Note: on macOS Catalina, due to Apple’s new app notarization requirements, you will need to download the installer from the terminal using curl:
# Example installing version `3.2.0`. Replace the version below as appropriate.
export BAZEL_VERSION=3.2.0curl-fLO"https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/releases/download/${BAZEL_VERSION}/bazel-${BAZEL_VERSION}-installer-darwin-x86_64.sh"
This is a temporary workaround until we fix notarization in our macOS release workflow (#9304).
Step 3: Run the installer
Run the Bazel installer as follows:
chmod+x"bazel-${BAZEL_VERSION}-installer-darwin-x86_64.sh"./bazel-${BAZEL_VERSION}-installer-darwin-x86_64.sh--user
The --user flag installs Bazel to the $HOME/bin directory on your system and sets the .bazelrc path to $HOME/.bazelrc. Use the --help command to see additional installation options.
If you are on macOS Catalina and get an error that “bazel-real” cannot be opened because the developer cannot be verified, you will need to re-download the installer from the terminal using curl as a workaround; see Step 2 above.
Step 4: Set up your environment
If you ran the Bazel installer with the --user flag as above, the Bazel executable is installed in your $HOME/bin directory. It’s a good idea to add this directory to your default paths, as follows:
export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin"
You can also add this command to your ~/.bashrc, ~/.zshrc, or ~/.profile file.
All set! You can confirm Bazel is installed successfully by running the following command:
bazel--version
To update to a newer release of Bazel, download and install the desired version.