Reputation: 121
I have few Java classes that I want to use on different projects.
I don't want to move these classes in a dedicated project for now.
So I want to build a JAR with these classes, and be able to use it in my other projects, all with Gradle.
So here my JAR task (sources) and I publish it as an artifact :
task utilitiesJar(type: Jar) {
baseName = 'utilities'
version = '0.0.1'
includeEmptyDirs = false
from sourceSets.main.allJava
include "**\\common\\exceptions\\**"
include "**\\common\\json\\**"
include "**\\common\\logging\\**"
}
publishing {
publications {
utilities(MavenPublication) {
artifact utilitiesJar
groupId group
artifactId utilitiesJar.baseName
version utilitiesJar.version
}
}
repositories {
maven {
url 'my_URL'
}
}
}
I get it back with an other project :
repositories {
mavenCentral()
maven {
url 'my_URL'
}
}
...
compile (...)
...
Seems like the JAR is correctly imported (I can see it in "External Libraries" of IntelliJ, with all its classes), but I can't use it. Maybe because the .class files are missing ? I'm beginner in Java, maybe I missed something.
How can I create a JAR with only some classes and then use it ?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 7077
Reputation: 121
Ok so as said in comments, I have to include the builded .class files, I can't use external .java classes like this.
So my solution :
def utilitiesName = '...'
def utilitiesVersion = '0.0.1'
task utilitiesJar(type: Jar, dependsOn: classes) {
baseName = utilitiesName
version = utilitiesVersion
includeEmptyDirs = false
from sourceSets.main.output
include ("**\\common\\exceptions\\**\\*", "**\\common\\json\\**\\*", "**\\common\\logging\\**\\*")
}
task utilitiesSourcesJar(type: Jar, dependsOn: classes) {
baseName = utilitiesName
version = utilitiesVersion
classifier = 'sources'
includeEmptyDirs = false
from sourceSets.main.allJava
include ("**\\common\\exceptions\\**\\*", "**\\common\\json\\**\\*", "**\\common\\logging\\**\\*")
}
publishing {
publications {
utilities(MavenPublication) {
artifact utilitiesJar
artifact utilitiesSourcesJar
groupId group
artifactId utilitiesName
version utilitiesVersion
}
}
repositories {
maven {
url 'myURL'
}
}
}
Now I can use it and see the classes in my IDE.
PS : doing in this way is pretty dirty. Create a sub-project / a module, it's just the way how to do it, that's finaly what I did.
Upvotes: 3