Swift Rules for Bazel
This repository contains rules for Bazel that can be used to build Swift libraries, tests, and executables for macOS and Linux.
To build applications for all of Apple's platforms (macOS, iOS, tvOS, visionOS, and watchOS), they can be combined with the Apple Rules.
If you run into any problems with these rules, please file an issue!
Create a simple CLI that can run on macOS, Linux, or Windows:
load("@build_bazel_rules_swift//swift:swift_binary.bzl", "swift_binary")
swift_binary(
name = "cli",
srcs = ["CLI.swift"],
)
Create a single library target that can be used by other targets in your build:
load("@build_bazel_rules_swift//swift:swift_library.bzl", "swift_library")
swift_library(
name = "MyLibrary",
srcs = ["MyLibrary.swift"],
tags = ["manual"],
)
Click here for the reference documentation for the rules and other definitions in this repository.
Before getting started, make sure that you have a Swift toolchain installed.
Apple users: Install Xcode. If this is your first time installing it, make sure to open it once after installing so that the command line tools are correctly configured.
Linux users: Follow the instructions on the Swift download page to download and install the appropriate Swift toolchain for your platform. Take care to ensure that you have all of Swift's dependencies installed (such as ICU, Clang, and so forth), and also ensure that the Swift compiler is available on your system path.
Copy the WORKSPACE
snippet from the releases
page.
The swift_binary
and swift_test
rules expect to use clang
as the driver
for linking, and they query the Bazel C++ API and CROSSTOOL to determine which
arguments should be passed to the linker. By default, the C++ toolchain used by
Bazel is gcc
, so Swift users on Linux need to override this by setting the
environment variable CC=clang
when invoking Bazel.
This step is not necessary for macOS users because the Xcode toolchain always
uses clang
.
macOS hosts: You can build with a custom Swift toolchain (downloaded from https://swift.org/download) instead of Xcode's default. To do so, pass the following flag to Bazel:
--action_env=TOOLCHAINS=toolchain.id
Where toolchain.id
is the value of the CFBundleIdentifier
key in the
toolchain's Info.plist file.
To list the available toolchains and their bundle identifiers, you can run:
bazel run @build_bazel_rules_swift//tools/dump_toolchains
Linux hosts: At this time, Bazel uses whichever swift
executable is
encountered first on your PATH
.
To make cacheable builds work correctly with debugging see this doc.
To download, build, and reference external Swift packages as Bazel targets, check out rules_swift_package_manager.
rules_apple and rules_swift are often affected by changes in bazel itself. This means you generally need to update these rules as you update bazel.
You can also see the supported bazel versions in the notes for each release on the releases page.
Besides these constraint this repo follows semver as best as we can since the 1.0.0 release.
Bazel release | Minimum supported rules version | Final supported rules version |
---|---|---|
8.x (most recent rolling) | 0.27.0 | current |
7.x | 0.27.0 | current |
6.x | 0.27.0 | current |
5.x | 0.25.0 | 1.14.0 |
4.x | 0.19.0 | 0.24.0 |
3.x | 0.14.0 | 0.18.0 |