Yippie-Ki-Yay
Yippie-Ki-Yay

Reputation: 22804

Gradle - getting the latest release version of a dependency

What would be the easiest way to tell Gradle the following:

Retrieve 'junit' dependency and take its latest 'release' version.

Managing Maven and Ivy repositories is sort of new to me. I tried the following steps and they result in Could not resolve dependency ... error:

Maybe I misunderstand something. Why would getting the latest version of the dependency be such a hard task?

Upvotes: 120

Views: 137197

Answers (6)

Mahozad
Mahozad

Reputation: 24482

Another similar notation for Kotlin DSL (build.gradle.kts):

dependencies {
    implementation("or.jsoup", "jsoup") {
        version {
            require("1.14.+")
        }
    }
    // OR simply
    // implementation("or.jsoup:jsoup:1.14.+")
}

Read more about this in Gradle documentations.

An excerpt from the docs:

A dynamic version can be either a version range (e.g. 2.+) or it can be a placeholder for the latest version available e.g. latest.integration.

Upvotes: 0

Peter Niederwieser
Peter Niederwieser

Reputation: 123900

Gradle currently does not support Maven's RELEASE (which is rarely used and deprecated) but it does support Ivy's latest.release (and for snapshots latest.integration). However, the general recommendation is to build against exact versions. Otherwise, the build can become a lottery.

Upvotes: 63

lenooh
lenooh

Reputation: 10682

In Android Studio:

If you're using + for the version, and want to know which version is actually being used, select Project in the sidebar, and then under External Libraries you will see the actual version number in use.

Upvotes: 3

RunninglVlan
RunninglVlan

Reputation: 166

Latest Gradle User Guide mentions and explains plus sign in versions:

From 7.2. Declaring your dependencies:

dependencies {
    compile group: 'org.hibernate', name: 'hibernate-core', version: '3.6.7.Final'
    testCompile group: 'junit', name: 'junit', version: '4.+'
}

... The build script also states that any junit >= 4.0 is required to compile the project's tests.

From 23.7. How dependency resolution works:

If the dependency is declared as a dynamic version (like 1.+), Gradle will resolve this to the newest available static version (like 1.2) in the repository. For Maven repositories, this is done using the maven-metadata.xml file, while for Ivy repositories this is done by directory listing.

Upvotes: 10

electronix384128
electronix384128

Reputation: 6723

Check out the Gradle-Versions-Plugin. It does exactly what you want: https://github.com/ben-manes/gradle-versions-plugin

For the installation, see the github page. Basically you need to add these two lines to your build.gradle - project file:

apply plugin: 'com.github.ben-manes.versions'

buildscript {
    [...]
    dependencies {
        classpath 'com.github.ben-manes:gradle-versions-plugin:0.8'
        [...]
    }
}
[...]

Then you can use the plugin, by running this command in terminal in your project dir:

./gradlew dependencyUpdates -Drevision=release

And it will show you which dependencies are outdated!

Upvotes: 27

jmruc
jmruc

Reputation: 5836

It can be quite useful sometimes to get the latest release - if for example you release often your own dependencies.

You can get the latest version like

compile "junit:junit:+"

or better specify at least the major version like

compile "junit:junit:4.+"

Upvotes: 293

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