Alt text
Bazel is an open source build tool similar ot Make, Maven or Gradle and uses a language with a pythonesque syntax called ‘Starlark’.
It is designed at its core as a multi-language build tool, meaning that you can use it in building projects requiring multiple
programming languages. For example, it is useful in the case where you have a backend in Go and a frontend in Reactsjs .

For the frontend part, we will use Bazel’ s native support for javascript and write build rules in a file called ‘BUILD.bazel’.
For the build of the Go backend part, we will work with a tool called ‘gazelle’ which is specific to Go .Below are some
components of the Bazel toolbox :
 
Bazelisk -> It is a wrapper for Bazel written in Go that automatically picks a good version of Bazel for your current working
directory.
 
Gazelle -> It is file generator helping developer in creating ‘BUILD.bazel’ files.
Gazelle understands the dependencies and the structure of your GO project and generates and updates those ‘BUILD.bazel’ files.
 
.bazelrc file -> Used to specify command-line options that ‘Bazel’ should use every time it runs (not necessary but can be useful) .
 
.bazelversion file -> Used to specify the current version of Bazel to be used for the current project. The aforementioned tool ‘Bazelisk’ will read this file to determine which version of ‘Bazel’ to use for the build.
 
.BUILD.bazel file -> This is the core of any Bazel-based project. It is a build script telling ‘Bazel’ how to build different targets
(like binaries or libraries) and what their dependencies are.

 
.WORKSPACE.bazel file -> It is usually an extension of the WORKSPACE file.
Inside it , you define rules for fetching Go dependencies or set up a docker image for the project .
Below is an example of such a WORKSPACE.bazel file used in the context of a gRPC architecture:
 

# in WORKSPACE.bazel, we define our workspace name,
# import our version variables and import some utilities
# to clone Git repositories and download archives.

workspace(name = "github_com_packtpublishing_grpc_go_for_professionals")

load(
    "//:versions.bzl",
    "GAZELLE_SHA256",
    "GAZELLE_VERSION",
    "GO_VERSION",
    "PROTOC_GEN_VALIDATE_VERSION",
    "PROTO_VERSION",
    "RULES_GO_SHA256",
    "RULES_GO_VERSION",
)
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:http.bzl", "http_archive")
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:git.bzl", "git_repository")

# Defining the dependencies for Gazelle.
http_archive(
    name = "bazel_gazelle",
    sha256 = GAZELLE_SHA256,
    urls = [
   "https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-gazelle/releases/download/%s/bazel-gazelle-%s.tar.gz" % (GAZELLE_VERSION, GAZELLE_VERSION),
   "https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-gazelle/releases/download/%s/bazel-gazelle-%s.tar.gz" % (GAZELLE_VERSION, GAZELLE_VERSION),
    ],
)

# Pulling the dependencies for building Go binaries, applications, and so on.
http_archive(
    name = "io_bazel_rules_go",
    sha256 = RULES_GO_SHA256,
    urls = [
        "https://mirror.bazel.build/github.com/bazelbuild/rules_go/releases/download/%s/rules_go-%s.zip" % (RULES_GO_VERSION, RULES_GO_VERSION),
        "https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_go/releases/download/%s/rules_go-%s.zip" % (RULES_GO_VERSION, RULES_GO_VERSION),
    ],
)

# Pulling dependencies of rules_go, setting the toolchain for building the go project, and telling Gazelle where to find the WORKSPACE.bazel file.
load("@io_bazel_rules_go//go:deps.bzl", "go_register_toolchains", "go_rules_dependencies")
load("@bazel_gazelle//:deps.bzl", "gazelle_dependencies") 
load("//:deps.bzl" , "go_dependencies") 

# Gazelle:repository_macro deps.bzl%go_dependencies
go_dependencies()

go_rules_dependencies()

go_register_toolchains(version = GO_VERSION)  

gazelle_dependencies(go_repository_default_config = "//:WORKSPACE.bazel") 

# Protobuf 
git_repository(
      name = "com_google_protobuf", 
      remote = "https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf", 
      tag = PROTO_VERSION, 
)

load("@com_google_protobuf//:protobuf_deps.bzl", "protobuf_deps") 

protobuf_deps()

# protoc_gen_validate
git_repository(
      name = "com_envoyproxy_protoc_gen_validate", 
      remote = "https://github.com/bufbuild/protoc-gen-validate", 
      tag = PROTOC_GEN_VALIDATE_VERSION, 
)

load("@com_envoyproxy_protoc_gen_validate//bazel:repositories.bzl", "pgv_dependencies")  
load("@com_envoyproxy_protoc_gen_validate//:dependencies.bzl", "go_third_party")  

pgv_dependencies()

# gazelle:repository_macro deps.bzl%go_third_party
go_third_party 

 

The Bazel philosophy Link to heading

In a monorepo architecture, we can have many different sub-projects with multiple languages contained within.
As eluded to earlier, while I primarily code in Go , I could add an angular application or some python tools or more.
It is then crucial that dependency management , compilation and builds remain reproducible and simple for all the developers on the team and for the entire lifecycle of the codebase. Bazel ensures hermeticity , meaning that builds are essentially extremely sand-boxed, pinned with proper dependencies, Go versions and will be guaranteed to behave the same despite of on which machine it is run.
This pro is a major reason why Bazel is used by big projects over the Go native build tooling.

 
In addition to hermiticity, Bazel provides :  

Advanced local caching :
-Incremental builds: Bazel only re-builds parts of your project that have been modified, rather than re-building the entire project.
This is particularly useful for large codebases where a full build could take a significant amount of time.
-Fine-grained dependency analysis: Bazel understands the dependencies between different parts of your code.
If you change a single line in a single file, Bazel will only rebuild the targets depending on this particular file, making the build faster.
-Local caching: Build artifacts are cached locally, so if you switch between git branches or rebuild the same code,
Bazel will retrieve the previously build artifacts from the cache.
 
Remote caching :
-Distributed builds : Bazel can distribute build tasks across multiple machines , useful in a CI environment where we might have multiple build agents.

-Shared cache : The cache can be shared among various developers and CI servers. This means that , if one developer has already
built a particular target, another developer (or CI server) can re-used the cached artifact instead of re-building it.
 
-Cache invalidation: Bazel is smart enough to know when an artifact is out-of-date and needs to be re-built, ensuring developers are always working with the most actual code.

 

Additional useful readings :
(https://www.coinbase.com/blog/bootstrapping-the-coinbase-monorepo)
(https://bazel.build/)