I'm working on multi-project build using gradle. The projects are developed independently ( in svn each project is in a different branch ). Each project is publish to repository and some other project might need one of this published project to be deployed ( in jboss ) before deploying that project. So the idea is to get the publish artifact from that project and deploy without checking out that particular branch.
I want to know how to do this using gradle, (Is it possible to declare a deployment dependency ? )
Thanks in Advance
I recommend to try and use the gradle-arquillian plugin, which may be bundled with the core Gradle distribution at some point. The other option is to script your own solution. If you decide to go with the latter, you only really need to figure out the deployment part, as fetching the artifacts is trivial (see "Working with dependencies" in the Gradle User Guide).
Related
I have few standalone projects which are built in sbt and few are in maven.
These projects are available in github as seperate repositories.
Now the task is to keep all these projects into a single repository.
My plan is to keep all these projects as different packages into a single maven project and store this into a single repo. I am using IntelliJ as IDE.
How can I achieve this? Or is there any easy way to achieve this, other than just copying all repos into a single one?
Can we keep both sbt build and maven build file together in one project or do we need to migrate all the sbt builds to maven?
Any leads appreciated!
If you want to combine them into a single Maven repository then obviously you will need to convert Sbt projects into a Maven ones. To convert you may consider using makePom from SBT. See also this SO thread.
Can we keep both sbt build and maven build file together in one project or do we need to migrate all the sbt builds to maven?
You can. In IDE then you will need to choose if you would like to open such project (module) as a Maven or SBT based.
Here I read about how to make a Groovy library .jar ... i.e. pretty much the same as making a Groovy (standalone) project. But I'm not clear what you do then with the resultant .jar...
Say I have two Eclipse "proper"/"standalone" projects (I'm using Groovy for everything) and I want them to share a third Gradle library project of mine as a dependency, which is merely a library of classes... how are my standalone projects expected to find the latest .jar version of the library which they're both using...?
My expectation would be that somehow these versions of the library .jar would have to under GRADLE_USER_HOME (i.e. same location as all other dependency .jars).
Then I would assume that in the build.gradle of both standalone projects you'd have a line like
compile 'mylibrary:mylibrarymodule:3.+'
... of course the first part of these compile directives normally involves a "domain name in reverse" ... and this is normally used by a repository like Maven. How does it work with something which doesn't need to be published?
NB at the time of writing I don't have a Maven account as such and have no idea whether "publication" for re-use of a local common library project like this is essential or not.
Naturally, when I distribute versions of my standalone projects they will need to be packaged up with the library .jar in question.
A link to a how-to for a case like this would be more than welcome: I haven't found it under gradle.org.
If you are developing by yourself, you can use maven-publish plugin to publish your artifacts to local maven repository(you don't have to install maven for this) and on your dependent project you can simply say use mavenLocal repository for dependencies.
If you are on a company, I suggest installing a repository manager and deploy your artifacts to this repository so others can use. You can use their respective plugins to deploy easily. (Gradle Artifactory Plugin, Gradle Nexus Plugin, these are just deployment plugins, you have to setup respository manager to. There are other repository management tools also.) Doing the above process from CI server is the preferred way.
To use latest version of a dependency, you can use Gradle Versions Plugin. If the versioning happen often, using snapshot versions also a possibility.
I have only little experience using maven with eclipse. One of the job descriptions which I received has "Workflow management using Maven" as a required skill. What does this mean ? What do they possibly expect?
I think they want you to correct them? :D
I'm not sure what they refer to. I would guess it relates to the developer workflow of creating and delivering software with eclipse (?) and maven.
So setting up a project from scratch is often done from an maven archetype (a project template if you like). A lot of open source frameworks offer archetypes to start with.
For existing projects you would check out the code from version control and import it into eclipse. the m2eclipse plugin is required to do that (but I think its quite common to have it)
Then there is building the software. Which is done through executing maven phases (which will then execute plugins). See maven-phases for more details. Maven phases have default plugins that execute (for example compile will run the compiler plugin).
So your workflow would look like this: you modify the files. compile them, test them, package them, deploy the artifacts into the maven repository. the maven install phase will store the artifacts in you local repository, the maven deploy phase will upload them into the company's repository.
From there the the files are installed. Yet you can use maven plugins to install the software into a application server. That depends on the traditions of the company.
I would not think of workflow as some strict step by step think like BPMN. Development is usually done with huge amounts of personal practices (are tests written in advance or while implementing, and so on).
Hope that will help :)
I'm in the latter stages of setting up a CI environment for my project. I'm using Maven, Jenkins and Artifactory Pro and can successfully build my project and deploy it's artifacts to Artifactory. I have also written a bash script to retrieve the resulting artifacts of a specific build from Artifactory and copy them somewhere.
The main part I'm missing right now is automated versioning. I've looked at enabling Artifactory release management, which is really cool, but involves the rebuilding of the project. I'm really trying to follow the mantra of 'Build Once, Deploy Anywhere', so any rebuilding is a no-no.
My question boils down to: Is there an automated way (either with one of the aforementioned tools, or a plugin) to handle versioning, without rebuilding an artifact?
Artifactory Pro allows you to easily extend Artifactory's behavior with your own plugins written in groovy. (https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/RTF/User+Plugins)
You can find here, an example of Promote extension, that will change your artifacts versions without the needs of new build.
You can find more usefully examples in the GitHub "artifactory-user-plugins" repository.
I want to create a maven project, which has to depend on a non maven project which in turn depends on 2 other non maven projects. I do not have ownership of any of the other projects and it would not be possible for me to change anything in those projects let alone the structure to conform to the maven structure.
I asked if I could just get jars -- but was told that because of multiple levels of dependency, it would be "difficult" -- although I haven't understood why.
Is this possible or should I just abandon the use of maven to create my project and go with a regular project with jars in the lib folder?
Inxsible
If you can go with a regular project build that means you must have access to the other project's jar files?
It doesn't really matter how the other project builds them, you can still gain more control over your own build process by loading the jars you depend on into a Maven repository.
I'd suggest using one of the following repository managers:
Nexus
Artifactory
Archiva
They'll give you management screens to uploading 3rd party jars, they'll also a more efficient way to use other Maven repositories like Maven Central.
Once you've got your Maven build process working, you could encourage the other projects to automatically publish their versions into your Maven repo.
They could use the ANT tasks provided by the Maven or Apache ivy projects. Worst case you just continue to load their libraries until they see the light :-)