228

I have 2 different project build on mvn. I am trying to replace to Gradle.

Project 1 is an SDK, and project 2 is using that sdk (example).

In the time of maven it creates artifact using mvn install which adds the whole project into local repository.

I like to work in gradle like that. I like project 1 build.gradle need to post it as a gradle local repository and then example project need to use it.

In maven we do mvn install which adds a project artifact into .m2 folder but how to do in gradle so what i can add a project artefact's into the local repository.

Any way that I can do so?

1

5 Answers 5

201

For versions of Gradle prior to 7

sdk/build.gradle:

apply plugin: "maven"

group = "foo"
version = "1.0"

example/build.gradle:

repositories {
    mavenLocal()
}

dependencies {
    compile "foo:sdk:1.0"
}
$sdk> gradle install

$example> gradle build

   
5
  • 2
    apply plugin: "maven" and $sdk> gradle install this will install the sdk into .m2 right ? And mavenLocal() also gets info from .m2 and .gradle ? Commented May 26, 2011 at 10:01
  • 20
    gradle install publishes into the local Maven repo, and mavenLocal() makes sure to look there for dependencies. Commented May 27, 2011 at 5:31
  • 1
    Is Gradle not "phase-oriented" like Maven? IOW, if I do a gradle publish will it not also go through an install phase?
    – Chris F
    Commented Jan 7, 2020 at 21:44
  • @PeterNiederwieser Do I should consider that apply plugin: "maven" makes available the "install" task for Gradle, right? - in some way - it is how a "transitive" (if the term fits well here) task from Maven to Gradle, right?. Consider to update your answer. Thank You Commented Jul 6, 2021 at 15:34
  • 12
    This is no long relevant in Gradle 7+ as the maven plugin has been removed. Instead you need to use the maven-publish plugin and then use gradle publishToMavenLocal. Commented Aug 16, 2021 at 18:23
149

You may be looking for:

gradle publishToMavenLocal

build.gradle:

plugins {
    // other plugins
    id 'maven-publish'
}


publishing {
    publications {
        maven(MavenPublication) {
            from components.java
        }
    }
}

See: Maven Publish Plugin

6
  • 8
    It's working fine even with maven options: gradle -Dmaven.repo.local=.m2/repository publishToMavenLocal
    – sparse
    Commented Jun 1, 2019 at 4:24
  • 8
    how is this different from gradle install with the maven plugin?
    – Matthew
    Commented Jun 18, 2019 at 18:02
  • 4
    @Matthew the maven plugin has been removed in Gradle 7 Commented Aug 16, 2021 at 18:22
  • I found I had to add the publishing section, such as in stackoverflow.com/a/58062266/7224691, to get this to work.
    – Ben
    Commented Sep 10, 2022 at 8:57
  • This also did not work for me unless I added the publishing section. Commented Sep 29, 2022 at 18:51
10

Check out Gradle's documentation on multi-project builds.

Here's an example, with some extra dependencies. Just call gradle install in the root folder, and all will be built and put to your local repo.

Folder structure:

root
+--> build.gradle
+--> settings.gradle
+--> sdk
|    +--> build.gradle
+--> example
     +--> build.gradle

root/build.gradle:

allprojects {
  apply plugin: 'java'
  apply plugin: 'maven'

  group = 'myGroup'
  version = '0.1-SNAPSHOT'
}

root/settings.gradle:

include 'sdk'
include 'example'

root/sdk/build.gradle:

dependencies {
  // just an example external dep.
  compile group:'commons-lang', name:'commons-lang', version:'2.3'
}

root/example/build.gradle:

dependencies {
  compile project(':sdk')
  compile group:'log4j', name:'log4j', version:'1.2.16'
}
2
  • 7
    Is this ideal practice? What if he wants to create a new project, example2, which also relies on sdk? Now he has to put 2 unrelated projects under a root project just because they share a dependency? You would think this entire 'multi-project' setup would be 1 Git project as well. Again, is this bad for company / multi-developer workflows?
    – BlazeFast
    Commented Dec 9, 2015 at 7:04
  • Include causes the project to apply all plugins to sub projects, so doesn't work when projects are built using multiple gradle versions
    – Dragas
    Commented Aug 22 at 8:13
10

You need to publish your own library to your local repository. You can do that in the following way:

  1. Add maven-publish plugin:

    plugins {
        // your other plugins come here...
        id 'maven-publish'
    }
    
  2. Add the publishing section to your build file:

    publishing {
        publications {
            myCoolLibrary(MavenPublication) {
                from components.java
            }
        }
    }
    
  3. Run gradle build publishToMavenLocal

    Find more details in the documentation.

0

One more option is to use Gradle flat directory support. Copy the jar file into local directory (say "flatRepo"). Then add that repo into your build.gradle file:

repositories { 
    flatDir(dirs: 'flatRepo') 
}

This can be used even if you have third party JAR, which is not available in public repositories.

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