Gradle Multi-Project Builds TODEPLETE

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External

Internal

Overview

A multi-project build is a build where more than one project is built during a single execution run. Multi-project builds are always represented by a tree of Project instances with a single root. Usually, there is a direct mapping between Project tree elements and directories on the file system where the project configuration and files are maintained, but this behavior is configurable. The project hierarchy is described in the settings.gradle file. This file is required for multi-project builds and must be present, by convention, in the root or "master" directory of the project.

A project has a name, and a fully qualified path which uniquely identifies it in the hierarchy.

The root project build file can be used to configure as much commonality as possible in the allprojects{...} block, leaving sub-projects to customize only what is specific for them. There is a subprojects{...} block that can be used to provide configuration for sub-projects only. Child directories may have their own settings.gradle and build.gradle configuration files.

Root Project

Sub-Project

Inter-Project Dependencies

Sub-projects do not automatically expose their artifacts to other sub-projects of the same multi-build project. The dependencies between sub-projects must be declared explicitly in the dependencies{...} script block of the dependent sub-project. For example, if classes that belong to "subproject-B" depend on classes in "subproject-A", then subproject-B build.gradle must contain:

dependencies {
    ...
    implementation project(':subproject-A')
    ...
}

Multi-Project Build Layout

Project Hierarchy

To Deplete

The structure of a hierarchical project can be displayed with:

gradle projects

It is possible to run any task in any subproject with the following syntax:

 gradle :<subproject-name>:<task-name>

If you were to spend a lot of time working in one sub-project, changing to that directory and running the build from there is normal. Running a task from that subdirectory will trigger all necessary actions form its dependency projects, thanks to the Gradle task graph implementation.

Project Filtering

https://docs.gradle.org/4.7/userguide/multi_project_builds.html#sub:project_filtering

Sub-projects to apply specific configuration to can be selected dynamically with an expression. configure can be used with a predicate closure to allow for selective sub-projects to be configured.

configure(subprojects.findAll {it.name == 'subproject-A' || it.name == 'subproject-A'} ) { 

    apply plugin : ...

    dependencies {
        ...
    }
}

Layout

Hierarchical

The project path is assumed to be equal to the relative physical file system path. "include" method argument "project1:child2" is mapped onto a "project1/child2" directory, relative to the root directory of the project. "project1:child2:subchild3" implies three projects: "project1", "project1:child2" and "project1:child2:subchild3".

Flat

A flat layout is introduced by the "includeFlat" method, which takes directory names are argument. These directories need to exist as samplings of the root project directory.