Where does gradle install Gcloud? - windows

I used the Gradle Cloud plugin to deploy my app. It seems it has installed a second installation of gcloud because the path variables of the command line were not up to date. Now after a command line restart, it says that there is a second installation of gcloud on the path, which is the one that I wanted Gradle to use originally. I want to keep the second installation, where is the installation that gradle made so that I may clean it up?
Gradle Gcloud: https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/legacy/standard/java/gradle-reference
Message from the Gradle gcloud installation (the gcloud installation listed here I want to keep) (userhome redacted):
Please remove the following to avoid confusion or accidental invocation:
<userhome>\AppData\Local\Google\Cloud SDK\google-cloud-sdk\bin\gsutil.cmd
<userhome>\AppData\Local\Google\Cloud SDK\google-cloud-sdk\bin\gcloud-crc32c.exe
<userhome>\AppData\Local\Google\Cloud SDK\google-cloud-sdk\bin\endpointscfg.py
<userhome>\AppData\Local\Google\Cloud SDK\google-cloud-sdk\bin\java_dev_appserver.sh
<userhome>\AppData\Local\Google\Cloud SDK\google-cloud-sdk\bin\bq.cmd

I found it with more log output from gradle. The path is:
<userhome>\AppData\Local\google\ct4j-cloud-sdk\LATEST\google-cloud-sdk\bin\gcloud.cmd
However gradle doesn't give a shit about an already present installation. It just reinstalls the gcloud cli separate. Unsure how to solve.

Related

How does the Jenkins config file provider plugin work?

How does the config file provider plugin work?
I have a Jenkinsfile for a declarative pipeline (multi-branch build) that contains:
configFileProvider([configFile(fileId: 'maven-settings', variable: 'MAVEN_SETTINGS')]) {
sh 'mvn -B -s $MAVEN_SETTINGS -DWHERE="$WHERE" deploy'
}
I have tried running this on two different Jenkins installations one which is installed directly and runs as daemon and another running as a container (jenkinsci/blueocean).
When run on the direct the Jenkins Config File Provider plugin is able to provide the required settings.
provisioning config files...
copy managed file [Maven settings] to file:/var/lib/jenkins/workspace/redacted#tmp/config8989354118161621860tmp
When run under the jenkinsci/blueocean container it fails with:
provisioning config files...
not able to provide the file [ManagedFile: id=maven-settings, targetLocation=null, variable=MAVEN_SETTINGS], can't be resolved by any provider - maybe it got deleted by an administrator
I have created a managed maven-settings.xml file with id maven-settings for blue/ocean but it is not being picked up.
I've also tried copying it to ~/.m2/settings.xml
By contrast the working installation does not have any managed files (settings.xml or otherwise) and I am unable to locate any maven settings file in the workspace. I'm not sure what the #tmp directory is. It is deleted by the time a build finishes.
So my question is:
Where should I put the settings to make the configFileProvider pass them on for the jenkinsci/blueocean build job?
How does the config file provider plugin work?
I have no idea what its doing so its hard to debug. The source is here but Java, Maven & Jenkins are not my main area.
What differences are there when Jenkins itself run as a container?
This answer suggests the the config file provider is unnecessary.
There is a similar question which is unanswered but it relates to a maven plugin.
I have part of the answer. My maven-settings file wasn't being picked up because I was using the file name rather than the file Id which is different.
The remaining part of the question is how is the original Jenkins instance able to generate this file without it being listed as a managed file.

Jenkins + Maven Manual Installation

I installed Jenkins on to 2 new machines no-problemo!
But, when attempting to integrate Maven, I am having "command not found" in my Jenkins log, yet I can run mvn no problem in the command line.
So, I thought it was a PATH issue - so I added the /bin and also the / (of the location where Maven is extracted to), yet I'm still getting the error.
I tried adding the PATH to my ~/.bash_profile as well, so my current PATH is:
$PATH:/usr/local/bin:/Users/jenkins/apache-maven-3.5.2/bin:/Users/jenkins/apache-maven-3.5.2
Still, Jenkins will not find Maven. I do NOT want to globally install Maven, as it may affect the other 5 build servers we have that are working with Maven correctly (not sure how it's working).
The issue was resolved by simply re-connecting the Jenkins Slave. Thanks for your feedback!

missing required extension: sapcoreaddon

I am trying to run install recipe sap_aom_som_b2b_b2c. However build was failed with following error.
Buildfile: C:\Hybris6\Hybris\bin\platform\build.xml
[echo] C:\Hybris6\Hybris\bin\platform/tomcat/bin
BUILD FAILED
C:\Hybris6\Hybris\bin\platform\build.xml:18: The following error occurred while executing this line:
C:\Hybris6\Hybris\bin\platform\resources\ant\antmacros.xml:157: Missing required extensions: sapcoreaddon<-[yacceleratorstorefront],sappricingproductcarouseladdon<-[yacceleratorstorefront]. Please check your extension setup!
I am new to Hybris. Could you please help me if I am missing some step here?
Have you followed these steps?
Setup the hybris platform
./install.sh -r sap_aom_som_b2b_b2c
Initialize the hybris platform
./install.sh -r sap_aom_som_b2b_b2c initialize
Start the hybris server and datahub
./install.sh -r sap_aom_som_b2b_b2c start
Stop the hybris server and datahub
./install.sh -r sap_aom_som_b2b_b2c stop
If so then at which step the build fail?
If you look at the gradle file in /hybris/installer/recipes/sap_aom_som_b2b_b2c/build.gradle, you will see all needed extensions in extensions configuration. So your localextensions.xml should definitely not be empty.
Depending on the version of hybris you used, you can have an issue with the recipe (I've experienced that with datahub on 6.1). So you have either to fix the gradle file or to look at it to do all the steps manually.
Basically, you have to set the configuration in local.properties, add the extensions in localextensions.xml and run all the ant commands (and in your case start the datahub server).
Also note that recipes must be only used in a clean hybris platform. (the version right after extracting from the archive).

How to use/start the gradle daemon on a Mac?

Every time I execute a gradle command on Mac I get a message saying:
"This build could be faster, please consider using the Gradle Daemon: https://docs.gradle.org/2.10/userguide/gradle_daemon.html"
I've created a gradle.properties file with the line org.gradle.daemon=true as mentioned in the web page given in the message. However no matter what I do, I still continue to get that message.
If I execute the command
gradle --daemon
then it executes successfully, but still next time I do something I get that message about it could be faster and builds are just as slow as before I started the daemon.
My installation directory is no /Users/username as in gradle_daemon.html as I'm falling a Udacity course (https://www.udacity.com/course/viewer#!/c-ud867/) and they recommend installing it to /usr/local/gradle
How can I actually get the gradle dameon to work and get rid of that could be faster message?
(Using Gradle version 2.10)
just put
org.gradle.daemon=true
in the ~/.gradle/gradle.properties file. Then each build on your machine will use the gradle wrapper and the message dissapears.
The page doesn't say anywhere that gradle must be installed in /Users/username. It says that this directory is your home directory, and that's where the .gradle/gradle.properties file must be located. The place where gradle is installed is irrelevant.

Gradle Could not create service of type InitScriptHandler using BuildScopeServices.createInitScriptHandler()

I used gradle build command in Centos 7 terminal and I got output:
FAILURE: Build failed with an exception.
* What went wrong:
Could not create service of type InitScriptHandler using BuildScopeServices.createInitScriptHandler().
* Try:
Run with --stacktrace option to get the stack trace. Run with --info or --debug option to get more log output.
For me, killing the Gradle daemon (gradle --stop) really helped and fixed the issue.
Try setting your GRADLE_USER_HOME variable to a folder where you have valid access. Then this error will go away.
For ex: I faced the same issue today while I was running gradle clean command on a new slave machine.
My Gradle version was 2.3.
With --stacktrace, I came to know it was trying to create .gradle folder for storing Gradle's cache data (while I invoked Gradle to run clean task on the slave) and it was trying to create that folder under /some/location/where/gradle/exists OR some /path/location/xxx/yyy where the user which was running Gradle on the slave machine didn't have valid access to write (create folder/files).
i.e. the user which I used to connect from Jenkins machine to the slave didn't have write access to touch/mkdir anything in the default location (where Gradle thought, OK I should create .gradle folder here).
To fix it, I added the above GRADLE_USER_HOME variable in the slave's ENVIRONMENT Variable section. Now, as I have valid access in my home directory, I was OK.
Setting:
GRADLE_USER_HOME=~/gradle_2_3_cache/.gradle
resolved the issue.
You can set it to ~/.gradle as well. But I set it under a custom folder inside my ~ home directory (gradle_2_3_cache). This will help me in case I have another job/build run running on the same Slave machine but with a different Gradle version for ex: 2.5 etc version and if I want the .gradle cache for 2.3 and 2.5/x version in separate folders.
NOTE: When using parallel section within Jenkinsfile, it's best to avoid Gradle greatness (i.e. using same Gradle's cache i.e. using same GRADLE_USER_HOME) as otherwise, you'll land into a mine of interesting issues as listed here: Jenkins - java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Last unit does not have enough valid bits & Gradle error: Task 'null' not found in root project
The Problem solved by simply using "sudo" and giving access to gradle to create a folder and write cache. use:
sudo ./gradlew
If you using wrapper gradlew, in root make directory .gradle_new
mkdir .gradle_new
chmod -R 777 .gradle_new
and run gradlew with arguments:
--project-cache-dir .gradle_new
Restarting the machine solved the issue.
I had the same problem.
For me it worked after I exclude the .gradle folder if you can not delete try to rename.
If you have just updated your JDK version and you have set up a Gradle wrapper in your project, you may want to double-check the wrapper version supports your new JDK. If not, consider removing wrapper-related files from the project (gradlew, gradlew.bat and gradle/wrapper/*) and re-generating them with the Gradle CLI, like so:
gradle wrapper --gradle-version <new-version-number>
e.g. gradle wrapper --gradle-version 4.10.2
This of course assumes your Gradle installation is up-to-date. If not, you will want to update that first.
I got the same error, got rid of it by using the correct version of Java / JDK. I was trying to build a Java 8 project with the Java 11 JDK. Check which version of Java JDK you are using.
To develop projects with different Java versions in parallel I now use jEnv to manage the different JDK versions: http://www.jenv.be/
This is a permission issue.
do a
gradle wrapper --stacktrace
you should see something like this
Failed to create parent directory '/home/cloud_user/my-project/gradle' when creating directory '/home/cloud_user/my-project/gradle/wrapper'
the user, cloud_user, has no permission to the directory
make cloud_user owner of the folder
sudo chown -R cloud_user:cloud_user /home/cloud_user/my-project/
I got this error when running code in IntelliJ Idea, and
gradle --stop
really not helped, as it said that "No Gradle daemons are running."
But simple kill of all gradle processes helped:
ps aux | grep gradle
kill -9 $PID
Permission issue. This fixed the issue for me:
sudo chown -R $USER dir
For me this was to do with Java versions. I have Java 10 installed and as the default Java on my system. Setting a JAVA_HOME pointing at Java 8 was sufficient for the project (graphql-spring-boot) to build.
If using the "Invoke Gradle script" build step, click on Advanced to reveal additional options. Locate "Force GRADLE_USER_HOME to use workspace" and check it.
If anyone is still struggling with this, my issue was caused by Microsoft preventing Java from running due to Controlled Folder Access security restrictions.
I didn't get the popup notification since my computer is set to Do Not Disturb Mode. Once I allowed access, Gradle ran fine.
For future reference.
I had the same problem, the issue was that the antivirus was blocking OpenJdk platform binary and java.exe which prevented android studio from being able to modify the files
I ran into this exception when trying to build a project that was mounted as read-only filesystem in a VM. The project set its own gradle cache so changing GRADLE_USER_HOME did not work. I had to change the filesystem to be read/write.
You Just Have to Run it under the super user (sudo ....) it works for me
If you run Docker-in-Docker and mount the project directory from docker host directly to docker container:
-v ${PWD}:/path_to_project -w /path_to_project
the owners are different and docker container user (either gradle or root) can't override/delete ./buildSrc/build or ./build/
One of the fixes - copy the sources inside the container to temporary directory and build there.
Smth like this (first mounted to project, but then copied to project-copy to "decouple" with the host system real files and run the build in the copy):
docker run -v "${PWD}":/home/gradle/project -w /home/gradle/project-copy \
--rm \
--entrypoint sh \
gradle:5.5.1-jdk11 \
-- -c "cp -r -T /home/gradle/project ./ && ./gradlew build"
In my case I had bad credentials to private Maven repository. JIdea does not show the inner exception but running gradle build reveals the problem immediately.
I used a Gradle project in Eclipse, Eclipse's Gradle was giving that error. When I installed NetBeans and its Gradle Plugin, the problem has gone, project was building okay. Another way to circumvent this error was using commandline ./gradlew , project also built successfully.
It seems that Eclipse's era is over, they appear to be unable to follow the progress.
This can happen if you run Gradle commands from separate terminals at the same time - I assume Gradle somehow locks ~/.gradle when it is running to prevent any problems.
I had that same error, while running gradle with java 14 (openjdk) as my default java implementation. Setting default java back to java 8 solved the issue
sudo update-alternatives --auto java
just run (taskkill /im java.exe /f) in command
In my case the error was different but I landed here, my error was:
Could not create service of type ExecutionHistoryStore using ExecutionGradleServices.createExecutionHistoryStore().
> Timeout waiting to lock execution history cache (/Volumes/Extreme SSD/FlutterProject/test/android/.gradle/6.7/executionHistory). It is currently in use by another Gradle instance.
Owner PID: unknown
Our PID: 94001
Owner Operation: unknown
Our operation:
Lock file: /Volumes/Extreme SSD/FlutterProject/test/android/.gradle/6.7/executionHistory/executionHistory.lock
It happens when you try to run flutter run from two separate terminals.
So I solved it by executing cd <projectPath> && flutter run from the active terminal which I was using first.
Basically, while executing some Gradle command, in this case building an android file, the terminal locks down some Gradle PID, so either you stop them or just simply use that terminal.
in my case manual removing the .gradle and .idea folders helped me
you can find them in the Android Studio if Project view selected
after this just clean and rebuild app
kill -9 'pid' solved the issue. pid can be found in the error log
To fix this issue, restarting your PC is the main solution
I got the same issue and for me worked below command.
./gradlew --stop
After that restart my system and wipe data of simulator and run again everything works fine.

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