Rules for running JavaScript programs under Bazel, as tools or with bazel run or bazel test.

For example, this binary references the acorn npm package which was already linked using an API like npm_link_all_packages.

load("@aspect_rules_js//js:defs.bzl", "js_binary", "js_test")

js_binary(
    name = "bin",
    # Reference the location where the acorn npm module was linked in the root Bazel package
    data = ["//:node_modules/acorn"],
    entry_point = "require_acorn.js",
)

Rules

js_binary

Execute a program in the node.js runtime.

The version of node is determined by Bazel's toolchain selection. In the WORKSPACE you used nodejs_register_toolchains to provide options to Bazel. Then Bazel selects from these options based on the requested target platform. Use the --toolchain_resolution_debug Bazel option to see more detail about the selection.

This rules requires that Bazel was run with --enable_runfiles.

Example usage (generated)

load("@aspect_rules_js//js:defs.bzl", "js_binary")

js_binary(
    # A unique name for this target.
    name = "",
    # Whether runfiles are enabled in the current build configuration
    enable_runfiles = false,
    # The main script which is evaluated by node.js
    entry_point = "",
)

name

A unique name for this target.

chdir

Working directory to run the binary or test in, relative to the workspace.

By default, js_binary runs in the root of the output tree.

To run in the directory containing the js_binary use

chdir = package_name()

(or if you're in a macro, use native.package_name())

WARNING: this will affect other paths passed to the program, either as arguments or in configuration files, which are workspace-relative.

You may need ../../ segments to re-relativize such paths to the new working directory. In a BUILD file you could do something like this to point to the output path:

js_binary(
    ...
    chdir = package_name(),
    # ../.. segments to re-relative paths from the chdir back to workspace;
    # add an additional 3 segments to account for running js_binary running
    # in the root of the output tree
    args = ["/".join([".."] * len(package_name().split("/")) + "$(rootpath //path/to/some:file)"],
)

copy_data_to_bin

When True, data files and the entry_point file are copied to the Bazel output tree before being passed as inputs to runfiles.

Defaults to True so that a js_binary with the default value is compatible with js_run_binary with use_execroot_entry_point set to True, the default there.

Setting this to False is more optimal in terms of inputs, but there is a yet unresolved issue of ESM imports skirting the node fs patches and escaping the sandbox: https://github.com/aspect-build/rules_js/issues/362. This is hit in some popular test runners such as mocha, which use native import() statements (https://github.com/aspect-build/rules_js/pull/353). When set to False, a program such as mocha that uses ESM imports may escape the execroot by following symlinks into the source tree. When set to True, such a program would escape the sandbox but will end up in the output tree where node_modules and other inputs required will be available.

data

Runtime dependencies of the program.

The transitive closure of the data dependencies will be available in the .runfiles folder for this binary/test.

You can use the @bazel/runfiles npm library to access these files at runtime.

npm packages are also linked into the .runfiles/node_modules folder so they may be resolved directly from runfiles.

enable_runfiles

Whether runfiles are enabled in the current build configuration.

Typical usage of this rule is via a macro which automatically sets this attribute based on a config_setting rule.

entry_point

The main script which is evaluated by node.js.

This is the module referenced by the require.main property in the runtime.

This must be a target that provides a single file or a DirectoryPathInfo from @aspect_bazel_lib//lib::directory_path.bzl.

See https://github.com/aspect-build/bazel-lib/blob/main/docs/directory_path.md for more info on creating a target that provides a DirectoryPathInfo.

env

Environment variables of the action.

Subject to $(location) and make variable expansion.

expected_exit_code

The expected exit code.

Can be used to write tests that are expected to fail.

include_declarations

When True, declarations and transitive_declarations from JsInfo providers in data targets are included in the runfiles of the target.

Defaults to false since declarations are generally not needed at runtime and introducing them could slow down developer round trip time due to having to generate typings on source file changes.

include_npm

When True, npm is included in the runfiles of the target.

An npm binary is also added on the PATH so tools can spawn npm processes. This is a bash script on Linux and MacOS and a batch script on Windows.

A minimum of rules_nodejs version 5.7.0 is required which contains the Node.js toolchain changes to use npm.

include_npm_linked_packages

When True, files in npm_linked_packages and transitive_npm_linked_packages from JsInfo providers in data targets are included in the runfiles of the target.

transitive_files from NpmPackageStoreInfo providers in data targets are also included in the runfiles of the target.

include_transitive_sources

When True, transitive_sources from JsInfo providers in data targets are included in the runfiles of the target.

log_level

Set the logging level.

Log from are written to stderr. They will be supressed on success when running as the tool of a js_run_binary when silent_on_success is True. In that case, they will be shown only on a build failure along with the stdout & stderr of the node tool being run.

node_options

Options to pass to the node invocation on the command line.

https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html

These options are passed directly to the node invocation on the command line. Options passed here will take precendence over options passed via the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable. Options passed here are not added to the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable so will not be automatically picked up by child processes that inherit that enviroment variable.

patch_node_fs

Patch the to Node.js fs API (https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html) for this node program to prevent the program from following symlinks out of the execroot, runfiles and the sandbox.

When enabled, js_binary patches the Node.js sync and async fs API functions lstat, readlink, realpath, readdir and opendir so that the node program being run cannot resolve symlinks out of the execroot and the runfiles tree. When in the sandbox, these patches prevent the program being run from resolving symlinks out of the sandbox.

When disabled, node programs can leave the execroot, runfiles and sandbox by following symlinks which can lead to non-hermetic behavior.

When True, the --preserve-symlinks-main flag is passed to node.

This prevents node from following an ESM entry script out of runfiles and the sandbox. This can happen for .mjs ESM entry points where the fs node patches, which guard the runfiles and sandbox, are not applied. See https://github.com/aspect-build/rules_js/issues/362 for more information. Once #362 is resolved, the default for this attribute can be set to False.

This flag was added in Node.js v10.2.0 (released 2018-05-23). If your node toolchain is configured to use a Node.js version older than this you'll need to set this attribute to False.

See https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html#--preserve-symlinks-main for more information.


js_test

Identical to js_binary, but usable under bazel test.

Bazel will set environment variables when a test target is run under bazel test and bazel run that a test runner can use.

A runner can write arbitrary outputs files it wants Bazel to pickup and save with the test logs to TEST_UNDECLARED_OUTPUTS_DIR. These get zipped up and saved along with the test logs.

JUnit XML reports can be written to XML_OUTPUT_FILE for Bazel to consume.

TEST_TMPDIR is an absolute path to a private writeable directory that the test runner can use for creating temporary files.

LCOV coverage reports can be written to COVERAGE_OUTPUT_FILE when running under bazel coverage or if the --coverage flag is set.

See the Bazel Test encyclopedia for details on the contract between Bazel and a test runner.

Example usage (generated)

load("@aspect_rules_js//js:defs.bzl", "js_test")

js_test(
    # A unique name for this target.
    name = "",
    # Whether runfiles are enabled in the current build configuration
    enable_runfiles = false,
    # The main script which is evaluated by node.js
    entry_point = "",
)

name

A unique name for this target.

chdir

Working directory to run the binary or test in, relative to the workspace.

By default, js_binary runs in the root of the output tree.

To run in the directory containing the js_binary use

chdir = package_name()

(or if you're in a macro, use native.package_name())

WARNING: this will affect other paths passed to the program, either as arguments or in configuration files, which are workspace-relative.

You may need ../../ segments to re-relativize such paths to the new working directory. In a BUILD file you could do something like this to point to the output path:

js_binary(
    ...
    chdir = package_name(),
    # ../.. segments to re-relative paths from the chdir back to workspace;
    # add an additional 3 segments to account for running js_binary running
    # in the root of the output tree
    args = ["/".join([".."] * len(package_name().split("/")) + "$(rootpath //path/to/some:file)"],
)

copy_data_to_bin

When True, data files and the entry_point file are copied to the Bazel output tree before being passed as inputs to runfiles.

Defaults to True so that a js_binary with the default value is compatible with js_run_binary with use_execroot_entry_point set to True, the default there.

Setting this to False is more optimal in terms of inputs, but there is a yet unresolved issue of ESM imports skirting the node fs patches and escaping the sandbox: https://github.com/aspect-build/rules_js/issues/362. This is hit in some popular test runners such as mocha, which use native import() statements (https://github.com/aspect-build/rules_js/pull/353). When set to False, a program such as mocha that uses ESM imports may escape the execroot by following symlinks into the source tree. When set to True, such a program would escape the sandbox but will end up in the output tree where node_modules and other inputs required will be available.

data

Runtime dependencies of the program.

The transitive closure of the data dependencies will be available in the .runfiles folder for this binary/test.

You can use the @bazel/runfiles npm library to access these files at runtime.

npm packages are also linked into the .runfiles/node_modules folder so they may be resolved directly from runfiles.

enable_runfiles

Whether runfiles are enabled in the current build configuration.

Typical usage of this rule is via a macro which automatically sets this attribute based on a config_setting rule.

entry_point

The main script which is evaluated by node.js.

This is the module referenced by the require.main property in the runtime.

This must be a target that provides a single file or a DirectoryPathInfo from @aspect_bazel_lib//lib::directory_path.bzl.

See https://github.com/aspect-build/bazel-lib/blob/main/docs/directory_path.md for more info on creating a target that provides a DirectoryPathInfo.

env

Environment variables of the action.

Subject to $(location) and make variable expansion.

expected_exit_code

The expected exit code.

Can be used to write tests that are expected to fail.

include_declarations

When True, declarations and transitive_declarations from JsInfo providers in data targets are included in the runfiles of the target.

Defaults to false since declarations are generally not needed at runtime and introducing them could slow down developer round trip time due to having to generate typings on source file changes.

include_npm

When True, npm is included in the runfiles of the target.

An npm binary is also added on the PATH so tools can spawn npm processes. This is a bash script on Linux and MacOS and a batch script on Windows.

A minimum of rules_nodejs version 5.7.0 is required which contains the Node.js toolchain changes to use npm.

include_npm_linked_packages

When True, files in npm_linked_packages and transitive_npm_linked_packages from JsInfo providers in data targets are included in the runfiles of the target.

transitive_files from NpmPackageStoreInfo providers in data targets are also included in the runfiles of the target.

include_transitive_sources

When True, transitive_sources from JsInfo providers in data targets are included in the runfiles of the target.

log_level

Set the logging level.

Log from are written to stderr. They will be supressed on success when running as the tool of a js_run_binary when silent_on_success is True. In that case, they will be shown only on a build failure along with the stdout & stderr of the node tool being run.

node_options

Options to pass to the node invocation on the command line.

https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html

These options are passed directly to the node invocation on the command line. Options passed here will take precendence over options passed via the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable. Options passed here are not added to the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable so will not be automatically picked up by child processes that inherit that enviroment variable.

patch_node_fs

Patch the to Node.js fs API (https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html) for this node program to prevent the program from following symlinks out of the execroot, runfiles and the sandbox.

When enabled, js_binary patches the Node.js sync and async fs API functions lstat, readlink, realpath, readdir and opendir so that the node program being run cannot resolve symlinks out of the execroot and the runfiles tree. When in the sandbox, these patches prevent the program being run from resolving symlinks out of the sandbox.

When disabled, node programs can leave the execroot, runfiles and sandbox by following symlinks which can lead to non-hermetic behavior.

When True, the --preserve-symlinks-main flag is passed to node.

This prevents node from following an ESM entry script out of runfiles and the sandbox. This can happen for .mjs ESM entry points where the fs node patches, which guard the runfiles and sandbox, are not applied. See https://github.com/aspect-build/rules_js/issues/362 for more information. Once #362 is resolved, the default for this attribute can be set to False.

This flag was added in Node.js v10.2.0 (released 2018-05-23). If your node toolchain is configured to use a Node.js version older than this you'll need to set this attribute to False.

See https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html#--preserve-symlinks-main for more information.


Macros and Functions

js_binary_lib.create_launcher

Example usage (generated)

load("@aspect_rules_js//js:defs.bzl", "js_binary_lib")

js_binary_lib.create_launcher(
    ctx = None,
    log_prefix_rule_set = None,
    log_prefix_rule = None,
)

ctx

log_prefix_rule_set

log_prefix_rule

fixed_args

fixed_env


js_binary_lib.implementation

Example usage (generated)

load("@aspect_rules_js//js:defs.bzl", "js_binary_lib")

js_binary_lib.implementation(
    ctx = None,
)

ctx