Java Rules

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Rules

java_binary

View rule source
java_binary(name, deps, srcs, data, resources, add_exports, add_opens, args, bootclasspath, classpath_resources, compatible_with, create_executable, deploy_env, deploy_manifest_lines, deprecation, distribs, env, exec_compatible_with, exec_properties, features, javacopts, jvm_flags, launcher, licenses, main_class, neverlink, output_licenses, plugins, resource_strip_prefix, restricted_to, runtime_deps, stamp, tags, target_compatible_with, testonly, toolchains, use_launcher, use_testrunner, visibility)

Builds a Java archive ("jar file"), plus a wrapper shell script with the same name as the rule. The wrapper shell script uses a classpath that includes, among other things, a jar file for each library on which the binary depends. When running the wrapper shell script, any nonempty JAVABIN environment variable will take precedence over the version specified via Bazel's --java_runtime_version flag.

The wrapper script accepts several unique flags. Refer to //src/main/java/com/google/devtools/build/lib/bazel/rules/java/java_stub_template.txt for a list of configurable flags and environment variables accepted by the wrapper.

Implicit output targets

  • name.jar: A Java archive, containing the class files and other resources corresponding to the binary's direct dependencies.
  • name-src.jar: An archive containing the sources ("source jar").
  • name_deploy.jar: A Java archive suitable for deployment (only built if explicitly requested).

    Building the <name>_deploy.jar target for your rule creates a self-contained jar file with a manifest that allows it to be run with the java -jar command or with the wrapper script's --singlejar option. Using the wrapper script is preferred to java -jar because it also passes the JVM flags and the options to load native libraries.

    The deploy jar contains all the classes that would be found by a classloader that searched the classpath from the binary's wrapper script from beginning to end. It also contains the native libraries needed for dependencies. These are automatically loaded into the JVM at runtime.

    If your target specifies a launcher attribute, then instead of being a normal JAR file, the _deploy.jar will be a native binary. This will contain the launcher plus any native (C++) dependencies of your rule, all linked into a static binary. The actual jar file's bytes will be appended to that native binary, creating a single binary blob containing both the executable and the Java code. You can execute the resulting jar file directly like you would execute any native binary.

  • name_deploy-src.jar: An archive containing the sources collected from the transitive closure of the target. These will match the classes in the deploy.jar except where jars have no matching source jar.

It is good practice to use the name of the source file that is the main entry point of the application (minus the extension). For example, if your entry point is called Main.java, then your name could be Main.

A deps attribute is not allowed in a java_binary rule without srcs; such a rule requires a main_class provided by runtime_deps.

The following code snippet illustrates a common mistake:


java_binary(
    name = "DontDoThis",
    srcs = [
        ...,
        "GeneratedJavaFile.java",  # a generated .java file
    ],
    deps = [":generating_rule",],  # rule that generates that file
)

Do this instead:


java_binary(
    name = "DoThisInstead",
    srcs = [
        ...,
        ":generating_rule",
    ],
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; default is []

The list of other libraries to be linked in to the target. See general comments about deps at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.
srcs

List of labels; default is []

The list of source files that are processed to create the target. This attribute is almost always required; see exceptions below.

Source files of type .java are compiled. In case of generated .java files it is generally advisable to put the generating rule's name here instead of the name of the file itself. This not only improves readability but makes the rule more resilient to future changes: if the generating rule generates different files in the future, you only need to fix one place: the outs of the generating rule. You should not list the generating rule in deps because it is a no-op.

Source files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule.)

Rules: if the rule (typically genrule or filegroup) generates any of the files listed above, they will be used the same way as described for source files.

This argument is almost always required, except if a main_class attribute specifies a class on the runtime classpath or you specify the runtime_deps argument.

data

List of labels; default is []

The list of files needed by this library at runtime. See general comments about data at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.
resources

List of labels; default is []

A list of data files to include in a Java jar.

Resources may be source files or generated files.

If resources are specified, they will be bundled in the jar along with the usual .class files produced by compilation. The location of the resources inside of the jar file is determined by the project structure. Bazel first looks for Maven's standard directory layout, (a "src" directory followed by a "resources" directory grandchild). If that is not found, Bazel then looks for the topmost directory named "java" or "javatests" (so, for example, if a resource is at <workspace root>/x/java/y/java/z, the path of the resource will be y/java/z. This heuristic cannot be overridden, however, the resource_strip_prefix attribute can be used to specify a specific alternative directory for resource files.

add_exports

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-exports= flags.

add_opens

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to reflectively access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-opens= flags.

bootclasspath

Label; default is None

Restricted API, do not use!
classpath_resources

List of labels; default is []

DO NOT USE THIS OPTION UNLESS THERE IS NO OTHER WAY)

A list of resources that must be located at the root of the java tree. This attribute's only purpose is to support third-party libraries that require that their resources be found on the classpath as exactly "myconfig.xml". It is only allowed on binaries and not libraries, due to the danger of namespace conflicts.

create_executable

Boolean; default is True

Deprecated, use java_single_jar instead.
deploy_env

List of labels; default is []

A list of other java_binary targets which represent the deployment environment for this binary. Set this attribute when building a plugin which will be loaded by another java_binary.
Setting this attribute excludes all dependencies from the runtime classpath (and the deploy jar) of this binary that are shared between this binary and the targets specified in deploy_env.
deploy_manifest_lines

List of strings; default is []

A list of lines to add to the META-INF/manifest.mf file generated for the *_deploy.jar target. The contents of this attribute are not subject to "Make variable" substitution.
javacopts

List of strings; default is []

Extra compiler options for this binary. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

jvm_flags

List of strings; default is []

A list of flags to embed in the wrapper script generated for running this binary. Subject to $(location) and "Make variable" substitution, and Bourne shell tokenization.

The wrapper script for a Java binary includes a CLASSPATH definition (to find all the dependent jars) and invokes the right Java interpreter. The command line generated by the wrapper script includes the name of the main class followed by a "$@" so you can pass along other arguments after the classname. However, arguments intended for parsing by the JVM must be specified before the classname on the command line. The contents of jvm_flags are added to the wrapper script before the classname is listed.

Note that this attribute has no effect on *_deploy.jar outputs.

launcher

Label; default is None

Specify a binary that will be used to run your Java program instead of the normal bin/java program included with the JDK. The target must be a cc_binary. Any cc_binary that implements the Java Invocation API can be specified as a value for this attribute.

By default, Bazel will use the normal JDK launcher (bin/java or java.exe).

The related --java_launcher Bazel flag affects only those java_binary and java_test targets that have not specified a launcher attribute.

Note that your native (C++, SWIG, JNI) dependencies will be built differently depending on whether you are using the JDK launcher or another launcher:

  • If you are using the normal JDK launcher (the default), native dependencies are built as a shared library named {name}_nativedeps.so, where {name} is the name attribute of this java_binary rule. Unused code is not removed by the linker in this configuration.
  • If you are using any other launcher, native (C++) dependencies are statically linked into a binary named {name}_nativedeps, where {name} is the name attribute of this java_binary rule. In this case, the linker will remove any code it thinks is unused from the resulting binary, which means any C++ code accessed only via JNI may not be linked in unless that cc_library target specifies alwayslink = 1.

When using any launcher other than the default JDK launcher, the format of the *_deploy.jar output changes. See the main java_binary docs for details.

main_class

String; default is ""

Name of class with main() method to use as entry point. If a rule uses this option, it does not need a srcs=[...] list. Thus, with this attribute one can make an executable from a Java library that already contains one or more main() methods.

The value of this attribute is a class name, not a source file. The class must be available at runtime: it may be compiled by this rule (from srcs) or provided by direct or transitive dependencies (through runtime_deps or deps). If the class is unavailable, the binary will fail at runtime; there is no build-time check.

Boolean; default is False

plugins

List of labels; default is []

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in this attribute will be run whenever this rule is built. A library may also inherit plugins from dependencies that use exported_plugins. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the resulting jar of this rule.
resource_strip_prefix

String; default is ""

The path prefix to strip from Java resources.

If specified, this path prefix is stripped from every file in the resources attribute. It is an error for a resource file not to be under this directory. If not specified (the default), the path of resource file is determined according to the same logic as the Java package of source files. For example, a source file at stuff/java/foo/bar/a.txt will be located at foo/bar/a.txt.

runtime_deps

List of labels; default is []

Libraries to make available to the final binary or test at runtime only. Like ordinary deps, these will appear on the runtime classpath, but unlike them, not on the compile-time classpath. Dependencies needed only at runtime should be listed here. Dependency-analysis tools should ignore targets that appear in both runtime_deps and deps.
stamp

Integer; default is -1

Whether to encode build information into the binary. Possible values:
  • stamp = 1: Always stamp the build information into the binary, even in --nostamp builds. This setting should be avoided, since it potentially kills remote caching for the binary and any downstream actions that depend on it.
  • stamp = 0: Always replace build information by constant values. This gives good build result caching.
  • stamp = -1: Embedding of build information is controlled by the --[no]stamp flag.

Stamped binaries are not rebuilt unless their dependencies change.

use_launcher

Boolean; default is True

Whether the binary should use a custom launcher.

If this attribute is set to false, the launcher attribute and the related --java_launcher flag will be ignored for this target.

use_testrunner

Boolean; default is False

Use the test runner (by default com.google.testing.junit.runner.BazelTestRunner) class as the main entry point for a Java program, and provide the test class to the test runner as a value of bazel.test_suite system property.
You can use this to override the default behavior, which is to use test runner for java_test rules, and not use it for java_binary rules. It is unlikely you will want to do this. One use is for AllTest rules that are invoked by another rule (to set up a database before running the tests, for example). The AllTest rule must be declared as a java_binary, but should still use the test runner as its main entry point. The name of a test runner class can be overridden with main_class attribute.

java_import

View rule source
java_import(name, deps, data, add_exports, add_opens, compatible_with, constraints, deprecation, distribs, exec_compatible_with, exec_properties, exports, features, jars, licenses, neverlink, proguard_specs, restricted_to, runtime_deps, srcjar, tags, target_compatible_with, testonly, toolchains, visibility)

This rule allows the use of precompiled .jar files as libraries for java_library and java_binary rules.

Examples


    java_import(
        name = "maven_model",
        jars = [
            "maven_model/maven-aether-provider-3.2.3.jar",
            "maven_model/maven-model-3.2.3.jar",
            "maven_model/maven-model-builder-3.2.3.jar",
        ],
    )

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; default is []

The list of other libraries to be linked in to the target. See java_library.deps.
data

List of labels; default is []

The list of files needed by this rule at runtime.
add_exports

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-exports= flags.

add_opens

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to reflectively access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-opens= flags.

constraints

List of strings; default is []

Extra constraints imposed on this rule as a Java library.
exports

List of labels; default is []

Targets to make available to users of this rule. See java_library.exports.
jars

List of labels; required

The list of JAR files provided to Java targets that depend on this target.

Boolean; default is False

Only use this library for compilation and not at runtime. Useful if the library will be provided by the runtime environment during execution. Examples of libraries like this are IDE APIs for IDE plug-ins or tools.jar for anything running on a standard JDK.
proguard_specs

List of labels; default is []

Files to be used as Proguard specification. These will describe the set of specifications to be used by Proguard. If specified, they will be added to any android_binary target depending on this library. The files included here must only have idempotent rules, namely -dontnote, -dontwarn, assumenosideeffects, and rules that start with -keep. Other options can only appear in android_binary's proguard_specs, to ensure non-tautological merges.
runtime_deps

List of labels; default is []

Libraries to make available to the final binary or test at runtime only. See java_library.runtime_deps.
srcjar

Label; default is None

A JAR file that contains source code for the compiled JAR files.

java_library

View rule source
java_library(name, deps, srcs, data, resources, add_exports, add_opens, bootclasspath, compatible_with, deprecation, distribs, exec_compatible_with, exec_properties, exported_plugins, exports, features, javabuilder_jvm_flags, javacopts, licenses, neverlink, plugins, proguard_specs, resource_strip_prefix, restricted_to, runtime_deps, tags, target_compatible_with, testonly, toolchains, visibility)

This rule compiles and links sources into a .jar file.

Implicit outputs

  • libname.jar: A Java archive containing the class files.
  • libname-src.jar: An archive containing the sources ("source jar").

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; default is []

The list of libraries to link into this library. See general comments about deps at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.

The jars built by java_library rules listed in deps will be on the compile-time classpath of this rule. Furthermore the transitive closure of their deps, runtime_deps and exports will be on the runtime classpath.

By contrast, targets in the data attribute are included in the runfiles but on neither the compile-time nor runtime classpath.

srcs

List of labels; default is []

The list of source files that are processed to create the target. This attribute is almost always required; see exceptions below.

Source files of type .java are compiled. In case of generated .java files it is generally advisable to put the generating rule's name here instead of the name of the file itself. This not only improves readability but makes the rule more resilient to future changes: if the generating rule generates different files in the future, you only need to fix one place: the outs of the generating rule. You should not list the generating rule in deps because it is a no-op.

Source files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule.)

Rules: if the rule (typically genrule or filegroup) generates any of the files listed above, they will be used the same way as described for source files.

Source files of type .properties are treated as resources.

All other files are ignored, as long as there is at least one file of a file type described above. Otherwise an error is raised.

This argument is almost always required, except if you specify the runtime_deps argument.

data

List of labels; default is []

The list of files needed by this library at runtime. See general comments about data at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.

When building a java_library, Bazel doesn't put these files anywhere; if the data files are generated files then Bazel generates them. When building a test that depends on this java_library Bazel copies or links the data files into the runfiles area.

resources

List of labels; default is []

A list of data files to include in a Java jar.

Resources may be source files or generated files.

If resources are specified, they will be bundled in the jar along with the usual .class files produced by compilation. The location of the resources inside of the jar file is determined by the project structure. Bazel first looks for Maven's standard directory layout, (a "src" directory followed by a "resources" directory grandchild). If that is not found, Bazel then looks for the topmost directory named "java" or "javatests" (so, for example, if a resource is at <workspace root>/x/java/y/java/z, the path of the resource will be y/java/z. This heuristic cannot be overridden, however, the resource_strip_prefix attribute can be used to specify a specific alternative directory for resource files.

add_exports

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-exports= flags.

add_opens

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to reflectively access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-opens= flags.

bootclasspath

Label; default is None

Restricted API, do not use!
exported_plugins

List of labels; default is []

The list of java_plugins (e.g. annotation processors) to export to libraries that directly depend on this library.

The specified list of java_plugins will be applied to any library which directly depends on this library, just as if that library had explicitly declared these labels in plugins.

exports

List of labels; default is []

Exported libraries.

Listing rules here will make them available to parent rules, as if the parents explicitly depended on these rules. This is not true for regular (non-exported) deps.

Summary: a rule X can access the code in Y if there exists a dependency path between them that begins with a deps edge followed by zero or more exports edges. Let's see some examples to illustrate this.

Assume A depends on B and B depends on C. In this case C is a transitive dependency of A, so changing C's sources and rebuilding A will correctly rebuild everything. However A will not be able to use classes in C. To allow that, either A has to declare C in its deps, or B can make it easier for A (and anything that may depend on A) by declaring C in its (B's) exports attribute.

The closure of exported libraries is available to all direct parent rules. Take a slightly different example: A depends on B, B depends on C and D, and also exports C but not D. Now A has access to C but not to D. Now, if C and D exported some libraries, C' and D' respectively, A could only access C' but not D'.

Important: an exported rule is not a regular dependency. Sticking to the previous example, if B exports C and wants to also use C, it has to also list it in its own deps.

javabuilder_jvm_flags

List of strings; default is []

Restricted API, do not use!
javacopts

List of strings; default is []

Extra compiler options for this library. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

Boolean; default is False

Whether this library should only be used for compilation and not at runtime. Useful if the library will be provided by the runtime environment during execution. Examples of such libraries are the IDE APIs for IDE plug-ins or tools.jar for anything running on a standard JDK.

Note that neverlink = 1 does not prevent the compiler from inlining material from this library into compilation targets that depend on it, as permitted by the Java Language Specification (e.g., static final constants of String or of primitive types). The preferred use case is therefore when the runtime library is identical to the compilation library.

If the runtime library differs from the compilation library then you must ensure that it differs only in places that the JLS forbids compilers to inline (and that must hold for all future versions of the JLS).

plugins

List of labels; default is []

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in this attribute will be run whenever this rule is built. A library may also inherit plugins from dependencies that use exported_plugins. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the resulting jar of this rule.
proguard_specs

List of labels; default is []

Files to be used as Proguard specification. These will describe the set of specifications to be used by Proguard. If specified, they will be added to any android_binary target depending on this library. The files included here must only have idempotent rules, namely -dontnote, -dontwarn, assumenosideeffects, and rules that start with -keep. Other options can only appear in android_binary's proguard_specs, to ensure non-tautological merges.
resource_strip_prefix

String; default is ""

The path prefix to strip from Java resources.

If specified, this path prefix is stripped from every file in the resources attribute. It is an error for a resource file not to be under this directory. If not specified (the default), the path of resource file is determined according to the same logic as the Java package of source files. For example, a source file at stuff/java/foo/bar/a.txt will be located at foo/bar/a.txt.

runtime_deps

List of labels; default is []

Libraries to make available to the final binary or test at runtime only. Like ordinary deps, these will appear on the runtime classpath, but unlike them, not on the compile-time classpath. Dependencies needed only at runtime should be listed here. Dependency-analysis tools should ignore targets that appear in both runtime_deps and deps.

java_test

View rule source
java_test(name, deps, srcs, data, resources, add_exports, add_opens, args, bootclasspath, classpath_resources, compatible_with, create_executable, deploy_manifest_lines, deprecation, distribs, env, env_inherit, exec_compatible_with, exec_properties, features, flaky, javacopts, jvm_flags, launcher, licenses, local, main_class, neverlink, plugins, resource_strip_prefix, restricted_to, runtime_deps, shard_count, size, stamp, tags, target_compatible_with, test_class, testonly, timeout, toolchains, use_launcher, use_testrunner, visibility)

A java_test() rule compiles a Java test. A test is a binary wrapper around your test code. The test runner's main method is invoked instead of the main class being compiled.

Implicit output targets

  • name.jar: A Java archive.
  • name_deploy.jar: A Java archive suitable for deployment. (Only built if explicitly requested.) See the description of the name_deploy.jar output from java_binary for more details.

See the section on java_binary() arguments. This rule also supports all attributes common to all test rules (*_test).

Examples



java_library(
    name = "tests",
    srcs = glob(["*.java"]),
    deps = [
        "//java/com/foo/base:testResources",
        "//java/com/foo/testing/util",
    ],
)

java_test(
    name = "AllTests",
    size = "small",
    runtime_deps = [
        ":tests",
        "//util/mysql",
    ],
)

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; default is []

The list of other libraries to be linked in to the target. See general comments about deps at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.
srcs

List of labels; default is []

The list of source files that are processed to create the target. This attribute is almost always required; see exceptions below.

Source files of type .java are compiled. In case of generated .java files it is generally advisable to put the generating rule's name here instead of the name of the file itself. This not only improves readability but makes the rule more resilient to future changes: if the generating rule generates different files in the future, you only need to fix one place: the outs of the generating rule. You should not list the generating rule in deps because it is a no-op.

Source files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule.)

Rules: if the rule (typically genrule or filegroup) generates any of the files listed above, they will be used the same way as described for source files.

This argument is almost always required, except if a main_class attribute specifies a class on the runtime classpath or you specify the runtime_deps argument.

data

List of labels; default is []

The list of files needed by this library at runtime. See general comments about data at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.
resources

List of labels; default is []

A list of data files to include in a Java jar.

Resources may be source files or generated files.

If resources are specified, they will be bundled in the jar along with the usual .class files produced by compilation. The location of the resources inside of the jar file is determined by the project structure. Bazel first looks for Maven's standard directory layout, (a "src" directory followed by a "resources" directory grandchild). If that is not found, Bazel then looks for the topmost directory named "java" or "javatests" (so, for example, if a resource is at <workspace root>/x/java/y/java/z, the path of the resource will be y/java/z. This heuristic cannot be overridden, however, the resource_strip_prefix attribute can be used to specify a specific alternative directory for resource files.

add_exports

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-exports= flags.

add_opens

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to reflectively access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-opens= flags.

bootclasspath

Label; default is None

Restricted API, do not use!
classpath_resources

List of labels; default is []

DO NOT USE THIS OPTION UNLESS THERE IS NO OTHER WAY)

A list of resources that must be located at the root of the java tree. This attribute's only purpose is to support third-party libraries that require that their resources be found on the classpath as exactly "myconfig.xml". It is only allowed on binaries and not libraries, due to the danger of namespace conflicts.

create_executable

Boolean; default is True

Deprecated, use java_single_jar instead.
deploy_manifest_lines

List of strings; default is []

A list of lines to add to the META-INF/manifest.mf file generated for the *_deploy.jar target. The contents of this attribute are not subject to "Make variable" substitution.
javacopts

List of strings; default is []

Extra compiler options for this binary. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

jvm_flags

List of strings; default is []

A list of flags to embed in the wrapper script generated for running this binary. Subject to $(location) and "Make variable" substitution, and Bourne shell tokenization.

The wrapper script for a Java binary includes a CLASSPATH definition (to find all the dependent jars) and invokes the right Java interpreter. The command line generated by the wrapper script includes the name of the main class followed by a "$@" so you can pass along other arguments after the classname. However, arguments intended for parsing by the JVM must be specified before the classname on the command line. The contents of jvm_flags are added to the wrapper script before the classname is listed.

Note that this attribute has no effect on *_deploy.jar outputs.

launcher

Label; default is None

Specify a binary that will be used to run your Java program instead of the normal bin/java program included with the JDK. The target must be a cc_binary. Any cc_binary that implements the Java Invocation API can be specified as a value for this attribute.

By default, Bazel will use the normal JDK launcher (bin/java or java.exe).

The related --java_launcher Bazel flag affects only those java_binary and java_test targets that have not specified a launcher attribute.

Note that your native (C++, SWIG, JNI) dependencies will be built differently depending on whether you are using the JDK launcher or another launcher:

  • If you are using the normal JDK launcher (the default), native dependencies are built as a shared library named {name}_nativedeps.so, where {name} is the name attribute of this java_binary rule. Unused code is not removed by the linker in this configuration.
  • If you are using any other launcher, native (C++) dependencies are statically linked into a binary named {name}_nativedeps, where {name} is the name attribute of this java_binary rule. In this case, the linker will remove any code it thinks is unused from the resulting binary, which means any C++ code accessed only via JNI may not be linked in unless that cc_library target specifies alwayslink = 1.

When using any launcher other than the default JDK launcher, the format of the *_deploy.jar output changes. See the main java_binary docs for details.

main_class

String; default is ""

Name of class with main() method to use as entry point. If a rule uses this option, it does not need a srcs=[...] list. Thus, with this attribute one can make an executable from a Java library that already contains one or more main() methods.

The value of this attribute is a class name, not a source file. The class must be available at runtime: it may be compiled by this rule (from srcs) or provided by direct or transitive dependencies (through runtime_deps or deps). If the class is unavailable, the binary will fail at runtime; there is no build-time check.

Boolean; default is False

plugins

List of labels; default is []

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in this attribute will be run whenever this rule is built. A library may also inherit plugins from dependencies that use exported_plugins. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the resulting jar of this rule.
resource_strip_prefix

String; default is ""

The path prefix to strip from Java resources.

If specified, this path prefix is stripped from every file in the resources attribute. It is an error for a resource file not to be under this directory. If not specified (the default), the path of resource file is determined according to the same logic as the Java package of source files. For example, a source file at stuff/java/foo/bar/a.txt will be located at foo/bar/a.txt.

runtime_deps

List of labels; default is []

Libraries to make available to the final binary or test at runtime only. Like ordinary deps, these will appear on the runtime classpath, but unlike them, not on the compile-time classpath. Dependencies needed only at runtime should be listed here. Dependency-analysis tools should ignore targets that appear in both runtime_deps and deps.
stamp

Integer; default is 0

Whether to encode build information into the binary. Possible values:
  • stamp = 1: Always stamp the build information into the binary, even in --nostamp builds. This setting should be avoided, since it potentially kills remote caching for the binary and any downstream actions that depend on it.
  • stamp = 0: Always replace build information by constant values. This gives good build result caching.
  • stamp = -1: Embedding of build information is controlled by the --[no]stamp flag.

Stamped binaries are not rebuilt unless their dependencies change.

test_class

String; default is ""

The Java class to be loaded by the test runner.

By default, if this argument is not defined then the legacy mode is used and the test arguments are used instead. Set the --nolegacy_bazel_java_test flag to not fallback on the first argument.

This attribute specifies the name of a Java class to be run by this test. It is rare to need to set this. If this argument is omitted, it will be inferred using the target's name and its source-root-relative path. If the test is located outside a known source root, Bazel will report an error if test_class is unset.

For JUnit3, the test class needs to either be a subclass of junit.framework.TestCase or it needs to have a public static suite() method that returns a junit.framework.Test (or a subclass of Test). For JUnit4, the class needs to be annotated with org.junit.runner.RunWith.

This attribute allows several java_test rules to share the same Test (TestCase, TestSuite, ...). Typically additional information is passed to it (e.g. via jvm_flags=['-Dkey=value']) so that its behavior differs in each case, such as running a different subset of the tests. This attribute also enables the use of Java tests outside the javatests tree.

use_launcher

Boolean; default is True

Whether the binary should use a custom launcher.

If this attribute is set to false, the launcher attribute and the related --java_launcher flag will be ignored for this target.

use_testrunner

Boolean; default is True

Use the test runner (by default com.google.testing.junit.runner.BazelTestRunner) class as the main entry point for a Java program, and provide the test class to the test runner as a value of bazel.test_suite system property.
You can use this to override the default behavior, which is to use test runner for java_test rules, and not use it for java_binary rules. It is unlikely you will want to do this. One use is for AllTest rules that are invoked by another rule (to set up a database before running the tests, for example). The AllTest rule must be declared as a java_binary, but should still use the test runner as its main entry point. The name of a test runner class can be overridden with main_class attribute.

java_plugin

View rule source
java_plugin(name, deps, srcs, data, resources, add_exports, add_opens, bootclasspath, compatible_with, deprecation, distribs, exec_compatible_with, exec_properties, features, generates_api, javabuilder_jvm_flags, javacopts, licenses, neverlink, output_licenses, plugins, processor_class, proguard_specs, resource_strip_prefix, restricted_to, tags, target_compatible_with, testonly, toolchains, visibility)

java_plugin defines plugins for the Java compiler run by Bazel. The only supported kind of plugins are annotation processors. A java_library or java_binary rule can run plugins by depending on them via the plugins attribute. A java_library can also automatically export plugins to libraries that directly depend on it using exported_plugins.

Implicit output targets

  • libname.jar: A Java archive.

Arguments are identical to java_library, except for the addition of the processor_class argument.

Arguments

Attributes
name

Name; required

A unique name for this target.

deps

List of labels; default is []

The list of libraries to link into this library. See general comments about deps at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.

The jars built by java_library rules listed in deps will be on the compile-time classpath of this rule. Furthermore the transitive closure of their deps, runtime_deps and exports will be on the runtime classpath.

By contrast, targets in the data attribute are included in the runfiles but on neither the compile-time nor runtime classpath.

srcs

List of labels; default is []

The list of source files that are processed to create the target. This attribute is almost always required; see exceptions below.

Source files of type .java are compiled. In case of generated .java files it is generally advisable to put the generating rule's name here instead of the name of the file itself. This not only improves readability but makes the rule more resilient to future changes: if the generating rule generates different files in the future, you only need to fix one place: the outs of the generating rule. You should not list the generating rule in deps because it is a no-op.

Source files of type .srcjar are unpacked and compiled. (This is useful if you need to generate a set of .java files with a genrule.)

Rules: if the rule (typically genrule or filegroup) generates any of the files listed above, they will be used the same way as described for source files.

Source files of type .properties are treated as resources.

All other files are ignored, as long as there is at least one file of a file type described above. Otherwise an error is raised.

This argument is almost always required, except if you specify the runtime_deps argument.

data

List of labels; default is []

The list of files needed by this library at runtime. See general comments about data at Typical attributes defined by most build rules.

When building a java_library, Bazel doesn't put these files anywhere; if the data files are generated files then Bazel generates them. When building a test that depends on this java_library Bazel copies or links the data files into the runfiles area.

resources

List of labels; default is []

A list of data files to include in a Java jar.

Resources may be source files or generated files.

If resources are specified, they will be bundled in the jar along with the usual .class files produced by compilation. The location of the resources inside of the jar file is determined by the project structure. Bazel first looks for Maven's standard directory layout, (a "src" directory followed by a "resources" directory grandchild). If that is not found, Bazel then looks for the topmost directory named "java" or "javatests" (so, for example, if a resource is at <workspace root>/x/java/y/java/z, the path of the resource will be y/java/z. This heuristic cannot be overridden, however, the resource_strip_prefix attribute can be used to specify a specific alternative directory for resource files.

add_exports

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-exports= flags.

add_opens

List of strings; default is []

Allow this library to reflectively access the given module or package.

This corresponds to the javac and JVM --add-opens= flags.

bootclasspath

Label; default is None

Restricted API, do not use!
generates_api

Boolean; default is False

This attribute marks annotation processors that generate API code.

If a rule uses an API-generating annotation processor, other rules depending on it can refer to the generated code only if their compilation actions are scheduled after the generating rule. This attribute instructs Bazel to introduce scheduling constraints when --java_header_compilation is enabled.

WARNING: This attribute affects build performance, use it only if necessary.

javabuilder_jvm_flags

List of strings; default is []

Restricted API, do not use!
javacopts

List of strings; default is []

Extra compiler options for this library. Subject to "Make variable" substitution and Bourne shell tokenization.

These compiler options are passed to javac after the global compiler options.

Boolean; default is False

Whether this library should only be used for compilation and not at runtime. Useful if the library will be provided by the runtime environment during execution. Examples of such libraries are the IDE APIs for IDE plug-ins or tools.jar for anything running on a standard JDK.

Note that neverlink = 1 does not prevent the compiler from inlining material from this library into compilation targets that depend on it, as permitted by the Java Language Specification (e.g., static final constants of String or of primitive types). The preferred use case is therefore when the runtime library is identical to the compilation library.

If the runtime library differs from the compilation library then you must ensure that it differs only in places that the JLS forbids compilers to inline (and that must hold for all future versions of the JLS).

output_licenses

List of strings; default is []

plugins

List of labels; default is []

Java compiler plugins to run at compile-time. Every java_plugin specified in this attribute will be run whenever this rule is built. A library may also inherit plugins from dependencies that use exported_plugins. Resources generated by the plugin will be included in the resulting jar of this rule.
processor_class

String; default is ""

The processor class is the fully qualified type of the class that the Java compiler should use as entry point to the annotation processor. If not specified, this rule will not contribute an annotation processor to the Java compiler's annotation processing, but its runtime classpath will still be included on the compiler's annotation processor path. (This is primarily intended for use by Error Prone plugins, which are loaded from the annotation processor path using java.util.ServiceLoader.)
proguard_specs

List of labels; default is []

Files to be used as Proguard specification. These will describe the set of specifications to be used by Proguard. If specified, they will be added to any android_binary target depending on this library. The files included here must only have idempotent rules, namely -dontnote, -dontwarn, assumenosideeffects, and rules that start with -keep. Other options can only appear in android_binary's proguard_specs, to ensure non-tautological merges.
resource_strip_prefix

String; default is ""

The path prefix to strip from Java resources.

If specified, this path prefix is stripped from every file in the resources attribute. It is an error for a resource file not to be under this directory. If not specified (the default), the path of resource file is determined according to the same logic as the Java package of source files. For example, a source file at stuff/java/foo/bar/a.txt will be located at foo/bar/a.txt.