Extending Gradle: Difference between revisions

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Examples:
Examples:
* Custom enhanced task developed in standalone project
* Custom enhanced task developed in standalone project. The project publishes the JAR in the local Maven repository.
* Custom enhanced task imported from external project
* Custom enhanced task imported from external project. The project gets the JAR with the task from the local Maven repository.


=Custom Task=
=Custom Task=

Revision as of 23:05, 29 September 2020

External

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 simple or enhanced tasks and binary plugins can be fully declared in-line in build.gradle. Placing the extension code here has the benefit that it is automatically compiled and included in the classpath of the build script. While declaring simple tasks in-line is acceptable, provided that the task or the plugin are not intended for reuse and sharing among other projects, declaring enhanced tasks or even full binary plugin in-line is, albeit possible, not recommended. The extension code declared in build.gradle is not visible outside the build script and it cannot be reused outside the build script.

Examples:

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 simple or enhanced tasks and "binary" plugin code can be declared in-line in a script plugin.

Examples:

In the Project's buildSrc Directory

The source code for the custom enhanced task or the binary plugin can be placed in the 'buildSrc/src/main/java|groovy|kotlin' subdirectory of the project directory. Gradle will compile and test the extension code and it will automatically make it available on the classpath of the build script. 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 is itself a Gradle project and has a standard Maven layout. It could have a build.gradle, but it works without it for simple Java compilation cases that does not require external dependencies. 'buildSrc/build.gradle' starts to become useful when the custom code task being developed requires external dependencies. In that case, the dependencies must be declared in 'buildSrc/build.gradle'.

The extension code placed here is not visible outside the build and it cannot be reused outside the build it defines it.

.
├── build.gradle
├── buildSrc
│   ├── build.gradle
│   └── src
│       └── main
│           └── java
│               └── playground
│                   └── gradle
│                       └── CustomEnhancedTask.java
└ ...

Examples:

External Standalone Project

Extension code can live in an external 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.

Examples:

  • Custom enhanced task developed in standalone project. The project publishes the JAR in the local Maven repository.
  • Custom enhanced task imported from external project. The project gets the JAR with the task from the local Maven repository.

Custom Task

Extending Gradle with Custom Tasks

Custom Binary Plugin

Extending Gradle with Binary Plugins