This page describes the toolchain framework, which is a way for rule authors to decouple their rule logic from platform-based selection of tools. It is recommended to read the rules and platforms pages before continuing. This page covers why toolchains are needed, how to define and use them, and how Bazel selects an appropriate toolchain based on platform constraints.
Motivation
Let's first look at the problem toolchains are designed to solve. Suppose you
are writing rules to support the "bar" programming language. Your bar_binary
rule would compile *.bar
files using the barc
compiler, a tool that itself
is built as another target in your workspace. Since users who write bar_binary
targets shouldn't have to specify a dependency on the compiler, you make it an
implicit dependency by adding it to the rule definition as a private attribute.
bar_binary = rule(
implementation = _bar_binary_impl,
attrs = {
"srcs": attr.label_list(allow_files = True),
...
"_compiler": attr.label(
default = "//bar_tools:barc_linux", # the compiler running on linux
providers = [BarcInfo],
),
},
)
//bar_tools:barc_linux
is now a dependency of every bar_binary
target, so
it'll be built before any bar_binary
target. It can be accessed by the rule's
implementation function just like any other attribute:
BarcInfo = provider(
doc = "Information about how to invoke the barc compiler.",
# In the real world, compiler_path and system_lib might hold File objects,
# but for simplicity they are strings for this example. arch_flags is a list
# of strings.
fields = ["compiler_path", "system_lib", "arch_flags"],
)
def _bar_binary_impl(ctx):
...
info = ctx.attr._compiler[BarcInfo]
command = "%s -l %s %s" % (
info.compiler_path,
info.system_lib,
" ".join(info.arch_flags),
)
...
The issue here is that the compiler's label is hardcoded into bar_binary
, yet
different targets may need different compilers depending on what platform they
are being built for and what platform they are being built on -- called the
target platform and execution platform, respectively. Furthermore, the rule
author does not necessarily even know all the available tools and platforms, so
it is not feasible to hardcode them in the rule's definition.
A less-than-ideal solution would be to shift the burden onto users, by making
the _compiler
attribute non-private. Then individual targets could be
hardcoded to build for one platform or another.
bar_binary(
name = "myprog_on_linux",
srcs = ["mysrc.bar"],
compiler = "//bar_tools:barc_linux",
)
bar_binary(
name = "myprog_on_windows",
srcs = ["mysrc.bar"],
compiler = "//bar_tools:barc_windows",
)
You can improve on this solution by using select
to choose the compiler
based on the platform:
config_setting(
name = "on_linux",
constraint_values = [
"@platforms//os:linux",
],
)
config_setting(
name = "on_windows",
constraint_values = [
"@platforms//os:windows",
],
)
bar_binary(
name = "myprog",
srcs = ["mysrc.bar"],
compiler = select({
":on_linux": "//bar_tools:barc_linux",
":on_windows": "//bar_tools:barc_windows",
}),
)
But this is tedious and a bit much to ask of every single bar_binary
user.
If this style is not used consistently throughout the workspace, it leads to
builds that work fine on a single platform but fail when extended to
multi-platform scenarios. It also does not address the problem of adding support
for new platforms and compilers without modifying existing rules or targets.
The toolchain framework solves this problem by adding an extra level of indirection. Essentially, you declare that your rule has an abstract dependency on some member of a family of targets (a toolchain type), and Bazel automatically resolves this to a particular target (a toolchain) based on the applicable platform constraints. Neither the rule author nor the target author need know the complete set of available platforms and toolchains.
Writing rules that use toolchains
Under the toolchain framework, instead of having rules depend directly on tools, they instead depend on toolchain types. A toolchain type is a simple target that represents a class of tools that serve the same role for different platforms. For instance, you can declare a type that represents the bar compiler:
# By convention, toolchain_type targets are named "toolchain_type" and
# distinguished by their package path. So the full path for this would be
# //bar_tools:toolchain_type.
toolchain_type(name = "toolchain_type")
The rule definition in the previous section is modified so that instead of
taking in the compiler as an attribute, it declares that it consumes a
//bar_tools:toolchain_type
toolchain.
bar_binary = rule(
implementation = _bar_binary_impl,
attrs = {
"srcs": attr.label_list(allow_files = True),
...
# No `_compiler` attribute anymore.
},
toolchains = ["//bar_tools:toolchain_type"],
)
The implementation function now accesses this dependency under ctx.toolchains
instead of ctx.attr
, using the toolchain type as the key.
def _bar_binary_impl(ctx):
...
info = ctx.toolchains["//bar_tools:toolchain_type"].barcinfo
# The rest is unchanged.
command = "%s -l %s %s" % (
info.compiler_path,
info.system_lib,
" ".join(info.arch_flags),
)
...
ctx.toolchains["//bar_tools:toolchain_type"]
returns the
ToolchainInfo
provider
of whatever target Bazel resolved the toolchain dependency to. The fields of the
ToolchainInfo
object are set by the underlying tool's rule; in the next
section, this rule is defined such that there is a barcinfo
field that wraps
a BarcInfo
object.
Bazel's procedure for resolving toolchains to targets is described
below. Only the resolved toolchain target is actually
made a dependency of the bar_binary
target, not the whole space of candidate
toolchains.
Mandatory and Optional Toolchains
By default, when a rule expresses a toolchain type dependency using a bare label (as shown above), the toolchain type is considered to be mandatory. If Bazel is unable to find a matching toolchain (see Toolchain resolution below) for a mandatory toolchain type, this is an error and analysis halts.
It is possible instead to declare an optional toolchain type dependency, as follows:
bar_binary = rule(
...
toolchains = [
config_common.toolchain_type("//bar_tools:toolchain_type", mandatory = False),
],
)
When an optional toolchain type cannot be resolved, analysis continues, and the
result of ctx.toolchains["//bar_tools:toolchain_type"]
is None
.
The config_common.toolchain_type
function defaults to mandatory.
The following forms can be used:
- Mandatory toolchain types:
toolchains = ["//bar_tools:toolchain_type"]
toolchains = [config_common.toolchain_type("//bar_tools:toolchain_type")]
toolchains = [config_common.toolchain_type("//bar_tools:toolchain_type", mandatory = True)]
- Optional toolchain types:
toolchains = [config_common.toolchain_type("//bar_tools:toolchain_type", mandatory = False)]
bar_binary = rule(
...
toolchains = [
"//foo_tools:toolchain_type",
config_common.toolchain_type("//bar_tools:toolchain_type", mandatory = False),
],
)
You can mix and match forms in the same rule, also. However, if the same toolchain type is listed multiple times, it will take the most strict version, where mandatory is more strict than optional.
Writing aspects that use toolchains
Aspects have access to the same toolchain API as rules: you can define required toolchain types, access toolchains via the context, and use them to generate new actions using the toolchain.
bar_aspect = aspect(
implementation = _bar_aspect_impl,
attrs = {},
toolchains = ['//bar_tools:toolchain_type'],
)
def _bar_aspect_impl(target, ctx):
toolchain = ctx.toolchains['//bar_tools:toolchain_type']
# Use the toolchain provider like in a rule.
return []
Defining toolchains
To define some toolchains for a given toolchain type, you need three things:
A language-specific rule representing the kind of tool or tool suite. By convention this rule's name is suffixed with "_toolchain".
- Note: The
\_toolchain
rule cannot create any build actions. Rather, it collects artifacts from other rules and forwards them to the rule that uses the toolchain. That rule is responsible for creating all build actions.
- Note: The
Several targets of this rule type, representing versions of the tool or tool suite for different platforms.
For each such target, an associated target of the generic
toolchain
rule, to provide metadata used by the toolchain framework. Thistoolchain
target also refers to thetoolchain_type
associated with this toolchain. This means that a given_toolchain
rule could be associated with anytoolchain_type
, and that only in atoolchain
instance that uses this_toolchain
rule that the rule is associated with atoolchain_type
.
For our running example, here's a definition for a bar_toolchain
rule. Our
example has only a compiler, but other tools such as a linker could also be
grouped underneath it.
def _bar_toolchain_impl(ctx):
toolchain_info = platform_common.ToolchainInfo(
barcinfo = BarcInfo(
compiler_path = ctx.attr.compiler_path,
system_lib = ctx.attr.system_lib,
arch_flags = ctx.attr.arch_flags,
),
)
return [toolchain_info]
bar_toolchain = rule(
implementation = _bar_toolchain_impl,
attrs = {
"compiler_path": attr.string(),
"system_lib": attr.string(),
"arch_flags": attr.string_list(),
},
)
The rule must return a ToolchainInfo
provider, which becomes the object that
the consuming rule retrieves using ctx.toolchains
and the label of the
toolchain type. ToolchainInfo
, like struct
, can hold arbitrary field-value
pairs. The specification of exactly what fields are added to the ToolchainInfo
should be clearly documented at the toolchain type. In this example, the values
return wrapped in a BarcInfo
object to reuse the schema defined above; this
style may be useful for validation and code reuse.
Now you can define targets for specific barc
compilers.
bar_toolchain(
name = "barc_linux",
arch_flags = [
"--arch=Linux",
"--debug_everything",
],
compiler_path = "/path/to/barc/on/linux",
system_lib = "/usr/lib/libbarc.so",
)
bar_toolchain(
name = "barc_windows",
arch_flags = [
"--arch=Windows",
# Different flags, no debug support on windows.
],
compiler_path = "C:\\path\\on\\windows\\barc.exe",
system_lib = "C:\\path\\on\\windows\\barclib.dll",
)
Finally, you create toolchain
definitions for the two bar_toolchain
targets.
These definitions link the language-specific targets to the toolchain type and
provide the constraint information that tells Bazel when the toolchain is
appropriate for a given platform.
toolchain(
name = "barc_linux_toolchain",
exec_compatible_with = [
"@platforms//os:linux",
"@platforms//cpu:x86_64",
],
target_compatible_with = [
"@platforms//os:linux",
"@platforms//cpu:x86_64",
],
toolchain = ":barc_linux",
toolchain_type = ":toolchain_type",
)
toolchain(
name = "barc_windows_toolchain",
exec_compatible_with = [
"@platforms//os:windows",
"@platforms//cpu:x86_64",
],
target_compatible_with = [
"@platforms//os:windows",
"@platforms//cpu:x86_64",
],
toolchain = ":barc_windows",
toolchain_type = ":toolchain_type",
)
The use of relative path syntax above suggests these definitions are all in the
same package, but there's no reason the toolchain type, language-specific
toolchain targets, and toolchain
definition targets can't all be in separate
packages.
See the go_toolchain
for a real-world example.
Toolchains and configurations
An important question for rule authors is, when a bar_toolchain
target is
analyzed, what configuration does it see, and what transitions
should be used for dependencies? The example above uses string attributes, but
what would happen for a more complicated toolchain that depends on other targets
in the Bazel repository?
Let's see a more complex version of bar_toolchain
:
def _bar_toolchain_impl(ctx):
# The implementation is mostly the same as above, so skipping.
pass
bar_toolchain = rule(
implementation = _bar_toolchain_impl,
attrs = {
"compiler": attr.label(
executable = True,
mandatory = True,
cfg = "exec",
),
"system_lib": attr.label(
mandatory = True,
cfg = "target",
),
"arch_flags": attr.string_list(),
},
)
The use of attr.label
is the same as for a standard rule,
but the meaning of the cfg
parameter is slightly different.
The dependency from a target (called the "parent") to a toolchain via toolchain
resolution uses a special configuration transition called the "toolchain
transition". The toolchain transition keeps the configuration the same, except
that it forces the execution platform to be the same for the toolchain as for
the parent (otherwise, toolchain resolution for the toolchain could pick any
execution platform, and wouldn't necessarily be the same as for parent). This
allows any exec
dependencies of the toolchain to also be executable for the
parent's build actions. Any of the toolchain's dependencies which use cfg =
"target"
(or which don't specify cfg
, since "target" is the default) are
built for the same target platform as the parent. This allows toolchain rules to
contribute both libraries (the system_lib
attribute above) and tools (the
compiler
attribute) to the build rules which need them. The system libraries
are linked into the final artifact, and so need to be built for the same
platform, whereas the compiler is a tool invoked during the build, and needs to
be able to run on the execution platform.
Registering and building with toolchains
At this point all the building blocks are assembled, and you just need to make
the toolchains available to Bazel's resolution procedure. This is done by
registering the toolchain, either in a MODULE.bazel
file using
register_toolchains()
, or by passing the toolchains' labels on the command
line using the --extra_toolchains
flag.
register_toolchains(
"//bar_tools:barc_linux_toolchain",
"//bar_tools:barc_windows_toolchain",
# Target patterns are also permitted, so you could have also written:
# "//bar_tools:all",
# or even
# "//bar_tools/...",
)
When using target patterns to register toolchains, the order in which the individual toolchains are registered is determined by the following rules:
- The toolchains defined in a subpackage of a package are registered before the toolchains defined in the package itself.
- Within a package, toolchains are registered in the lexicographical order of their names.
Now when you build a target that depends on a toolchain type, an appropriate toolchain will be selected based on the target and execution platforms.
# my_pkg/BUILD
platform(
name = "my_target_platform",
constraint_values = [
"@platforms//os:linux",
],
)
bar_binary(
name = "my_bar_binary",
...
)
bazel build //my_pkg:my_bar_binary --platforms=//my_pkg:my_target_platform
Bazel will see that //my_pkg:my_bar_binary
is being built with a platform that
has @platforms//os:linux
and therefore resolve the
//bar_tools:toolchain_type
reference to //bar_tools:barc_linux_toolchain
.
This will end up building //bar_tools:barc_linux
but not
//bar_tools:barc_windows
.
Toolchain resolution
For each target that uses toolchains, Bazel's toolchain resolution procedure determines the target's concrete toolchain dependencies. The procedure takes as input a set of required toolchain types, the target platform, the list of available execution platforms, and the list of available toolchains. Its outputs are a selected toolchain for each toolchain type as well as a selected execution platform for the current target.
The available execution platforms and toolchains are gathered from the
external dependency graph via
register_execution_platforms
and
register_toolchains
calls in
MODULE.bazel
files.
Additional execution platforms and toolchains may also be specified on the
command line via
[
--extra_execution_platforms](/versions/7.4.0/reference/command-line-reference#flag--extra_execution_platforms)
and
[
--extra_toolchains`](/versions/7.4.0/reference/command-line-reference#flag--extra_toolchains).
The host platform is automatically included as an available execution platform.
Available platforms and toolchains are tracked as ordered lists for determinism,
with preference given to earlier items in the list.
The set of available toolchains, in priority order, is created from
--extra_toolchains
and register_toolchains
:
- Toolchains registered using
--extra_toolchains
are added first. (Within these, the last toolchain has highest priority.) - Toolchains registered using
register_toolchains
in the transitive external dependency graph, in the following order: (Within these, the first mentioned toolchain has highest priority.)- Toolchains registered by the root module (as in, the
MODULE.bazel
at the workspace root); - Toolchains registered in the user's
WORKSPACE
file, including in any macros invoked from there; - Toolchains registered by non-root modules (as in, dependencies specified by the root module, and their dependencies, and so forth);
- Toolchains registered in the "WORKSPACE suffix"; this is only used by certain native rules bundled with the Bazel installation.
- Toolchains registered by the root module (as in, the
NOTE: Pseudo-targets like :all
, :*
, and
/...
are ordered by Bazel's package
loading mechanism, which uses a lexicographic ordering.
The resolution steps are as follows.
A
target_compatible_with
orexec_compatible_with
clause matches a platform if, for eachconstraint_value
in its list, the platform also has thatconstraint_value
(either explicitly or as a default).If the platform has
constraint_value
s fromconstraint_setting
s not referenced by the clause, these do not affect matching.If the target being built specifies the
exec_compatible_with
attribute (or its rule definition specifies theexec_compatible_with
argument), the list of available execution platforms is filtered to remove any that do not match the execution constraints.For each available execution platform, you associate each toolchain type with the first available toolchain, if any, that is compatible with this execution platform and the target platform.
Any execution platform that failed to find a compatible mandatory toolchain for one of its toolchain types is ruled out. Of the remaining platforms, the first one becomes the current target's execution platform, and its associated toolchains (if any) become dependencies of the target.
The chosen execution platform is used to run all actions that the target generates.
In cases where the same target can be built in multiple configurations (such as for different CPUs) within the same build, the resolution procedure is applied independently to each version of the target.
If the rule uses execution groups, each execution group performs toolchain resolution separately, and each has its own execution platform and toolchains.
Debugging toolchains
If you are adding toolchain support to an existing rule, use the
--toolchain_resolution_debug=regex
flag. During toolchain resolution, the flag
provides verbose output for toolchain types or target names that match the regex variable. You
can use .*
to output all information. Bazel will output names of toolchains it
checks and skips during the resolution process.
If you'd like to see which cquery
dependencies are from toolchain
resolution, use cquery
's --transitions
flag:
# Find all direct dependencies of //cc:my_cc_lib. This includes explicitly
# declared dependencies, implicit dependencies, and toolchain dependencies.
$ bazel cquery 'deps(//cc:my_cc_lib, 1)'
//cc:my_cc_lib (96d6638)
@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:toolchain (96d6638)
@bazel_tools//tools/def_parser:def_parser (HOST)
//cc:my_cc_dep (96d6638)
@local_config_platform//:host (96d6638)
@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:toolchain_type (96d6638)
//:default_host_platform (96d6638)
@local_config_cc//:cc-compiler-k8 (HOST)
//cc:my_cc_lib.cc (null)
@bazel_tools//tools/cpp:grep-includes (HOST)
# Which of these are from toolchain resolution?
$ bazel cquery 'deps(//cc:my_cc_lib, 1)' --transitions=lite | grep "toolchain dependency"
[toolchain dependency]#@local_config_cc//:cc-compiler-k8#HostTransition -> b6df211