Extending Gradle
Internal
Overview
The simplest way to extend Gradle is to write a custom task, which can be declared in-line in the project's build.gradle or in a script plugin, in the projects's buildSrc directory or in can be external to project and provided back to the Gradle runtime as a JAR. More complex behavior that goes beyond the capabilities of a custom task can be implemented as a custom object plugin, which has the same choice in terms of where the code lives.
Extensions Code Location
In-line in build.gradle
Both custom tasks and binary plugins can be fully declared in-line in build.gradle. While declaring simple custom tasks in-line is acceptable, provided that the tasks are not intended for reuse and sharing among other projects, declaring a full binary plugin in-line is, albeit possible, not recommended.
Example of a custom simple task declared in-line in build.gradle.
In-line in a script plugin
A script plugin is a regular Gradle build script that can be imported into another build script. Both custom tasks and "binary" plugin code can be declared in-line in a script plugin.
Example of a custom simple task declared in-line in a script plugin.
In the Project's buildSrc Directory
This is a good choice while developing a custom task or a plugin, because it gives a quick feedback loop and allows for in-line debugging. The 'buildSrc' directory contains a Gradle project and has a standard Maven layout. It could have a build.gradle, but it seems that for simple Java compilation it works without it.
.
├─ build.gradle
└─ buildSrc
└─ src
└─ main
└─ java
└─ playground
└─ gradle
Example of an enhanced task developed in buildSrc.
External to Project
Extension code can live in separate standalone projects that publish JARs. Those JARs can be declared as dependencies by a Gradle project that can then use the custom task or the binary plugin externally developed.