Extending Gradle

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Revision as of 06:13, 24 September 2020 by Ovidiu (talk | contribs) (→‎Custom Task)
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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.

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.

In the Project's buildSrc Directory

This is a good choice while developing the custom task or plugin, because it gives a quick feedback loop and allows for in-line debugging.

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.

Custom Task

Extending Gradle with Custom Tasks

Custom Binary Plugin

https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/custom_plugins.html#custom_plugins

Gradle allows writing custom binary plugins. The source code for the plugin can be declared in-line in the build script or in a script plugin, none of these methods being recommended, in a directory structure under the project's buildSrc directory or in a separate standalone project that publishes a JAR.