Warning categories supported by buildifier's linter:
All warnings can be disabled by adding a special comment # buildifier: disable=<category_name> to the expression that causes the warning. Historically comments with buildozer instead of buildifier are also supported, they are equivalent.
# buildifier: disable=no-effect
"""
A multiline comment as a string literal.
Docstrings don't trigger the warning if they are first statements of a file or a function.
"""
if debug:
print("Debug information:", foo) # buildifier: disable=print
cfg = "data" for attr definitions has no effectattr-cfg--incompatible_disallow_data_transitionThe Configuration cfg = "data" is deprecated and has no effect. Consider removing it.
attr.license() is deprecated and shouldn't be usedattr-license--incompatible_no_attr_licenseThe attr.license() method is almost never used and being deprecated.
non_empty attribute for attr definitions are deprecatedattr-non-empty--incompatible_disable_deprecated_attr_paramsThe non_empty attribute for attr definitions is deprecated, please use allow_empty with an opposite value instead.
default parameter for attr.output()is deprecatedattr-output-default--incompatible_no_output_attr_defaultThe default parameter of attr.output() is bug-prone, as two targets of the same rule would be unable to exist in the same package under default behavior. Use Starlark macros to specify defaults for these attributes instead.
single_file is deprecatedattr-single-file--incompatible_disable_deprecated_attr_paramsThe single_file attribute is deprecated, please use allow_single_file instead.
*args and **kwargs are not allowed in BUILD filesbuild-args-kwargs--incompatible_no_kwargs_in_build_filesHaving *args or **kwargs makes BUILD files hard to read and manipulate. The list of arguments should be explicit.
bzl-visibilityIf a directory foo contains a subdirectory internal or private, only files located under foo can access it.
For example, dir/rules_mockascript/private/foo.bzl can be loaded from dir/rules_mockascript/private/bar.bzl or dir/rules_mockascript/sub/public.bzl, but not from dir/other_rule/file.bzl.
l, I, or O as namesconfusing-nameThe names l, I, or O can be easily confused with I, l, or 0 correspondingly.
constant-globGlob function is used to get a list of files from the depot. The patterns (the first argument) typically include a wildcard (* character). A pattern without a wildcard is often useless and sometimes harmful.
To fix the warning, move the string out of the glob:
- glob(["*.cc", "test.cpp"]) + glob(["*.cc"]) + ["test.cpp"]
There’s one important difference: before the change, Bazel would silently ignore test.cpp if file is missing; after the change, Bazel will throw an error if file is missing.
If test.cpp doesn’t exist, the fix becomes:
- glob(["*.cc", "test.cpp"]) + glob(["*.cc"])
which improves maintenance and readability.
If no pattern has a wildcard, just remove the glob. It will also improve build performance (glob can be relatively slow):
- glob(["test.cpp"]) + ["test.cpp"]
ctx.{action_name} is deprecatedctx-actions--incompatible_new_actions_apiThe following actions are deprecated, please use the new API:
ctx.new_file → ctx.actions.declare_filectx.experimental_new_directory → ctx.actions.declare_directoryctx.file_action → ctx.actions.writectx.action(command = "...") → ctx.actions.run_shellctx.action(executable = "...") → ctx.actions.runctx.empty_action → ctx.actions.do_nothingctx.template_action → ctx.actions.expand_templatectx.actions.args().add() for multiple arguments is deprecatedctx-args--incompatible_disallow_old_style_args_addIt's deprecated to use the add method of ctx.actions.args() to add a list (or a depset) of variables. Please use either add_all or add_joined, depending on the desired behavior.
depset-iteration--incompatible_depset_is_not_iterableDepsets are complex structures, iterations over them and lookups require flattening them to a list which may be a heavy operation. To make it more obvious it's now required to call the .to_list() method on them in order to be able to iterate their items:
deps = depset() [x.path for x in deps] # deprecated [x.path for x in deps.to_list()] # recommended
depset-union--incompatible_depset_unionThe following ways to merge two depsets are deprecated:
depset1 + depset2 depset1 | depset2 depset1.union(depset2)
Please use the depset constructor instead:
depset(transitive = [depset1, depset2])
When fixing this issue, make sure you understand depsets and try to reduce the number of calls to depset.
dict-concatenation--incompatible_disallow_dict_plusThe + operator to concatenate dicts is deprecated. The operator used to create a new dict and copy the data to it. There are several ways to avoid it, for example, instead of d = d1 + d2 + d3 you can use one of the following:
Use Skylib:
load(“@bazel_skylib//lib:dicts.bzl”, “dicts”)
d = dicts.add(d1, d2, d3)
The same if you don't want to use Skylib:
d = dict(d1.items() + d2.items() + d3.items())
The same in several steps:
d = dict(d1) # If you don't want d1 to be mutated d.update(d2) d.update(d3)
foo was already found on lineduplicated-nameEach label in Bazel has a unique name, and Bazel doesn’t allow two rules to have the same name. With macros, this may be accepted by Bazel (if each macro generates different rules):
my_first_macro(name = "foo") my_other_macro(name = "foo")
Although the build may work, this code can be very confusing. It can confuse users reading a BUILD file (if they look for the rule “foo”, they may read see only one of the macros). It will also confuse tools that edit BUILD files.
Just change the name attribute of one rule/macro.
FileType function is deprecatedfiletype--incompatible_disallow_filetypeThe function FileType is deprecated. Instead of using it as an argument to the rule function just use a list of strings.
function-docstringfunction-docstring-headerfunction-docstring-argsfunction-docstring-returnPublic functions should have docstrings describing functions and their signatures. A docstring is a string literal (not a comment) which should be the first statement of a function (it may follow comment lines). Function docstrings are expected to be formatted in the following way:
"""One-line summary: must be followed and may be preceded by a blank line.
Optional additional description like this.
If it's a function docstring and the function has more than one argument, the docstring has
to document these parameters as follows:
Args:
parameter1: description of the first parameter. Each parameter line
should be indented by one, preferably two, spaces (as here).
parameter2: description of the second
parameter that spans two lines. Each additional line should have a
hanging indentation of at least one, preferably two, additional spaces (as here).
another_parameter (unused, mutable): a parameter may be followed
by additional attributes in parentheses
Returns:
Description of the return value.
Should be indented by at least one, preferably two spaces (as here)
Can span multiple lines.
"""
Docstrings are required for all public functions with at least 5 statements. If a docstring exists it should start with a one-line summary line followed by an empty line. If a docsrting is required or it describe some of the arguments, it should describe all of them. If a docstring is required and the function returns a value, it should be described.
git_repository is not global anymoregit-repository--incompatible_remove_native_git_repositoryNative git_repository and new_git_repository functions are removed. Please use the Starlark versions instead:
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:git.bzl", "git_repository", "new_git_repository")
http_archive is not global anymorehttp-archive--incompatible_remove_native_http_archiveNative http_archive function are removed. Please use the Starlark versions instead:
load("@bazel_tools//tools/build_defs/repo:http.bzl", "http_archive")
/ operator for integer division is deprecatedinteger-division--incompatible_disallow_slash_operatorThe / operator is deprecated in favor of //, please use the latter for integer division:
a = b // c d //= e
keyword-positional-paramsSome parameters for builtin functions in Starlark are keyword for legacy reasons; their names are not meaningful (e.g. x). Making them positional-only will improve the readability.
loadload is used to import definitions in a BUILD file. If the definition is not used in the file, the load can be safely removed. If a symbol is loaded two times, you will get a warning on the second occurrence.
Delete the line. When load is used to import multiple symbols, you can remove the unused symbols from the list. To fix your BUILD files automatically, try this command:
buildozer 'fix unusedLoads' path/to/BUILD
If you want to keep the load, you can disable the warning by adding a comment # @unused.
load-on-top--incompatible_bzl_disallow_load_after_statementLoad statements should be first statements (with the exception of WORKSPACE files), they can follow only comments and docstrings.
module-docstring.bzl files should have docstrings on top of them. A docstring is a string literal (not a comment) which should be the first statement of the file (it may follow comment lines). For example:
""" This module contains build rules for my project. """ ...
name-conventionsBy convention, all variables should be lower_snake_case, constant should be UPPER_SNAKE_CASE, and providers should be UpperCamelCase ending with Info.
native-androidThe Android build rules should be loaded from Starlark. The native rules will be disabled.
native module shouldn't be used in BUILD filesnative-buildThere's no need in using native. in BUILD files, its members are available as global symbols there.
native-cc--incompatible_load_cc_rules_from_bzlThe C++ build rules should be loaded from Starlark. The native rules will be disabled.
native-java--incompatible_load_java_rules_from_bzlThe Java build rules should be loaded from Starlark. The native rules will be disabled.
native.package() shouldn't be used in .bzl filesnative-packageIt's discouraged and will be disallowed to use native.package() in .bzl files. It can silently modify the semantics of a BUILD file and makes it hard to maintain.
native-proto--incompatible_load_proto_rules_from_bzlThe Proto build rules and symbols should be loaded from Starlark. The native rules will be disabled.
native-py--incompatible_load_python_rules_from_bzlThe Python build rules should be loaded from Starlark. The native rules will be disabled.
no-effectThe statement has no effect. Consider removing it or storing its result in a variable.
out-of-order-loadLoad statements should be ordered by their first argument - extension file label. This makes it easier to developers to locate loads of interest and reduces chances for conflicts when performing large-scale automated refactoring.
When applying automated fixes, it's highly recommended to also use load-on-top fixes, since otherwise the relative order of a symbol load and its usage can change resulting in runtime error.
ctx.attr.dep.output_group is deprecatedoutput-group--incompatible_no_target_output_groupThe output_group field of a target is deprecated in favor of the OutputGroupInfo provider.
overly-nested-depsetIf a depset is iteratively chained in a for loop, e.g. the following pattern is used:
for ...:
x = depset(..., transitive = [..., x, ...])
this can result in an overly nested depset with a long chain of transitive elements. Such patterns can lead to performance problems, consider refactoring the code to create a flat list of transitive elements and call the depset constructor just once:
transitive = []
for ...:
transitive += ...
x = depset(..., transitive = transitive)
Or in simple cases you can use list comprehensions instead:
x = depset(..., transitive = [y.deps for y in ...])
For more information, read Bazel documentation about depsets and reducing the number of calls to depset.
PACKAGE_NAME is deprecatedpackage-name--incompatible_package_name_is_a_functionThe global variable PACKAGE_NAME is deprecated, please use native.package_name() instead.
package-on-topHere is a typical structure of a BUILD file:
load() statementspackage()Instantiating a rule and setting the package defaults later can be very confusing, and has been a source of bugs (tools and humans sometimes believe package applies to everything in a BUILD file). This might become an error in the future (but it requires large-scale changes in google3).
The linter allows the following to be before package():
load()package_group()licenses()positional-argsAll top level calls (except for some built-ins) should use keyword args over positional arguments. Positional arguments can cause subtle errors if the order is switched or if an argument is removed. Keyword args also greatly improve readability.
- my_macro("foo", "bar")
+ my_macro(name = "foo", env = "bar")
The linter allows the following functions to be called with positional arguments:
load()vardef()export_files()licenses()print()print() is a debug function and shouldn't be submittedprintUsing the print() function for warnings is discouraged: they are often spammy and non actionable, the people who see the warning are usually not the people who can fix the code to make the warning disappear, and the actual maintainers of the code may never see the warning.
redefined-variableIn .bzl files, redefining a global variable is already forbidden. This helps both humans and tools reason about the code. For consistency, we want to bring this restriction also to BUILD files.
Rename one of the variables.
Note that the content of lists and dictionaries can still be modified. We will forbid reassignment, but not every side-effect.
REPOSITORY_NAME is deprecatedrepository-name--incompatible_package_name_is_a_functionThe global variable REPOSITORY_NAME is deprecated, please use native.repository_name() instead.
return-valueSome but not all execution paths of a function return a value. Either there's an explicit empty return statement, or an implcit return in the end of a function. If it is intentional, make it explicit using return None. If you know certain parts of the code cannot be reached, add the statement fail("unreachable") to them.
rule-impl-returnReturning structs from rule implementation functions is deprecated, consider using providers or lists of providers instead.
same-origin-loadload is used to import definitions in a BUILD file. If the same label is used for loading symbols more the ones, all such loads can be merged into a single one.
Merge all loads into a single one. For example,
load(":f.bzl", "s1")
load(":f.bzl", "s2")
can be written more compactly as
load(":f.bzl", "s1", "s2")
string-escape--incompatible_restrict_string_escapesUnrecognized escape sequences in string literals (e.g. "\a \b" is error-prone and shouldn't be used. If you need the backslash symbol, escape it explicitly: "\\a \\b".
string-iteration--incompatible_string_is_not_iterableIteration over strings often leads to confusion with iteration over a sequence of strings, therefore strings won't be recognized as sequences of 1-element strings (like in Python). Use string indexing and len instead:
my_string = "hello world"
for i in range(len(my_string)):
char = my_string[i]
# do something with char
uninitializedThe local value can be not initialized at the time of execution. It may happen if it's initialized in one of the if-else clauses but not in all of them, or in a for-loop which can potentially be empty.
unreachableThe statement is unreachable because it follows a return, break, continue, or fail() statement.
unsorted-dict-itemsDictionary items should be sorted lexicagraphically by their keys. This makes it easier to find the item of interest and reduces chances of conflicts when performing large-scale automated refactoring.
The order is affected by NamePriority dictionary passed using -tables or -add_tables flags.
If you want to preserve the original dictionary items order, you can disable the warning by adding a comment # @unsorted-dict-items to the dictionary expression or any of its enclosing expressins (binary, if etc). For example,
# @unsorted-dict-items
d = {
"b": "bvalue",
"a": "avalue",
}
will not be reported as an issue because the assignment operation that uses the dictionary with unsorted items has a comment disabling this warning.
unused-variableThis happens when a variable is set but not used in the file, e.g.
x = [1, 2]
The line can often be safely removed.
If you want to keep the variable, you can disable the warning by adding a comment # @unused.
x = [1, 2] # @unused