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The Buildbarn client daemon Build status PkgGoDev Go Report Card

Whereas most of the other Buildbarn repositories provide server-side infrastructure, this repository provides a tool that's intended to be run on your personal system: the Buildbarn client daemon, bb_clientd for short. The goal of bb_clientd is twofold:

  1. To provide insight in, and access to the data stored by Remote Execution services.
  2. To speed up builds that use Remote Execution.

Even though this project is developed as part of the Buildbarn project, and also reuses many of Buildbarn's components, bb_clientd is expected to be compatible with other implementations of the Remote Execution API.

This document will explain how to set up bb_clientd and demonstrate its features.

Obtaining bb_clientd

There are various ways in which a copy of bb_clientd may be obtained:

Running bb_clientd...

... from within this source tree

After carefully reviewing the contents of configs/bb_clientd.jsonnet and making changes where needed, you may run the following commands to launch bb_clientd:

umount ~/bb_clientd; fusermount -u ~/bb_clientd
export XDG_CACHE_HOME=${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-~/.cache}
mkdir -p \
    ${XDG_CACHE_HOME}/bb_clientd/ac/persistent_state \
    ${XDG_CACHE_HOME}/bb_clientd/cas/persistent_state \
    ${XDG_CACHE_HOME}/bb_clientd/outputs \
    ~/bb_clientd
OS=$(uname) bazel run //cmd/bb_clientd $(bazel info workspace)/configs/bb_clientd.jsonnet

You may validate that bb_clientd is running by inspecting the top-level directory of its FUSE (Linux) or NFSv4 (macOS) mount:

$ ls -l ~/bb_clientd
total 0
d--x--x--x  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 cas
dr-xr-xr-x  2 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 outputs
drwxrwxrwx  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 scratch

... as a systemd service

After installing the bb_clientd Debian package (available through GitHub Actions) you may launch it for any user on the system by running the following commands:

systemctl enable --user bb_clientd
systemctl start --user bb_clientd
loginctl enable-linger

The following commands may be used to inspect its status and logs:

systemctl status --user bb_clientd
journalctl --user -u bb_clientd -f

By default, bb_clientd will use the configuration file that is also shipped with this repository. It is possible to override configuration options by creating a file named ~/.config/bb_clientd.jsonnet that uses the following structure:

local defaultConfiguration = import 'bb_clientd_defaults.jsonnet';
defaultConfiguration {
  // Options that you want to override go here.
}

Using bb_clientd...

... as a proxy for gRPC requests

Bazel's way of communicating with the Remote Execution service may sometimes be inefficient:

  • Even though Bazel uses hashes as part of its state, it is not content addressed. This means that it may frequently download files redundantly. For example, in case a rebuild of an action yields files with the same contents, Bazel will still delete the old files and download them once again.

  • Bazel does not cache the results of FindMissingBlobs() calls, meaning that it often looks up digests that it already requested recently.

bb_clientd solves this by adding local caching. This cache is used for all traffic passing through a single instance of bb_clientd, meaning that you will even see speedups when building multiple checkouts of the same project, after running bazel clean, switching between clusters, etc.

If you normally run Bazel to build with remote execution as follows:

bazel build --remote_executor mycluster-prod.example.com --remote_instance_name hello [more options]

You can let it use bb_clientd by running it like this instead:

bazel build --remote_executor unix:${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-~/.cache}/bb_clientd/grpc --remote_instance_name mycluster-prod.example.com/hello [more options]

Notice how the hostname of the cluster has become a prefix of --remote_instance_name. This is because bb_clientd's example configuration provides support for routing requests to multiple clusters. It uses the instance name to determine to which cluster traffic needs to be routed.

You may wish to add --remote_bytestream_uri_prefix to the bazel build command with the URI of the real remote executor. This will cause Bazel's build event stream to emit URIs with this prefix rather than ${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-~/.cache}/bb_clientd/grpc. Some build event consumers offer features that require access to the remote cache; this is necssary for those features to access the canonical remote.

... as a system local cache

bb_clientd's example configuration also reserves instance names local/* to act as a general purpose remote cache, where each instance name acts as its own namespace. This means that if you want to cache the results of a build performed locally, you may run Bazel as follows:

bazel build --remote_cache unix:${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-~/.cache}/bb_clientd/grpc --remote_instance_name local/some/project --remote_upload_local_results=true [more options]

The advantage of this option over Bazel's own --disk_cache flag is that the cache space is bounded in size and shared with that of bb_clientd's proxy feature.

... as a tool for exploring the Content Addressable Storage

When using the default configuration file, bb_clientd will memorize the credentials that were attached to any RPCs that were forwarded to the Remote Execution service. This means that bb_clientd can give you direct access to your cluster's Content Addressable Storage, at least until your token expires or bb_clientd restarts.

The FUSE/NFSv4 file system provided by bb_clientd automatically generates a "blobs" directory for every instance name and digest function provided:

$ ls ~/bb_clientd/cas/mycluster-prod.example.com/hello/blobs/
md5/  sha1/  sha256/  sha256tree/  sha384/  sha512/
$ ls -l ~/bb_clientd/cas/mycluster-prod.example.com/hello/blobs/sha256
total 0
d--x--x--x  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 directory
d--x--x--x  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 executable
d--x--x--x  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 file
d--x--x--x  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 tree

You can use it to obtain the contents of individual files:

$ file -b ~/bb_clientd/cas/mycluster-prod.example.com/hello/blobs/file/22184d8f153d9e28ae827297dbe0c3459554abb384d7b5c9dc292e6c8f596882-799796
C++ source, UTF-8 Unicode (with BOM) text, with very long lines

Or view the contents of entire directories:

$ cd ~/bb_clientd/cas/mycluster-prod.example.com/hello/blobs/directory/aa58f5f12edcd4695af98aed13cf87c79bd537e5bfc2c0d21fb0b6e695c94ce9-175
$ find . -ls
 7826520175049250699  0 dr-xr-xr-x    1 root  root     0 Jan  1  2000 .
17991803894754190639  0 dr-xr-xr-x    1 root  root     0 Jan  1  2000 ./runfiles
18404615058361292775  0 -r-xr-xr-x 9999 root  root  8340 Jan  1  2000 ./runfiles/runfiles.h
 7642484527095133707  0 -r-xr-xr-x 9999 root  root   744 Jan  1  2000 ./grep-includes.sh

All of the content accessed through the "cas" directory is lazy-loading, and is cached locally.

... as a playground

The FUSE/NFSv4 file system also provides a "scratch" directory that you can (mostly) use like an ordinary directory on your system. Because it resides on the same file system as the "cas" directory shown above, it is possible to create hard links to files that are backed by the Content Addressable Storage. This may be useful when trying to reproduce problems locally, without needing to download all of the files up front.

$ cp -lr ~/bb_clientd/cas/mycluster-prod.example.com/hello/blobs/directory/9b6841c638336162fdad886ac3294425a6e73bb38a227562e7feb6a950c5e5fb-165 ~/bb_clientd/scratch/my-broken-test
$ cd ~/bb_clientd/scratch/my-broken-test
$ ls -l
total 0
drwxrwxrwx  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 bazel-out
drwxrwxrwx  1 root  wheel  0 Jan  1  2000 external
$ ~/bb_clientd/cas/mycluster-prod.example.com/hello/blobs/command/85c0c6b2464de5e738b650ea8f674961885b12e287ff360695459ef107801166-6426
exec ${PAGER:-/usr/bin/less} "$0" || exit 1
Executing tests from //:hello_world
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Segmentation fault

Note that if your implementation of cp does not support the -l flag, you may need to install GNU Coreutils or use rsync with the --link-dest flag.

Actions executing this way may directly write data into the file system. The backing store for this is configured through the "filePool" option in the bb_clientd configuration file. Keep in mind that none of the data written into the "scratch" directory is persisted across restarts of bb_clientd!

... to perform Remote Builds without the Bytes

Bazel 0.25 and later provide a feature named "Remote Builds without the Bytes". By enabling flags such as --remote_download_minimal, Bazel will no longer download output files of build actions and store them in bazel-out/. Though this speeds up builds significantly, there are two disadvantages:

  • You can no longer access output files. This may be acceptable if you only want to know whether a build succeeds (e.g., CI presubmit checks), but it cannot be used universally.
  • It doesn't provide fast incremental builds. For each of the files that is normally downloaded, Bazel creates an in-memory reference to the remote instance of the file. This information is discarded at the end of the build, meaning that Bazel can't continue where it left off.

To solve these issues, bb_clientd implements a gRPC API named the Bazel Output Service. Bazel can use this API to store the entire bazel-out/ directory inside the FUSE/NFSv4 file system. Every time Bazel needs to download a file from the Remote Execution service, it calls into a BatchCreate() gRPC method. bb_clientd implements this method by creating lazy-loading files, just like the ones in the "cas" directory. This means that you can enjoy the performance improvements of "Remote Builds without the Bytes", but not with the restrictions that it currently imposes.

Bazel 7.2 and later implement support for the Bazel Output Service. Bazel can be configured to use this feature by providing the following additional command line arguments:

--experimental_remote_output_service unix:${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-~/.cache}/bb_clientd/grpc --experimental_remote_output_service_output_path_prefix ${HOME}/bb_clientd/outputs

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