My experience with the Gralde Kotlin DSL is fairly limited - all of one build script which is the subject of this article.
If you want to simply see how a sample script looks, I have a sample github repo with just that here - https://github.com/bijukunjummen/cf-show-env
Just to compare:
1. Consider the way different plugins are applied with gradle:
plugins { id "com.github.pivotalservices.cf-app" version "1.0.9" } apply plugin: 'kotlin" apply plugin: 'java' apply plugin: 'org.springframework.boot' apply from: 'gradle/gatling.gradle'
An equivalent kotlin dsl is the following:
plugins { id("com.github.pivotalservices.cf-app").version("1.0.9") } apply { plugin("kotlin") plugin("java") plugin("org.springframework.boot") from("gradle/gatling.gradle") }
2. Adding project dependencies:
dependencies { compile('org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-actuator') compile('org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-devtools') compile('org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-thymeleaf') compile('org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-web') compile('com.google.guava:guava:19.0') compile("org.webjars:bootstrap:3.3.7") compile("org.webjars:jquery:3.1.1") compile("io.prometheus:simpleclient:${prometheus_client_version}") compile("io.prometheus:simpleclient_spring_boot:${prometheus_client_version}") compile('nz.net.ultraq.thymeleaf:thymeleaf-layout-dialect') testCompile('org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-test') }
an equivalent code using kotlin DSL:
dependencies { val prometheus_client_version = "0.0.21" compile("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-actuator") compile("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-devtools") compile("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-thymeleaf") compile("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-web") compile("com.google.guava:guava:19.0") compile("org.webjars:bootstrap:3.3.7") compile("org.webjars:jquery:3.1.1") compile("io.prometheus:simpleclient:${prometheus_client_version}") compile("io.prometheus:simpleclient_spring_boot:${prometheus_client_version}") compile("nz.net.ultraq.thymeleaf:thymeleaf-layout-dialect") testCompile("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-test") }
3. Configuring Plugins - I have a plugin which helps deploy applications to Cloud Foundry, and works off a configuration which looks like this, when expressed using normal gradle build:
cfConfig { //CF Details ccHost = "api.local.pcfdev.io" ccUser = "admin" ccPassword = "admin" org = "pcfdev-org" space = "pcfdev-space" //App Details name = "cf-show-env" hostName = "cf-show-env" filePath = "build/libs/cf-show-env-0.1.3-SNAPSHOT.jar" path = "" domain = "local.pcfdev.io" instances = 2 memory = 1024 timeout = 180 //Env and services buildpack = "https://github.com/cloudfoundry/java-buildpack.git" environment = ["JAVA_OPTS": "-Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/./urandom", "SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE": "cloud"] cfService { name = "p-mysql" plan = "512mb" instanceName = "test-db" } cfUserProvidedService { instanceName = "mydb1" credentials = ["jdbcUri": "someuri1"] } }
this can now be configured in a typesafe way with full auto-completion support in IntelliJ the following way using Kotlin DSL:
configure< CfPluginExtension> { //CF Details ccHost = "api.local.pcfdev.io" ccUser = "admin" ccPassword = "admin" org = "pcfdev-org" space = "pcfdev-space" //App Details name = "cf-show-env" hostName = "cf-show-env" filePath = "build/libs/cf-show-env-1.0.0-M1.jar" path = "" domain = "local.pcfdev.io" instances = 2 memory = 1024 timeout = 180 //Env and services buildpack = "https://github.com/cloudfoundry/java-buildpack.git" environment = mapOf( "JAVA_OPTS" to "-Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/./urandom", "SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE" to "cloud" ) cfService(closureOf<CfService> { name = "p-mysql" plan = "512mb" instanceName = "test-db" }) cfUserProvidedService(closureOf<CfUserProvidedService> { instanceName = "myups" credentials = mapOf( "user" to "someuser", "uri" to "someuri" ) }) }
4. And finally a straight task:
task "hello-world" { doLast { println("Hello World") } } task showAppUrls(dependsOn: "cf-get-app-detail") << { print "${project.cfConfig.applicationDetail}" }
looks more or less the same in Kotlin DSL:
task("hello-world") { doLast { println("Hello World") } } task("showAppUrls").dependsOn("cf-get-app-detail").doLast { println(cfConfig); }
I am excited about using Kotlin DSL to configure my gradle builds, there are a few quirks to keep in mind though - the Intellij support tends to be a little flaky, it took a few tries for the IDEA to start helping with the auto-completions, also I needed to google quite a bit and look at some of the sample projects in gradle kotlin dsl, all in all though this has an awesome potential.
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