Gradle Task
Internal
Overview
A task represents a well defined piece of work that is executing during a build, such as compiling Java classes or creating a distribution file. The goal of a Gradle execution, also known as a Gradle build, is to execute a set of tasks, in sequence.
A tasks belongs to a project. Each project comes with a set of pre-defined, built-in tasks. Each declared plugin may add its own tasks. New simple tasks can be declared in-line in build.gradle or in script plugins. Tasks whose implementations are available on the build's classpath can be declared in build.gradle, as enhanced tasks, and thus made available for use. Tasks can even be fully defined in-line or in script plugins, by providing the task code in-line in the script.
Task API
Task DSL
Task Structure
Task Name
Each task has a name, which is unique within the context of its owning project. The name must not contain dashes.
Task Path
A task path is the concatenation of the task owning project name and the task name, separated by the ":" character.
Declaring a Task
With DSL
Programmatically
Task Configuration Closure
Task Action
Task Action Closure
Task action closures can be used to define custom simple tasks, in-line in build.gradle or in a script plugin.
@TaskAction
Task Dependencies
Explicit Dependencies
Implicit Dependencies
Custom Tasks
Built-in Tasks
Each build exposes a set of built-in tasks, that can be used right away without any additional configuration or loading any plugin:
- init
- wrapper
- buildEnvironment
- components
- dependencies
- dependencyInsight
- dependentComponents
- help
- model
- projects
- properties
- tasks