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1 - Introduction

This project contains a set of useful gradle plugins

2 - Usage

In order to use the plugins you need to add this to your build script:

    buildscript {
      dependencies {
        classpath 'org.pongasoft:org.pongasoft.gradle-plugins:3.0.1'
      }
    }

Note that since 3.0.0, this plugin is now published in maven central.

3 - Plugins

3.0 - Release type concept

Most plugins exposes the releaseType property (of type org.pongasoft.gradle.core.ReleaseType) which is an enumeration describing for what type of release the current build is being done.

  • whether the build is producing snapshots or not (determined by whether the version ends with -SNAPSHOT). If you use the org.pongasoft.spec as described below then it will be in snapshot mode unless you provide -Prelease=true when building.
  • whether the release is being done in a local repository or remote repository (determined by the remote property which can be set by -Premote=true when building)

Note that this concept is exported by most plugins, but is actually not being used by them. It is a convenience that allows you to conditionally setup publications and repositories or create/disable tasks based on this value. See publishing.gradle for a good example on how this property is being used to dynamically define the kind of publication and repository to use.

3.1 - org.pongasoft.userConfig

This plugin plugin attempts to load user configuration (for the gradle build) in the following files (values read last overrides previous values) and make it available to all gradle build files as a userConfig object (instance of groovy.util.ConfigObject). Check groovy.util.ConfigSlurper for details on the syntax.

    userConfig.properties
    userConfig-${project.group}.properties
    userConfig-${project.name}.properties
    userConfig-${project.group}-${project.name}.properties

Those files are looked into the following folders:

    ./${filename}
    ${user.home}/.${project.group}/${filename}
    ${user.home}/.gradle/${filename}
    ${user.home}/.${filename}

You can provide your own location by using -PuserConfig.properties=... (this will override the entire list).

This plugin should be used only in the root project when doing a multi project build.

3.2 - org.pongasoft.spec

This plugin reads a file called project-spec.groovy (or project-spec.json) and makes it available in all build files as a spec object (instance of java.util.Map).

This plugin automatically handles spec.version in this fashion: always force snapshot mode (meaning version ends with -SNAPSHOT) unless -Prelease=true is provided when running the build. See an example of this file and how it is being used in this project itself!

The recommended approach is to define it this way (at the root level)

    apply plugin: 'org.pongasoft.spec'

    allprojects {
      group = spec.group
      version = spec.version
    }

3.3. - org.pongasoft.externalRepositories

This plugin allows you to externalize repository configuration and override it with your own defaults (for example if you do not want to use maven central). Similarly to the org.pongasoft.userConfig plugin, it reads an optional set of files (values read last overrides previous values) and makes it available to all build files as a externalRepositories object (instance of org.pongasoft.gradle.core.RepositoryPluginExtension).

    repositories.gradle
    repositories-${project.group}.gradle
    repositories-${project.rootProject.name}.gradle
    repositories-${project.name}.gradle
    repositories-${project.group}-${project.name}.gradle
    repositories-${project.rootProject.name}-${project.group}.gradle
    repositories-${project.rootProject.name}-${project.name}.gradle
    repositories-${project.rootProject.name}-${project.group}-${project.name}.gradle

Those files are looked into the following folders:

    ${project.rootProject.projectDir}/${filename} // if different from .
    ./${filename}
    ${user.home}/.${project.group}/${filename}
    ${user.home}/.gradle/${filename}
    ${user.home}/.${filename}

You can provide your own location by using -Prepositories.gradle=... (this will override the entire list).

You can define any repository names, and they are made available into any build script:

    buildscript {
      externalRepositories.buildscript.configure()
    }

    externalRepositories.build.configure()

This plugin no longer supports bintray following JFrog sunsetting bintray

Check the repositories.gradle file that comes with this project for examples.

3.4 - org.pongasoft.release

This plugin does the following (by default):

  • creates an empty releaseMaster configuration
  • creates javadocJar, groovydocJar and sourcesJar tasks (depending on the kind of artifacts built)
  • creates a release task which automatically publishes the java software component as well as all the artifacts that are part of the releaseMaster configuration using a publication named release in a repository named release

This plugin is highly configurable:

  • you can change the software component (release.releaseComponent)
  • you can change the configurations (release.releaseConfigurations, release.sourcesConfigurations, release.javadocConfigurations, release.groovydocConfigurations)
  • you can change the name of the task, repository or publication (all defaulting to release)
  • you can disable the creation of the task entirely by setting release.repositoryName (or release.publicationName) to null
  • you can invoke release.task(...) to create your own task(s) to publish a particular component and/or configuration artifacts in a particular combination of publication/repository (useful after disabling the main task generation)

This plugin exports the releaseType concept.

Note that since 3.0.0, this plugin is no longer aware of snapshots or remote as this is directly handled in the publication itself by using the releaseType concept.

3.5 - org.pongasoft.cmdline

This plugin adds the following tasks:

  • package-assemble: Assembles the package (exploded)
  • package: Create the package
  • package-install: Install the package (locally)
  • package-clean-install: Cleans the (previously) installed package

and a lib configuration on which you add your dependencies.

By convention (configurable), the result of the package task is a tgz which contains a directory structure like this:

    lib/*.jar (all dependencies)
    + whatever directory structure was under 'src/cmdline/resources' (also configurable)

If there is a src/cmdline/resources/bin folder, then all files in this folder will be tarred up as executables.

All files under src/cmdline/resources are also processed through a replacement token plugin if you provide replacement tokens.

This plugin is highly configurable through the CmdlinePluginConvention available in the build file as cmdline:

    example:
    dependencies {
      lib project(':project1')
      lib 'org.json:json:20090211'
    }
    cmdline {
      replacementTokens = [__version__: project.version]
      resources << fileTree(dir: rootDir, includes: ['*.txt', '*.md'])
    }

If the buildInfo object is defined, this plugin will automatically save a build.info file at the root of the package. To disable this feature use:

    cmdline {
      noBuildInfo = true
    }

3.6 - org.pongasoft.buildInfo

This plugin adds the property buildInfo to the root project and generates a file (at the root of the build) when the build completes. The content of this file is a json representation of the buildInfo. Example of content:

    {
        "name": "gradle-plugins",
        "version": "2.1.0",
        "scmUrl": "[email protected]:pongasoft/gradle-plugins.git",
        "scmCommitVersion": "24134d260317bc077ba76f590e114ec2740e6117",
        "gradleVersion": "1.5",
        "jvm": "1.7.0_21 (Oracle Corporation 23.21-b01)",
        "os": "Mac OS X 10.8.3 x86_64",
        "buildTime": 1367010673446,
        "buildTimeString": "2013/04/26 11:11:13 HST",
        "buildDuration": 13996,
        "buildDurationString": "13.996 secs",
        "buildTasks": [
            "release"
        ]
    }

3.7 - org.pongasoft.signing

This plugin does the following:

  • automatically populates signing.keyId, signing.password and signing.secretKeyRingFile properties from values defined either in userConfig file (see org.pongasoft.userConfig plugin), project-spec.groovy (see org.pongasoft.spec plugin), command line (ex: -Psigning.keyId=xxx) or an environment variable (ex: SIGNING_KEY)
  • apply the signing plugin to the publications (sign project.publishing.publications)

3.8 - org.pongasoft.externalPublishing

This plugin allows you to externalize publishing configuration and override it with your own defaults. Similarly to the org.pongasoft.userConfig plugin, it reads an optional set of files (values read last overrides previous values). See publishing.gradle in this project for an example.

    publishing.gradle
    publishing-${project.group}.gradle
    publishing-${project.rootProject.name}.gradle
    publishing-${project.name}.gradle
    publishing-${project.group}-${project.name}.gradle
    publishing-${project.rootProject.name}-${project.group}.gradle
    publishing-${project.rootProject.name}-${project.name}.gradle
    publishing-${project.rootProject.name}-${project.group}-${project.name}.gradle

Those files are looked into the following folders:

    ${project.rootProject.projectDir}/${filename} // if different from .
    ./${filename}
    ${user.home}/.${project.group}/${filename}
    ${user.home}/.gradle/${filename}
    ${user.home}/.${filename}

You can provide your own location by using -Ppublishing.gradle=... (this will override the entire list).

3.9 - org.pongasoft.sonatypePublishing

This plugin adds the sonatype extension property (of type org.pongasoft.gradle.plugins.SonatypePublishingExtension) to allow easy configuration when publishing to maven central. For example:

    repositories {
      maven {
        name = "release"
        url = sonatype.s01.conditionedOn(releaseType)
        credentials {
            username = sonatype.username
            password = sonatype.password
        }
      }
    }

sonatype.username and sonatype.password behaves like the org.pongasoft.signing plugin in how to populate this values (user config, project spec, command line or environment variable).

4 - Compilation

In order to compile the code you need

  • java 1.8+

At the top simply run

    ./gradlew test

which should compile and run all the tests.

5 - Directory structure

  • buildSrc

    • Contains the code of the plugins
  • org.pongasoft.gradle-plugins

    • Project that creates the jar file for the plugins (using the java-gradle-plugin plugin) so that it can be released

6 - Build configuration

The project uses the org.pongasoft.userConfig plugin and as such can be configured the way described in the plugin

    Example:
    ~/.userConfig.properties
    top.build.dir="/Volumes/Disk2/deployment/${userConfig.project.name}"
    top.release.dir="/export/content/repositories/release"

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This project contains a set of useful gradle plugins

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