Last month the Google Bazel team hosted its largest ever Bazel user conference: BazelCon 2019, an annual gathering of the community surrounding the Bazel build system. This is the main Bazel event of the year which serves as an opportunity for Bazel contributors, maintainers, and users to meet and learn from each other, present Bazel migration stories, educate new users, and collaborate together o
Dropbox server-side software lives in a large monorepo. One lesson we’ve learned scaling the monorepo is to minimize the number of global operations that operate on the repository as a whole. Years ago, it was reasonable to run our entire test corpus on every commit to the repository. This scheme became untenable as we added more tests. One obvious inefficiency is the pointless and wasteful execut
After the Whistler All-Hands this past summer, I started seriously looking at whether Firefox should switch to using Bazel for its build system. The motivation behind switching build systems was twofold. The first motivation was that build times are one of the most visible developer-facing aspects of the build system and everybody appreciates faster builds. What’s less obvious, but equally impor
We're excited to announce the first General Availability release of Bazel, an open source build system designed to support a wide variety of programming languages and platforms. Bazel was born of Google's own needs for highly scalable builds. When we open sourced Bazel back in 2015, we hoped that Bazel could fulfill similar needs in the software development industry. A growing list of Bazel users
Happy Halloween! On this not-so-spooky episode of the Google Cloud Podcast, Melanie and Mark talk with Tony Aiuto of Bazel. Bazel grew from Google’s internal build system, Blaze, to become the open source Bazel that it is today. The aim of the project is to quickly make very large builds across multiple languages. Tony Aiuto Tony is the tech-lead/manager for Bazel Product Excellence. He works on r
The latest news from Google on open source releases, major projects, events, and student outreach programs. Usage of containers in software applications is on the rise, and with their increasing usage in production comes a need for robust testing and validation. Containers provide great testing environments, but actually validating the structure of the containers themselves can be tricky. The Dock
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