0

I've got a very simple multiproject build like below:

module1, which generates a public API jar and exposes it through "publicAPI" configuration:

configurations {
    publicAPI
}

task generatePublicAPI(type: Jar) {
    outputs.upToDateWhen { false }
    baseName 'public-api'
    from sourceSets.main.output
}

artifacts {
    publicAPI generatePublicAPI
}

module2, which uses the public API jar (by referencing 'publicAPI' configuration defined in module1) to generate a application jar:

configurations {
    generateApplication
}

dependencies {
    generateApplication project(path: ':module1', configuration: 'publicAPI')
}

task jarApp(type: Jar) {
    baseName 'app'
    from configurations.generateApplication.collect {
        it.isDirectory() ? it : zipTree(it)
    }
}

Now, when I execute 'gradle :module2:jarApp" task, I got the following error:

Cannot expand ZIP '/home/picasso/Documents/GradlePlayground/module1/build/libs/public-api.jar' as it does not exist

and I can see that gradle was not trying to execute 'generatePublicAPI' of module1.

However, if I make "jarApp" task depends on "generatePublicAPI" task explicitly,

task jarApp(dependsOn: 'module1:generatePublicAPI', type: Jar) {...}

then everything's fine.

BUT, wouldn't this approach against one of the purpose of using dependency configuration so that I don't have to worry about the details of how module1 is built, e.g. which task generates the jar and what artifacts it produces?

I thought gradle is able to work out the tasks it needs to execute by following along the "route" of the referenced dependency configuration.

Am I missing something here so that "generatePublicAPI" task can be executed automatically without have to declare "dependsOn" explicitly for "createApp" task?

4
  • Basically as far as I see module2 depends on module1. Maybe adding evaluationDependsOn(':module1') in build.gradle for module2 will help? And this is not the case that gradle always can resolve dependencies between projects/modules. Sometimes it needs help ;). That's why the methods are defined.
    – Opal
    Jan 28, 2015 at 7:53
  • Thanks for the pointer! However, adding "evaluationDependsOn(':modules1')" does not work. I got the same error message.
    – Yu Lu
    Jan 28, 2015 at 10:21
  • Is the project hosted online? Github?
    – Opal
    Jan 28, 2015 at 10:23
  • 1
    Oh, no, it's on my local machine. But I guess I'll push it to github when I got home so that you can try it out. Thanks!
    – Yu Lu
    Jan 28, 2015 at 14:50

1 Answer 1

1

I asked the same question on Gradleware's forum and got the answer from one of the core developer, here's the link.

Basically, the issue is that collect method returns a new collection but gradle has no way to know that this new collection was generated from the configuration, therefore it couldn't infer which task to execute.

The solution is instead of declaring a dependency on a task, declare a dependency on the actual configuration instead like the following:

task jarApp(dependsOn: configurations.generateApplication, type: Jar)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.