The gradle-release plugin is designed to work similar to the Maven release plugin.
The gradle release
task defines the following as the default release process:
- The plugin checks for any un-committed files (Added, modified, removed, or un-versioned).
- Checks for any incoming or outgoing changes.
- Removes the SNAPSHOT flag on your project's version (If used)
- Prompts you for the release version.
- Checks if your project is using any SNAPSHOT dependencies
- Will
build
your project. - Commits the project if SNAPSHOT was being used.
- Creates a release tag with the current version.
- Prompts you for the next version.
- Commits the project with the new version.
Current SCM support: Bazaar, Git (1.7.2 or newer), Mercurial, and Subversion
The gradle-release plugin will work with Gradle 1.0M3 and beyond
buildscript {
repositories {
maven {
url 'https://plugins.gradle.org/m2/'
}
}
dependencies {
classpath 'net.researchgate:gradle-release:2.6.0'
}
}
apply plugin: 'net.researchgate.release'
plugins {
id 'net.researchgate.release' version '2.6.0'
}
Please refer to the Gradle DSL PluginDependenciesSpec to understand the behavior and limitations when using the new syntax to declare plugin dependencies.
After you have your build.gradle
file configured, simply run: gradle release
and follow the on-screen instructions.
As described above, the plugin will check for un-committed files and SNAPSHOT dependencies. By default the plugin will fail when any un-committed, or SNAPSHOT dependencies are found.
Below are some properties of the Release Plugin Convention that can be used to make your release process more lenient
Name | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
failOnCommitNeeded | true | Fail the release process when there un-committed changes |
failOnPublishNeeded | true | Fail when there are local commits that haven't been published upstream (DVCS support) |
failOnSnapshotDependencies | true | Fail when the project has dependencies on SNAPSHOT versions |
failOnUnversionedFiles | true | Fail when files are found that are not under version control |
failOnUpdateNeeded | true | Fail when the source needs to be updated, or there are changes available upstream that haven't been pulled |
revertOnFail | true | When a failure occurs should the plugin revert it's changes to gradle.properties? |
Below are some properties of the Release Plugin Convention that can be used to customize the build
Name | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
tagTemplate | $version | The string template which is used to generate the tag name. Possible variables are $version and $name. Example: '$name-$version' will result in "myproject-1.1.0". (Always ensure to use single-quotes, otherwise `$` is interpreted already in your build script) |
preCommitText | This will be prepended to all commits done by the plugin. A good place for code review, or ticket numbers | |
preTagCommitMessage | [Gradle Release Plugin] - pre tag commit: | The commit message used to commit the non-SNAPSHOT version if SNAPSHOT was used |
tagCommitMessage | [Gradle Release Plugin] - creating tag: | The commit message used when creating the tag. Not used with BZR projects |
newVersionCommitMessage | [Gradle Release Plugin] - new version commit: | The commit message used when committing the next version |
Below are some properties of the Release Plugin Convention that are specific to version control.
VCS | Name | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Git | requireBranch | master | Defines the branch which releases must be done off of. Eg. set to `release` to require releases are done on the `release` branch (or use a regular expression to allow releases from multiple branches, e.g. `/release|master/`). Set to '' to ignore. |
Git | pushOptions | {empty} | Defines an array of options to add to the git adapter during a push. This could be useful to have the vc hooks skipped during a release. Example `pushOptions = ["--no-verify"]` |
Git | signTag | false | Adds `-s` parameter to the tag command |
To set any of these properties to false, add a "release" configuration to your project's build.gradle
file. Eg. To ignore un-versioned files, you would add the following to your build.gradle
file:
release {
failOnUnversionedFiles = false
}
Eg. To ignore upstream changes, change 'failOnUpdateNeeded' to false:
release {
failOnUpdateNeeded = false
}
This are all possible configuration options and its default values:
release {
failOnCommitNeeded = true
failOnPublishNeeded = true
failOnSnapshotDependencies = true
failOnUnversionedFiles = true
failOnUpdateNeeded = true
revertOnFail = true
preCommitText = ''
preTagCommitMessage = '[Gradle Release Plugin] - pre tag commit: '
tagCommitMessage = '[Gradle Release Plugin] - creating tag: '
newVersionCommitMessage = '[Gradle Release Plugin] - new version commit: '
tagTemplate = '${version}'
versionPropertyFile = 'gradle.properties'
versionProperties = []
buildTasks = ['build']
versionPatterns = [
/(\d+)([^\d]*$)/: { Matcher m, Project p -> m.replaceAll("${(m[0][1] as int) + 1}${m[0][2]}") }
]
scmAdapters = [
net.researchgate.release.GitAdapter,
net.researchgate.release.SvnAdapter,
net.researchgate.release.HgAdapter,
net.researchgate.release.BzrAdapter
]
git {
requireBranch = 'master'
pushToRemote = 'origin'
pushToBranchPrefix = ''
commitVersionFileOnly = false
signTag = false
}
svn {
username = null
password = null
pinExternals = false // allows to pin the externals when tagging, requires subversion client >= 1.9.0
}
}
To add a step to the release process is very easy. Gradle provides a very nice mechanism for manipulating existing tasks
For example, if we wanted to make sure uploadArchives
is called and succeeds after the build with the release version has finished, we would just add the uploadArchives
task as a dependency of the afterReleaseBuild
task:
afterReleaseBuild.dependsOn uploadArchives
Support for multi-project builds isn't complete, but will work given some assumptions. The gradle-release plugin assumes and expects that only one version control system is used by both root and sub projects.
Apply the plugin separately to each subproject that you wish to release. Release using a qualified task name, e.g.:
./gradlew :sub:release # release a subproject named "sub"
./gradlew :release # release the root project
In a continuous integration environment like Jenkins or Hudson, you don't want to have an interactive release process. To avoid having to enter any information manually during the process, you can tell the plugin to automatically set and update the version number.
You can do this by setting the release.useAutomaticVersion
property on the command line, or in Jenkins when you execute gradle. The version to release and the next version can be optionally defined using the properties release.releaseVersion
and release.newVersion
.
$ gradle release -Prelease.useAutomaticVersion=true -Prelease.releaseVersion=1.0.0 -Prelease.newVersion=1.1.0-SNAPSHOT
To ask questions please use stackoverflow or gitter.
- Chat/Gitter: https://gitter.im/researchgate/gradle-release
- Stack Overflow: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/gradle-release-plugin
To report bugs, please use the GitHub project.
- Project Page: https://github.com/researchgate/gradle-release
- Reporting Bugs: https://github.com/researchgate/gradle-release/issues