I am simplifying the setup I have to illustrate my issue, but have included structural complexities.
Using Gradle's Kotlin DSL I have a composite build where the root project is empty and the two included builds are both side-by-side multiproject builds with varying structures that make use of "container" projects (aka, empty directories with no build.gradle.kts files) for organization purposes.
.
├── app
│ ├── common
│ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ ├── js
│ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ ├── jvm
│ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ ├── build.gradle.kts
│ └── settings.gradle.kts
├── library
│ ├── core
│ │ ├── common
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ ├── js
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ └── jvm
│ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ ├── other-component
│ │ ├── common
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ ├── js
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ └── jvm
│ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ ├── util
│ │ ├── util1
│ │ │ ├── common
│ │ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ │ ├── js
│ │ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ │ └── jvm
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ └── util2
│ │ ├── common
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ ├── js
│ │ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ │ └── jvm
│ │ └── build.gradle.kts
│ ├── build.gradle.kts
│ └── settings.gradle.kts
├── build.gradle.kts
└── settings.gradle.kts
My desire is to be able to run build in the root composite project within the IDE (Intellij) and it mimic the behavior of a multiproject execution, where everything underneath that project executes the task in turn.
In Groovy, one can just use the spread operator on includedBuilds*.tasks* in the composite project to wire it up, but in the Kotlin DSL, we only have access to task, which is a single TaskReference and no way to get a collection of Tasks (TaskCollection or Collection of Tasks) or collection of TaskReferences.
So in the rootProject of the composite build.gradle.kts, I have:
tasks {
val clean by getting {
gradle.includedBuilds.forEach { this.dependsOn(it.task(":cleanAll")) }
}
val build by getting {
gradle.includedBuilds.forEach { this.dependsOn(it.task(":buildAll")) }
}
}
Then in one of the included builds build.gradle.kts files, I have tried wiring them two different ways (well many but these are the two approaches):
// Variation 1
tasks {
val buildAll : GradleBuild by creating {
this.dependsOn(tasks.getByPath(":build"))
}
val cleanAll : Delete by creating {
this.dependsOn(tasks.getByPath(":clean"))
}
}
// Variation 2
tasks {
val buildAll: GradleBuild by creating {
subprojects.forEach {
this.dependsOn(it.tasks.getByPath(":build"))
}
}
val cleanAll: Delete by creating {
subprojects.forEach {
this.dependsOn(it.tasks.getByPath(":clean"))
}
}
}
// Variation 2.b
tasks {
val buildAll: GradleBuild by creating {
this.dependsOn(subprojects.mapNotNull(it.tasks.getByPath(":build")))
}
val cleanAll: Delete by creating {
this.dependsOn(subprojects.mapNotNull(it.tasks.getByPath(":clean")))
}
}
// I even used different ways to try and get the tasks such as it.tasks["root:library:build"], it.tasks[":library:build"], and it.tasks["library:build"] since I know that the included builds are executed in an isolated fashion. None of these worked
// The result was when I used absolute paths, gradle spat back that these tasks didn't exist (I assumed because they were lifecycle tasks).
Basically, trying the variations above only ever built and cleaned the rootProjects of the included builds and never the subprojects. Is this a bug?
I do not want to have to resort to needing knowledge of the underlying structure of the included builds to wire this up. That would be unsustainable. What am I doing wrong?