Gradle Goodness: Run Tasks Ignoring Up-to-Date Checks [Code Snippet]
You can use Gradle for builds for incremental tasks, building only when things change. This quick code snippet introduces the assemble and rerun task commands
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Join For FreeGradle builds are fast because Gradle supports incremental tasks. This means Gradle can determine if input or output of tasks has changed — before running the task. If nothing has changed, a task is marked as up-to-date and the task is not executed. Otherwise, the task is executed. If we want to execute a task even if it is up-to-date we must use the command line option --rerun-tasks
.
In the following example, we run the assemble
task for a simple Java project, and we see all tasks are executed. When we invoke the assemble
task again we see the tasks are all up-to-date:
$ gradle assemble :compileJava :processResources :classes :jar :assemble
BUILD SUCCESSFUL Total time: 1.765 secs
$ gradle assemble
:compileJava UP-TO-DATE
:processResources UP-TO-DATE
:classes UP-TO-DATE
:jar UP-TO-DATE
:assemble UP-TO-DATE BUILD SUCCESSFUL
Total time: 0.715 secs
$
To run all tasks without an up-to-date check we use the option --rerun-tasks
:
Written with Gradle 3.2.1.
Published at DZone with permission of Hubert Klein Ikkink, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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