- •1.1. About this user guide
- •2.1. Features
- •2.2. Why Groovy?
- •3.1. Getting Started
- •4.1. Prerequisites
- •4.2. Download
- •4.3. Unpacking
- •4.4. Environment variables
- •4.5. Running and testing your installation
- •4.6. JVM options
- •5.1. Working through problems
- •5.2. Getting help
- •6.1. Projects and tasks
- •6.2. Hello world
- •6.3. A shortcut task definition
- •6.4. Build scripts are code
- •6.5. Task dependencies
- •6.6. Dynamic tasks
- •6.7. Manipulating existing tasks
- •6.8. Shortcut notations
- •6.9. Extra task properties
- •6.10. Using Ant Tasks
- •6.11. Using methods
- •6.12. Default tasks
- •6.13. Configure by DAG
- •6.14. Where to next?
- •7.1. The Java plugin
- •7.2. A basic Java project
- •7.3. Multi-project Java build
- •7.4. Where to next?
- •8.1. What is dependency management?
- •8.2. Declaring your dependencies
- •8.3. Dependency configurations
- •8.4. External dependencies
- •8.5. Repositories
- •8.6. Publishing artifacts
- •8.7. Where to next?
- •9.1. A basic Groovy project
- •9.2. Summary
- •10.1. Building a WAR file
- •10.2. Running your web application
- •10.3. Summary
- •11.1. Executing multiple tasks
- •11.2. Excluding tasks
- •11.3. Task name abbreviation
- •11.4. Selecting which build to execute
- •11.5. Obtaining information about your build
- •11.7. Summary
- •12.1. Task Tree
- •12.2. Favorites
- •12.3. Command Line
- •12.4. Setup
- •13.1. Enter the daemon
- •13.2. Reusing and expiration of daemons
- •13.3. Usage and troubleshooting
- •13.4. Daemon properties
- •14.1. Directory creation
- •14.2. Gradle properties and system properties
- •14.3. Configuring the project using an external build script
- •14.4. Configuring arbitrary objects
- •14.5. Configuring arbitrary objects using an external script
- •14.6. Caching
- •15.1. Configuring the build environment via gradle.properties
- •15.2. Accessing the web via a proxy
- •16.1. The Gradle build language
- •16.2. The Project API
- •16.3. The Script API
- •16.4. Declaring variables
- •16.5. Some Groovy basics
- •17.1. Defining tasks
- •17.2. Locating tasks
- •17.3. Configuring tasks
- •17.4. Adding dependencies to a task
- •17.5. Adding a description to a task
- •17.6. Replacing tasks
- •17.7. Skipping tasks
- •17.8. Skipping tasks that are up-to-date
- •17.9. Task rules
- •17.10. Summary
- •18.1. Locating files
- •18.2. File collections
- •18.3. File trees
- •18.4. Using the contents of an archive as a file tree
- •18.5. Specifying a set of input files
- •18.6. Copying files
- •18.7. Using the Sync task
- •18.8. Creating archives
- •19.1. Choosing a log level
- •19.2. Writing your own log messages
- •19.3. Logging from external tools and libraries
- •19.4. Changing what Gradle logs
- •20.1. Using Ant tasks and types in your build
- •20.2. Importing an Ant build
- •20.3. Ant properties and references
- •21.1. Applying plugins
- •21.2. What plugins do
- •21.3. Conventions
- •21.4. More on plugins
- •22.1. Language plugins
- •22.2. Experimental language plugins
- •22.3. Integration plugins
- •22.4. Software development plugins
- •22.5. Base plugins
- •22.6. Third party plugins
- •23.1. Usage
- •23.2. Source sets
- •23.3. Tasks
- •23.4. Project layout
- •23.5. Dependency management
- •23.6. Convention properties
- •23.7. Working with source sets
- •23.8. Javadoc
- •23.9. Clean
- •23.10. Resources
- •23.11. CompileJava
- •23.12. Test
- •23.14. Uploading
- •24.1. Usage
- •24.2. Tasks
- •24.3. Project layout
- •24.4. Dependency management
- •24.5. Convention properties
- •24.6. Source set properties
- •24.7. CompileGroovy
- •25.1. Usage
- •25.2. Tasks
- •25.3. Project layout
- •25.4. Dependency Management
- •25.5. Convention Properties
- •25.6. Source set properties
- •25.7. Fast Scala Compiler
- •26.1. Usage
- •26.2. Tasks
- •26.3. Project layout
- •26.4. Dependency management
- •26.5. Convention properties
- •26.7. Customizing
- •27.1. Usage
- •27.2. Tasks
- •27.3. Project layout
- •27.4. Dependency management
- •27.5. Convention properties
- •27.8. Using custom descriptor file
- •28.1. Usage
- •28.2. Tasks
- •28.3. Project layout
- •28.4. Dependency management
- •28.5. Convention properties
- •29.1. Usage
- •29.2. Tasks
- •29.3. Project layout
- •29.4. Dependency management
- •29.5. Configuration
- •30.1. Usage
- •30.2. Tasks
- •30.3. Project layout
- •30.4. Dependency management
- •30.5. Configuration
- •31.1. Usage
- •31.2. Tasks
- •31.3. Dependency management
- •31.4. Configuration
- •32.1. Usage
- •32.2. Tasks
- •32.3. Dependency management
- •32.4. Configuration
- •33.1. Usage
- •33.2. Tasks
- •33.3. Dependency management
- •33.4. Configuration
- •34.1. Usage
- •34.2. Analyzing Multi-Project Builds
- •34.3. Analyzing Custom Source Sets
- •34.4. Setting Custom Sonar Properties
- •34.5. Tasks
- •35.1. Usage
- •35.2. Implicitly applied plugins
- •35.3. Tasks
- •35.4. Dependency management
- •35.5. Convention object
- •36.1. Usage
- •36.2. Tasks
- •36.3. Configuration
- •36.4. Customizing the generated files
- •37.1. Usage
- •37.2. Tasks
- •37.3. Configuration
- •37.4. Customizing the generated files
- •37.5. Further things to consider
- •38.1. Usage
- •38.2. Tasks
- •38.3. Project layout
- •38.4. Dependency management
- •38.5. Convention properties
- •38.6. Source set properties
- •39.1. Usage
- •39.2. Tasks
- •39.3. Project layout
- •39.4. Dependency management
- •39.5. Convention properties
- •40.1. Usage
- •40.2. Tasks
- •40.3. Project layout
- •40.4. Dependency management
- •40.5. Convention properties
- •41.1. Usage
- •42.1. Usage
- •42.2. Tasks
- •42.3. Convention properties
- •42.4. Including other resources in the distribution
- •43.2. Dependency management overview
- •43.3. Dependency configurations
- •43.4. How to declare your dependencies
- •43.5. Working with dependencies
- •43.6. Repositories
- •43.7. How dependency resolution works
- •43.8. The dependency cache
- •43.9. Strategies for transitive dependency management
- •44.1. Introduction
- •44.2. Artifacts and configurations
- •44.3. Declaring artifacts
- •44.4. Publishing artifacts
- •44.5. More about project libraries
- •45.1. Usage
- •45.2. Tasks
- •45.3. Dependency management
- •45.4. Convention properties
- •45.5. Convention methods
- •45.6. Interacting with Maven repositories
- •46.1. Usage
- •46.2. Signatory credentials
- •46.3. Specifying what to sign
- •46.4. Publishing the signatures
- •46.5. Signing POM files
- •47.1. Usage
- •47.2. Source code locations
- •47.3. Compiling
- •47.4. Configuring the compiler
- •47.5. Working with shared libraries
- •47.6. Dependencies
- •47.7. Publishing
- •48.1. Build phases
- •48.2. Settings file
- •48.3. Multi-project builds
- •48.4. Initialization
- •48.5. Configuration and execution of a single project build
- •48.6. Responding to the lifecycle in the build script
- •49.1. Cross project configuration
- •49.2. Subproject configuration
- •49.3. Execution rules for multi-project builds
- •49.4. Running tasks by their absolute path
- •49.5. Project and task paths
- •49.6. Dependencies - Which dependencies?
- •49.7. Project lib dependencies
- •49.8. Multi-Project Building and Testing
- •49.9. Property and method inheritance
- •49.10. Summary
- •50.1. Packaging a task class
- •50.2. Writing a simple task class
- •50.3. A standalone project
- •51.1. Packaging a plugin
- •51.2. Writing a simple plugin
- •51.3. Getting input from the build
- •51.4. Working with files in custom tasks and plugins
- •51.5. A standalone project
- •51.6. Maintaining multiple domain objects
- •52.1. Inherited properties and methods
- •52.2. Injected configuration
- •52.3. Build sources in the buildSrc project
- •52.4. Running another Gradle build from a build
- •52.5. External dependencies for the build script
- •52.6. Ant optional dependencies
- •52.7. Summary
- •53.1. Basic usage
- •53.2. Using an init script
- •53.3. Writing an init script
- •53.4. External dependencies for the init script
- •54.1. Configuration
- •54.2. Unix file permissions
- •54.3. Environment variable
- •55.1. Introduction to the Tooling API
- •55.2. Tooling API and the Gradle Build Daemon
- •55.3. Quickstart
- •A.1. Sample customBuildLanguage
- •A.2. Sample customDistribution
- •A.3. Sample customPlugin
- •A.4. Sample java/multiproject
- •B.1. Groovy script variables
- •B.2. Configuration and execution phase
- •C.1. Deprecated command-line options
- •C.2. Daemon command-line options:
- •C.3. System properties
- •C.4. Environment variables
- •D.1. IntelliJ
- •D.2. Eclipse
- •D.3. Using Gradle without IDE support
Table 29.2. Checkstyle plugin - additional task dependencies
Task name |
Depends on |
check |
All Checkstyle tasks, including checkstyleMain and checkstyleTest. |
29.3. Project layout
The Checkstyle plugin expects the following project layout:
Table 29.3. Checkstyle plugin - project layout
File |
Meaning |
config/checkstyle/checkstyle.xml |
Checkstyle configuration file |
29.4. Dependency management
The Checkstyle plugin adds the following dependency configurations:
Table 29.4. Checkstyle plugin - dependency configurations
Name Meaning
checkstyle The Checkstyle libraries to use
29.5. Configuration
See CheckstyleExtension.
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30
The CodeNarc Plugin
The CodeNarc plugin performs quality checks on your project's Groovy source files using CodeNarc and generates reports from these checks.
30.1. Usage
To use the CodeNarc plugin, include in your build script:
Example 30.1. Using the CodeNarc plugin
build.gradle
apply plugin: 'codenarc'
The plugin adds a number of tasks to the project that perform the quality checks. You can execute the checks by running gradle check.
30.2. Tasks
The CodeNarc plugin adds the following tasks to the project:
Table 30.1. CodeNarc plugin - tasks
Task name |
Depends |
Type |
Description |
|
on |
|
|
codenarcMain |
- |
CodeNarc |
Runs CodeNarc against the production Groovy |
|
|
|
source files. |
codenarcTest |
- |
CodeNarc |
Runs CodeNarc against the test Groovy |
|
|
|
source files. |
codenarcSourceSet- |
CodeNarc |
Runs CodeNarc against the given source set's |
|
|
|
|
Groovy source files. |
The CodeNarc plugin adds the following dependencies to tasks defined by the Groovy plugin.
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Table 30.2. CodeNarc plugin - additional task dependencies
Task name |
Depends on |
check |
All CodeNarc tasks, including codenarcMain and codenarcTest. |
30.3. Project layout
The CodeNarc plugin expects the following project layout:
Table 30.3. CodeNarc plugin - project layout
File |
Meaning |
config/codenarc/codenarc.xml |
CodeNarc configuration file |
30.4. Dependency management
The CodeNarc plugin adds the following dependency configurations:
Table 30.4. CodeNarc plugin - dependency configurations
Name Meaning
codenarc The CodeNarc libraries to use
30.5. Configuration
See CodeNarcExtension.
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31
The FindBugs Plugin
The FindBugs plugin performs quality checks on your project's Java source files usingFindBugs and generates reports from these checks.
31.1. Usage
To use the FindBugs plugin, include in your build script:
Example 31.1. Using the FindBugs plugin
build.gradle
apply plugin: 'findbugs'
The plugin adds a number of tasks to the project that perform the quality checks. You can execute the checks by running gradle check.
31.2. Tasks
The FindBugs plugin adds the following tasks to the project:
Table 31.1. FindBugs plugin - tasks
Task name |
Depends on |
Type |
Description |
findbugsMain |
classes |
FindBugs |
Runs FindBugs against the production |
|
|
|
Java source files. |
findbugsTest |
testClasses |
FindBugs |
Runs FindBugs against the test Java |
|
|
|
source files. |
findbugsSourceSetsourceSetClassFindBugses |
Runs FindBugs against the given source |
||
|
|
|
set's Java source files. |
The FindBugs plugin adds the following dependencies to tasks defined by the Java plugin.
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