The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#) https://grpc.io/
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Esun Kim f1e79853ed
Revert "Revert "Buildify Envoy upb (#28558)" (#28648)" (#28649)
3 years ago
..
README.md Improve bazel RBE documentation 5 years ago
kokoro.bazelrc
mac.bazelrc Revert "Revert "Buildify Envoy upb (#28558)" (#28648)" (#28649) 3 years ago
manual.bazelrc avoid occasional timeout uploading RBE results 5 years ago
rbe_common.bazelrc Re-enabling RBE ubsan (#27861) 3 years ago
windows.bazelrc migrate windows RBE to win2019 pool 5 years ago
workspace_status_kokoro.bat
workspace_status_kokoro.sh

README.md

Running Remote Builds with bazel

This allows you to spawn gRPC C/C++ remote build and tests from your workstation with configuration that's very similar to what's used by our CI Kokoro.

Note that this will only work for gRPC team members (it requires access to the remote build and execution cluster), others will need to rely on local test runs and tests run by Kokoro CI.

Prerequisites

  • See Installing Bazel for instructions how to install bazel on your system.

  • Setup application default credentials for running remote builds by following the "Set credentials" section. (Note: for the ResultStore UI upload to work, you'll need a special kind of application default credentials, so if the build event upload doesn't work, doublecheck the instructions)

Running remote build manually from dev workstation

IMPORTANT: The OS from which you run the bazel command needs to always match your desired build & execution platform. If you want to run tests on linux, you need to run bazel from a linux machine, to execute tests on windows you need to be on windows etc. If you don't follow this guideline, the build might still appear like it's working, but you'll get nonsensical results (e.g. will be test configured as if on mac, but actually running on linux).

Linux

For opt or dbg run this command:

# manual run of bazel tests remotely on Foundry
bazel --bazelrc=tools/remote_build/manual.bazelrc test --config=opt //test/...

This also works for sanitizer runs (asan, msan, tsan, ubsan):

# manual run of bazel tests remotely on Foundry with given sanitizer
bazel --bazelrc=tools/remote_build/manual.bazelrc test --config=asan //test/...

Windows

# manual run of bazel tests remotely on RBE Windows (must be run from Windows machine)
bazel --bazelrc=tools/remote_build/windows.bazelrc test --config=windows_opt //test/...

NOTE: Unlike on Linux and Mac, the bazel version won't get autoselected for you, so check that you're using the right bazel version.

MacOS

There is no such thing as Mac RBE cluster, so a real remote build on Macs is currently impossible. The following setup will build and run test on you local mac machine, but will give you the RBE-like look & feel (e.g. a results link will be generated and some extra configuration will be used).

# manual run of bazel tests on Mac (must be run from Mac machine)
# NOTE: it's not really a "remote execution", but uploads results to ResultStore
bazel --bazelrc=tools/remote_build/mac.bazelrc test --config=opt //test/...

NOTE: Because this is essentially a local run, you'll need to run start port server first (tools/run_tests/start_port_server.py)

Running local builds with bazel

On all platforms, you can generally still use bazel builds & tests locally without any extra settings, but you might need to start port server first (tools/run_tests/start_port_server.py) to be able to run the tests locally.

E.g.: bazel test --config=opt //test/...

Bazel command line options

Available command line options can be found in Bazel command line reference