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Bazel build system rules for LaTeX

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Bazel rules for LaTeX

This repository provides Bazel rules for LaTeX, inspired by Klaus Aehlig's blog post on the matter.

Instead of depending on the host system's copy of LaTeX, these rules download a modular copy of TeXLive from GitHub. By using fine-grained dependencies, you will only download portions of TeXLive that are actually used in your documents.

As the output of the LaTeX tools is unnecessarily verbose, the main build rules invoke LaTeX using latexrun. Errors and warnings are formatted similar to those generated by Clang.

BibLaTeX is supported by biber and bibtex. Both are obtained from the TeX Live distribution. Latexrun defaults to bibtex. Please specify the command flag mentioned below to build with biber instead.

Using these rules

Traditional workspace approach

Add the following to WORKSPACE:

http_archive(
    name = "bazel_latex",
    sha256 = "<checksum>",
    strip_prefix = "bazel-latex-<release>",
    url = "https://github.com/ProdriveTechnologies/bazel-latex/archive/v<release>.tar.gz",
    patches = ["some_patch.patch"], % Optional
)

load("@bazel_latex//:repositories.bzl", "latex_repositories")

latex_repositories()

# Needed for building ghostscript
# Which is needed by dvisvgm,
# dvisvgm is part of the texlive toolchain,
# but cannot produce correct svg from pdf files without dynamically
# linking to ghostscript.
load("@rules_foreign_cc//foreign_cc:repositories.bzl", "rules_foreign_cc_dependencies")

rules_foreign_cc_dependencies()

# mac os shared lib was cumbersome to build via foreign rules so as a temporary
# solution we provide it as a precompiled artifact.
# Consider making it available via bazel_latex binaries repo instead
http_archive(
    name = "ghostscript_macos",
    build_file_content = """
filegroup(
    name = "libgs_macos",
    srcs = glob(["*/*"]),
    target_compatible_with = ["@platforms//os:osx"],
    visibility = ["//visibility:public"],
)
""",
    sha256 = "56b480ebdf34000eac4a29e108ce6384858941d892fd69e604d90585aaae4c94",
    urls = [
        "https://github.com/solsjo/rules_latex_deps/releases/download/v0.9.4/rules_latex_deps_macos-latest.zip",
    ],
)

Using Bzlmod

Add to your MODULE.bazel file:

bazel_dep(name = "bazel_latex")

git_override(
    module_name = "bazel_latex", 
    remote = "https://github.com/ProdriveTechnologies/bazel-latex.git",
    commit = "227b02f346c1dd0098d32b5bcb1ef874dd367e2a",
)

Build files

And add the following load() directive to your BUILD files:

load("@bazel_latex//:latex.bzl", "latex_document")

You can then use latex_document() in BUILD file to declare documents that need to be built.

load("@bazel_latex//:latex.bzl", "latex_document", "latex_to_svg")

latex_document(
    name = "my_report",
    srcs = glob([
        "chapters/*.tex",
    ]) + [
        "@bazel_latex//packages:biblatex",
        "references.bib",
        "//example/example_class:example_class",
    ],
    bib_tool = "biber",  # Is the default
    format = "pdf",  # Is the default
    main = "my_report.tex",
)

latex_to_svg(
    name = "my_svg_report",
    src = ":my_report",
    libgs = select({
        "@platforms//os:osx": "@ghostscript_macos//:libgs_macos",
        "//conditions:default": "@bazel_latex//third_party:libgs",
    }),
)

latex_document(
    name = "my_dvi_report",
    srcs = glob([
        "chapters/*.tex",
    ]) + [
        "@bazel_latex//packages:biblatex",
        "references.bib",
        "//example/example_class:example_class",
    ],
    format = "dvi",
    main = "my_report.tex",
)

# svgs generated from dvis are 'searchable'.
# This is not yet the case for svg generated from pdfs.
latex_to_svg(
    name = "my_dvi_svg_report",
    src = ":my_dvi_report",
)

Note: For OS X, ghostscript for OS X might not be binary compatible with your version of OS X, as it is provided as a precompiled artifact.

Note: For OS X, latex_to_svg makes use of python to find the absolute path of ghostscript. In using python it also assumes that python3 on OS X is located at /usr/local/bin. This is unfortunate, but can be fixed in a later release.

Utilize cmd_flags to provide optional command line arguments.

Commonly reused sources (e.g., templates) can be placed in filegroup() blocks, so that they don't need to be repeated. Those filegroup() could be located not just in the single BUILD file, but in any of sub directories. For example, if you want to include company specific template files which are located in //company_dir directory as company_style, then declare them as like following in company_dir/BUILD file, and include the dependency, like //company_dir:company_style, in latex_repositories.

filegroup(
    name = "company_style",
    srcs = glob([
        ...
    ]),
)

A PDF can be built by running:

bazel build //example:my_report

It can be viewed using your system's PDF viewer by running:

bazel run //example:my_report_view

If you want to get the output from the PDF viewer you can run:

bazel run //example:my_report_view_output

Using packages

By default, latex_document() only provides a version of TeXLive that is complete enough to build the most basic documents. Whenever you use \usepackage{} in your documents, you must also add a corresponding dependency to your latex_document(). This will cause Bazel to download and expose those packages for you. Below is an example of how a document can be built that depends on the Hyperref package.

latex_document(
    name = "hello",
    srcs = ["@bazel_latex//packages:hyperref"],
    main = "hello.tex",
)

This repository provides bindings for most commonly used packages. Please open a pull request if additional bindings are needed.

Local packages

If the desired package to use is not available through bazel-latex, but is available in TeX Live, then it is possible to patch BUILD.bazel in /packages to add support for the desired package locally.

Therefore, clone bazel-latex locally, and make the desired changes to the packages build file. Then, put the output of the diff in some_patch.patch, and update your WORKSPACE accordingly as shown below.

http_archive(
    name = "bazel_latex",
    sha256 = "<checksum>",
    strip_prefix = "bazel-latex-<release>",
    url = "https://github.com/ProdriveTechnologies/bazel-latex/archive/v<release>.tar.gz",
    patches = ["some_patch.patch"],
)

If this solution does not suffice, please feel free to open a PR to add the corresponding package to Bazel LaTeX. In that case, also see CONTRIBUTING.md.

Example

An example is available in the corresponding folder. The example can be executed by running:

bazel run //example:my_report_view

Platform support

These rules have been tested to work on (using bazel 3.2.0):

  • FreeBSD 11.2, building locally.
  • macOS Mojave 10.14, building locally.
  • macOS Catalina 10.15, building locally.
  • Ubuntu 18.04, building locally.
  • Ubuntu 18.04 WSL, building locally.
  • Ubuntu 18.04, building on a Debian 8 based Buildbarn setup.
  • Ubuntu 19.04 (Disco Dingo), building locally.
  • Ubuntu 20.04, building locally.
  • Ubuntu 22.04, github actions
  • Manjaro 18.1.2 (Juhraya), building locally.
  • Windows 10 1803, building on a Debian 8 based Buildbarn setup.

These rules are known not to work on:

  • Windows (paths are unix-style) should be fixed in a PR.