Extending Gradle with a Custom Enhanced Task: Difference between revisions

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==Enhanced Task Implementation Details==
==Enhanced Task Implementation Details==
The name of the method annotated with [[Gradle_Task#.40TaskAction|@TaskAction]] is arbitrary.
The name of the method annotated with [[Gradle_Task#.40TaskAction|@TaskAction]] is arbitrary.
<font color=darkgray>TODO Gradle in Action Section 8.3.2 Using the CloudBees API from tasks. + Section 8.4 Writing custom task classes.</font>
==Enhanced Task Testing==
==Enhanced Task Testing==
<font color=darkgray>TODO https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/custom_tasks.html#sec:writing_tests_for_your_task_class</font>
<font color=darkgray>TODO https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/custom_tasks.html#sec:writing_tests_for_your_task_class</font>

Revision as of 00:37, 30 September 2020

External

Internal

Overview

The simplest way of extending Gradle is write a custom task. The custom task can be declared in-line in the default build script build.gradle, as a simple task. The simple task can also be declared in-line in a separate build script, which is then included from the default build script. The code of the custom task can live in a separate source file, which in turn can be declared in a special area of the Gradle project, or can be shared with other projects as part of a library, developed in its own project. Such a task is referred to as a enhanced task.

Declared tasks can be listed with:

gradle tasks --all

Simple Task

A simple task is defined with an in-line task action closure in the build script or another script imported from the build script.

task customSimpleTask {
    println 'this is a simple task'
}

Examples:

Enhanced Task

An enhanced task requires writing Groovy or Java code either in in-line in build.gradle or a script plugin file, or into a source code file (or files) maintained in the project's buildSrc or externally. The behavior is built into the task and the task exposes some properties that can be configured from the build script.

An in-line custom enhanced task can be declared as follows, either in build.gradle or in a script plugin:

...
class CustomEnhancedTask extends DefaultTask {
    @TaskAction
    void impl() {
        System.out.println("this is an in-line enhanced task")
    }
}

task customTask(type: CustomEnhancedTask)
...

Example: Custom ehanced Java task declared in-line in build.gradle

The same task can be defined in a Java/Groovy/Kotlin file either in the project's buildSrc or in an external project:

package playground.gradle;

import org.gradle.api.DefaultTask;
import org.gradle.api.tasks.TaskAction;

public class CustomEnhancedTask extends DefaultTask {
   @TaskAction
   void impl() {
      System.out.println("this is an custom enhanced task developed in buildSrc");
   }
}

If the task was defined in the project's buildSrc, then it can then be declared in build.gradle as follows. The task name is arbitrary, it does not have to match the class name, but matching names is intuitive and thus preferred.

task customEnhancedTask(type: playground.gradle.CustomEnhancedTask)

Example: Custom enhanced task developed in buildSrc.

If the task was defined in an external project, the external project must publish the JAR containing the task in a repository, and the Gradle project using the task must declare the JAR as dependency in the buildScript block of the build.gradle file and pull it from the repository it was published in:

buildscript {
    repositories {
        mavenLocal()
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath 'playground.gradle.standalone-task:06-enhanced-task-developed-in-standalone-project:0.1.0'
    }
}

task custEnhTask(type: playground.gradle.CustomEnhancedTask)

Examples:

Enhanced Task Implementation Details

The name of the method annotated with @TaskAction is arbitrary. TODO Gradle in Action Section 8.3.2 Using the CloudBees API from tasks. + Section 8.4 Writing custom task classes.

Enhanced Task Testing

TODO https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/custom_tasks.html#sec:writing_tests_for_your_task_class

TODO/TODEPLETE

DEPLETE Gradle_Task_TODEPLETE#Explicit_Task_Declaration_.28Custom_Tasks.29