I want to test my code against the latest bleeding edge Scala 2 nightlies.
This old answer doesn't work anymore.
What do I do?
I want to test my code against the latest bleeding edge Scala 2 nightlies.
This old answer doesn't work anymore.
What do I do?
Global / resolvers += "scala-integration" at
"https://scala-ci.typesafe.com/artifactory/scala-integration/"
scalaVersion := "2.13.10-bin-abcd123"
for a 2.12 nightly, substitute e.g. 2.12.18
for 2.13.10
; in either case, it's the version number of the next release on that branch
for abcd123
, manually substitute the first 7 characters of the SHA of the latest green build on the 2.13.x or 2.12.x branch on Travis-CI.
A quick way to find out the full version number of a current nightly is to use scala-cli
, as follows.
on scala-cli 0.1.3 or newer, you can run nightlies with:
scala-cli repl -S 2.12.nightly
scala-cli repl -S 2.13.nightly
scala-cli repl -S 2.nightly # same as 2.13.nightly
# Scala 3, too!
scala-cli repl -S 3.0.nightly
scala-cli repl -S 3.1.nightly
scala-cli repl -S 3.2.nightly
scala-cli repl -S 3.nightly # same as 3.2.nightly at present
Of course, not only repl
works but also all the other scala-cli subcommands such as compile
and run
. It also works with //>
directives in your script itself, for example:
//> using scala "3.nightly"
The Scala team no longer publishes -SNAPSHOT
versions of Scala. (Starting that again could be a community contribution; see this ticket.)
But the team does publish nightly builds, each with its own fixed version number. The version number of a nightly looks like e.g. 2.13.1-bin-abcd123
. (-bin-
signals binary compatibility to sbt; all 2.13.x releases since 2.13.0 are binary compatible with each other.)
The old Jenkins-based answer that used to be here no longer works, since we (in 2018) moved publishing of nightlies off Jenkins and onto Travis-CI.
To tell sbt to use one of these nightlies, you need to do three things.
First, add the resolver where the nightlies are kept:
Global / resolvers += "scala-integration" at
"https://scala-ci.typesafe.com/artifactory/scala-integration/"
Second, specify the Scala version:
scalaVersion := "2.13.1-bin-abcd123"
But that isn't a real version number. Manually substitute a version number containing the 7-character SHA of the last commit in the scala/scala repository for which a nightly build was published. Look at https://travis-ci.org/scala/scala/branches and you'll see the SHA in the upper right corner of the 2.13.x (or 2.12.x) section. For example:
As soon as 2.13.1 is released, the version number in the nightly will bump to 2.13.2, and so on.
If you have a multiproject build, be sure you set these settings across all projects when you modify your build definition. Or, you may set them temporarily in the sbt shell with ++2.13.1-bin-abcd123
(sbt 0.13.x) or ++2.13.1-bin-abcd123!
(sbt 1.x; the added exclamation point is necessary to force a version not included in crossScalaVersions
to be used).
Ideally, we would suggest an automated way to ask Travis-CI for the right SHA. This is presumably possible via Travis-CI's API, but (to my knowledge) nobody has looked into it yet. (Is there a volunteer?)
Note that we call these “nightly” builds informally, but technically it's a misnomer. A so-called “nightly” is built for every merged PR.
No further 2.11.x releases are planned, so we (the Scala team at Lightbend) aren't publishing 2.11 nightlies anymore, either.
CrossVersion.patch
, and while you're at it you might as well use scalaOrganization.value
to get Typelevel Scala compatibility too.
Mar 9, 2017 at 7:58
org.scala-js#scalajs-compiler_2.12.8-bin-ebf8017;0.6.25: not found
, one solution (that worked for me) is: libraryDependencies := libraryDependencies.value.filterNot(_.name == "scalajs-compiler"), addCompilerPlugin("org.scala-js" % "scalajs-compiler_2.12.7" % "0.6.25"),
Oct 24, 2018 at 13:33
"foolib" %% "1.2.3"
with "foolib_2.12.7" % "1.2.3"
, this comes up with anything published by full Scala version, typically compiler plugins (Scala.js, macro paradise, etc)
Oct 24, 2018 at 21:20