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BuildConfig Gradle-plugin for Java and Groovy projects

Includes a class with constants accessible at runtime set by the build script process. The constants can be defined using a closure

Dependency

There are many ways to include the dependency.

Easy (Gradle 2.1+)

plugins {
  id 'de.fuerstenau.buildconfig' version '1.1.8'
}

Classic (Gradle prior to 2.1)

A little bit more control though.

buildscript {
  repositories {
    maven {
      url 'https://plugins.gradle.org/m2/'
    }
  }
  dependencies {
    classpath 'gradle.plugin.de.fuerstenau:BuildConfigPlugin:1.1.8'
  }
}
apply plugin: 'de.fuerstenau.buildconfig' // actually applies the plugin

Local

You can download the .jar-file from the button at the top and use as file dependency

buildscript {
  dependencies {
    classpath files ("${projectDir}/lib/BuildConfig-1.1.8-SNAPSHOT.jar") // insert the path to .jar-file
  }
}
apply plugin: 'de.fuerstenau.buildconfig'

By default a BuildConfig class BuildConfig in a package equal to the defined group or de.fuerstenau.buildconfig if no group is defined. Also the BuildConfig is by default generated for the main SourceSet.

IDEs

There are requirements for different IDEs.

Netbeans

As of Netbeans 8.1 with gradle plugin there is no further requirement. Works out of the box.

Intellij IDEA

Tested with IntelliJ IDEA 2016. Generation works out of the box. The generated classes are only resolved when the IDEA gradle plugin is applied and after compiling.

apply plugin: 'idea'

Eclipse

Eclipse (Mars) with the buildship plugin resolves the generated classes after a project refresh. Also the Eclipse gradle plugin needs to be applied.

apply plugin: 'eclipse'

BuildConfig

A BuildConfig class (class name can be configured) has always two (2) non-optional fields that are always provided, but may not always contain useful data, depending on the availability.

  • String NAME - the application name (default: project.name)
  • String VERSION - the application version (default: project.version or if former not set "unspecified")

A BuildConfig is generated as Java code and then compiled to a .class-file and added to the classpath of a SourceSet and also added to the outputs, therefore contained in a .jar-file produced from these outputs.

Here is an example how such a generated Java class might look like:

package de.fuerstenau.buildconfig;
/** DO NOT EDIT. GENERATED CODE */
public final class BuildConfig
{
   private BuildConfig () { /*. no instance */ }
   public static final String VERSION = "1.0-SNAPSHOT";
   public static final String NAME = "HelloWorld";
}

and usage inside the application might look like this:

package some.package;
import de.fuerstenau.buildconfig.BuildConfig;

public class HelloBuildConfig
{
   public static void main (String[] args)
   {
      System.out.println (BuildConfig.NAME);
      System.out.println (BuildConfig.VERSION);
   }
}

The generated Java code won't normally show up because the compiled class will be added to the classpath and it really depends on the IDE used, if the class is visible somewhere (Netbeans 8.1 shows it after building reloading a project as dependency), see IDE section.

Configuration

Basic configuration

The plugin can be configured using the provided buildConfig { }configuration closure. The following closure show the the basic properties and their default values:

buildConfig {
    appName = project.name       // sets value of NAME field
    version = project.version // sets value of VERSION field,
                                 // 'unspecified' if project.version is not set
    
    clsName = 'BuildConfig'      // sets the name of the BuildConfig class
    packageName = project.group  // sets the package of the BuildConfig class,
                                 // 'de.fuerstenau.buildconfig' if project.group is not set
    charset = 'UTF-8'            // sets charset of the generated class,
                                 // 'UTF-8' if not set otherwise
}

Additional fields

Additional fields can be added to the BuildConfig class easily through the buildConfigField (String type, String name, String value)-method. This method can be repeated multiple time.

  • type - the of the field, which can be any Java object or Java primitive type (eg. 'int' or 'org.sampel.SomeType', note: parameter is a String),
  • name - the name of the field, as the field will be a static final conventions says it should be an uppercasename (eg. 'MY_FIELD', also a String)
  • and last but not least value - the value of the field, must be a valid value for the type (eg. '13' or ' { (byte) 0xfe, (byte) 0x11 }', note: as a String).

Note: Instead of an explicit value a Closure<String> is also possible through buildConfigField (String, String, Closure<String>) method.

Note: No import-statements are generated, if you need a type that is not a Java standard type, you need to provide a fully qualified class name and this type must also be available in application. Additionally no syntax checks are performed, therefore entering any invalid or dangerous values may cause harm (remember to escape if the values come from unsafe sources).

Example:

buildConfig {
    buildConfigField 'String', 'MY_STR_FIELD', '"my message to the app"'
    buildConfigField 'String', 'MY_STR_FIELD2', {
        'some lazy evaluated value' 
    }
    buildConfigField 'int', 'MY_INT_FIELD', '42'
    buildConfigField 'byte[]', 'MY_BYTE_ARRAY_FIELD', '{ (byte) 0xfa, (byte) 0x20, (byte) 0x22 }'
    buildConfigField 'long', 'BUILD_UNIXTIME', System.currentTimeMillis() + 'L'
    buildConfigField 'java.util.Date', 'BUILD_DATE', 'new java.util.Date(' + System.currentTimeMillis() + 'L)'
    buildConfigField 'java.time.Instant', 'BUILD_INSTANT', 'java.time.Instant.ofEpochMilli(' + System.currentTimeMillis() + 'L)'
}

Note: There is some black magic included to make String and char constants more legible, instead of

buildConfigField 'String', 'MY_STR_FIELD', '"my message to the app"'
buildConfigField 'char', 'MY_CHAR_FIELD', "'x'" // or '\'x\'' for that matter

one could alsow write

buildConfigField 'String', 'MY_STR_FIELD', 'my message to the app'
buildConfigField 'char', 'MY_CHAR_FIELD', 'x'

Per-SourceSet-Configuration

It's possible to configure per SourceSet. Without per-SourceSet-configuration the BuildConfig is generated for the default SourceSet which is main. Th configuration closure provides a method sourceSets (Closure sourceSetsClosure) which can be used to accomplish this. The parameter sourceSetsClosure contains the names (case-sensitive) of SourceSet instances followed by a configuration closure which has the same properties and methods as the buildConfig configuration closure, minus a sourceSets-method because we do not want endless recursion.

buildConfig {
    sourceSets {
        main {
            // configuration of 'main' SourceSet
        }
        someOther {
            // configuration of 'someOther' SourceSet
        }
    }
}

There is some special behaviour though:

  • Properties from the buildConfig closure are inherited and overridden if defined in a specific SourceSet configuration closure.
  • If sourceSets method is used the plugin will generate a BuildConfig for the 'main'-SourceSet only if it's explicitly configured within.

The following configuration omits a BuildConfig for 'main'-SourceSet because it's not in the sourceSets-closure, appName is inherited but overridden for someOther:

buildConfig {
    appName = 'MyAppName'
    sourceSets {
        someOther {
            appName = 'MyOtherAppName'
            // configuration of 'someOther' SourceSet
        }
        yetSomeOther {
            // configuration of 'yetSomeOther' SourceSet
        }
    }
}

Advanced usage

Manual task wiring

This is an example of manually creating the tasks and wiring them to generate and compile a build config for main-SourceSet. This is very similar to the internal working of the plugin.

First we don't want the plugin to be applied, only to be resolved. This can be done like this

Prior to Gradle 3.0

buildscript {
    repositories {
        maven {
            url 'https://plugins.gradle.org/m2/'
        }
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath 'gradle.plugin.de.fuerstenau:BuildConfigPlugin:1.1.8'
    }
}
plugins {
    id 'java'
}

Note: we don't apply the plugin, we just need to resolve the classpath.

Gradle 3.0+

Since Gradle 3.0 there is a new option to resolve a plugin and make it available on the classpath, but not to apply it. That way You can omit the whole buildscript-closure from above and instead use only the plugins-closure.

plugins {
    id 'java'
    id 'de.fuerstenau.buildconfig' version '1.1.8' apply false
}

Note: The apply false at the end of the plugin declaration.

And then we create the tasks and wire them

/* the generating task, creates the .java-file */
task generateBuildConfig (type: de.fuerstenau.buildconfig.GenerateBuildConfigTask) {
    /* we need to define an output dir for the generated .java-file */
    outputDir = new File ("${buildDir}/gen/buildconfig/src/main/")

    /* the task has nearly the same properties as the buildconfig closure */
    appName = 'SuperTrooperStarshipApp'
    clsName = 'MainConfig'
    packageName = 'org.sample'
    buildConfigField 'int', 'MY_INT_FIELD', '42'
}
/* the compiling task, compiles the generated .java file */
task compileBuildConfig(type:JavaCompile, dependsOn: generateBuildConfig) {
    classpath = files () // we need no extra class path
    /* where do we want our .class file */
    destinationDir = new File ("${buildDir}/gen/buildconfig/classes/main/")
    /* the input is the output of the generating task */
    source = generateBuildConfig.outputDir
}

sourceSets {
    main {
        /* last but not least we want our buildconfig to be part of the classpath */
        compileClasspath += compileBuildConfig.outputs.files
        /* also we want the .class-file to be included in the default .jar-artifact,
         * therefore we add our outputs to the sourceset's outputs, we nee to filter out
         * the dependency-cache */
        compileBuildConfig.outputs.files.findAll {
           !it.name.endsWith ('dependency-cache') // we don't want these
        }.each {
           output.dir it // add everything else
        }
    }
}

Alternative Maven repository

Should there be a problem with the repository at plugins.gradle.org, this can be used as alternative:

buildscript {
  repositories {
    maven {
      url 'https://dl.bintray.com/mfuerstenau/maven'
    }
  }
  dependencies {
    classpath 'gradle.plugin.de.fuerstenau:BuildConfigPlugin:1.1.8'
  }
}
apply plugin: 'de.fuerstenau.buildconfig' // actually applies the plugin

Compatibility

  • Oracle JDK and OpenJDK 1.7 compatible,
  • Gradle 2.9-3.3 with Java and/or Groovy plugin tested.

Gradle plugin portal

The plugin is listed at https://plugins.gradle.org/plugin/de.fuerstenau.buildconfig.

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A BuildConfig plugin for Gradle java projects

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