5z9MYbgxoeIEazKJ24+4YqIQ=",
strip_prefix = "remote-apis-eb433accc6a666b782ea4b787eb598e5c3d27c93",
urls = [
"https://github.com/bazelbuild/remote-apis/archive/eb433accc6a666b782ea4b787eb598e5c3d27c93.zip",
],
)
bazel_dep(name = "googleapis", version = "0.0.0-20240326-1c8d509c5", repo_name = "com_google_googleapis")
bazel_dep(name = "grpc-java", version = "1.62.2")
googleapis_switched_rules = use_extension("@googleapis//:extensions.bzl", "switched_rules")
googleapis_switched_rules.use_languages(
grpc = True,
java = True,
)
use_repo(googleapis_switched_rules, "com_google_googleapis_imports")
You can then use the existing layer targets to build your own OCI images, for example:
oci_image(
name = "mycompany-buildfarm-server",
base = "@<YOUPROVIDE>",
entrypoint = [
"/usr/bin/java",
"-jar",
"/app/build_buildfarm/buildfarm-server_deploy.jar",
],
tars = [
"@build_buildfarm//:layer_buildfarm_server",
],
)
where @<YOUPROVIDE>
is the name of an oci.pull(name = 'YOUPROVIDE', ...)
in your MODULE.bazel
To install OCI bundled Helm chart:
helm install \
-n bazel-buildfarm \
--create-namespace \
bazel-buildfarm \
oci://ghcr.io/buildfarm/buildfarm \
--version "0.2.4"