I find it more ergonomic to add notes or a description about a test to a `doc` attribute, similar to other rules, vs a comment block above it or in the `impl` function docstring. Hopefully this can improve the readability of test rules.
This is a relatively simple addition to unittest that statically creates rules
that either explicitly fail or not depending on if the test case is valid during
LOADING phase of bazel. The test conditions are evaluated entirely in loading
phase, but if we want an actual test to fail rather than just `fail()` killing
the build, we can use this to assert state and report test failures.
See https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-federation/pull/127
In particular, this allows us to use a modern Stardoc release to fix generated md docs.
And we can remove internal_deps.bzl/internal_setup.bzl - it's unnecessary complexity
needed only for deprecated Federation setup.
Due to grep having dropped support for handling line-ending matches in a cross-platform way, grepping for `...$` will now fail on Windows, as it no longer ignores the CR part of the CRLF line endings on Windows.
This should turn this project green again on Bazel CI.
* Enable unittest.suite to accept partial calls of rules
This permits using `unittest.suite` with test rules that have nondefault
attributes, while retaining compatibility with current usage.
For instance, this permits setting a `timeout` on each test in a
`unittest.suite`. Previously, all tests in a `unittest.suite` would
have the default timeout, with no good way to alter this. This
made it hard to eliminate all the warnings produced from using the
`--test_verbose_timeout_warnings` bazel option.
While timeouts were the motivation, the solution here is not specific
to timeouts. It will permit arbitrary additional arguments to the test
rules in a `unittest.suite`.
Fixes #98
* Respond to review feedback.
* Document a breaking change in bazel that this code needs to be aware of.
`@bazel_tools` is tricky since it is effectively a part of the standard
library that can not have a `bzl_library` attached to it. As a simple
fix for this, `bzl_library` can have a srcs dependency on it so that it
includes the transitive closure of all of its dependencies.
`@bazel_tools` imports are rewritten into the `srcs` attribute since
they are `exports_files`ed from the @bazel_tools.
Co-authored-by: c-parsons <cparsons@google.com>
* Move Gazelle extension to //gazelle/bzl and change package name
This fixes an issue with importing bazel-skylib into
google3. Currently, Glaze (internal Go build file generator) attempts
to generate a target (//gazelle:gazelle) that conflicts with one
that's already declared here.
I think the right solution is actually to move the package into a
subdirectory. In the future (bazelbuild/bazel-gazelle#5), Gazelle's Go
extension will generate target names similar to what Glaze does, so
the same conflict will happen in open source. I think it's also
logical to have a directory of packages in case more need to be added
in the future, and for the extension to have a package name matching
the language it works with.
This is an incompatible change, but the //gazelle directory isn't part
of a tagged release yet, so hopefully it won't break anyone.
* fix runfiles access in test
* Fix gazelle package names.
Co-authored-by: Jay Conrod <jayconrod@google.com>
This should fix some buildkite CI flows, ensuring success of
this test is no longer tied to the current compilation_mode.
It also improves the error message of the offending evaluation.
- while the federation code is in flux, this will mean less churn for skylib
- rules_pkg is only needed by developers for making a distribution, so this won't impact users.
- when we develop a new federation model, we can re-depend the right way.
Without this change, evaluating bzl with strict dependencies results in an error.
[`load(":new_sets.bzl", _sets = "sets")`](560d7b2359/lib/sets.bzl (L17)) results in `No such file or directory: 'third_party/bazel_skylib/lib/new_sets.bzl`