The Base Plugin
The Base Plugin provides some tasks and conventions that are common to most builds and adds a structure to the build that promotes consistency in how they are run. Its most significant contribution is a set of lifecycle tasks that act as an umbrella for the more specific tasks provided by other plugins and build authors.
Usage
plugins {
base
}
plugins {
id 'base'
}
Task
clean
—Delete
-
Deletes the build directory and everything in it, i.e. the path specified by the Project.getBuildDir() project property.
check
— lifecycle task-
Plugins and build authors should attach their verification tasks, such as ones that run tests, to this lifecycle task using
check.dependsOn(task)
. assemble
— lifecycle task-
Plugins and build authors should attach tasks that produce distributions and other consumable artifacts to this lifecycle task. For example,
jar
produces the consumable artifact for Java libraries. Attach tasks to this lifecycle task usingassemble.dependsOn(task)
. build
— lifecycle task-
Depends on:
check
,assemble
Intended to build everything, including running all tests, producing the production artifacts and generating documentation. You will probably rarely attach concrete tasks directly to
build
asassemble
andcheck
are typically more appropriate. buildConfiguration
— task rule-
Assembles those artifacts attached to the named configuration. For example,
buildArchives
will execute any task that is required to create any artifact attached to thearchives
configuration. cleanTask
— task rule-
Removes the defined outputs of a task, e.g.
cleanJar
will delete the JAR file produced by thejar
task of the Java Plugin.
Dependency management
The Base Plugin adds no configurations for dependencies, but it does add the following configurations:
default
-
A fallback configuration used by consumer projects. Let’s say you have project B with a project dependency on project A. Gradle uses some internal logic to determine which of project A’s artifacts and dependencies are added to the specified configuration of project B. If no other factors apply — you don’t need to worry what these are — then Gradle falls back to using everything in project A’s
default
configuration.New builds and plugins should not be using the
default
configuration! It remains for the reason of backwards compatibility. archives
-
A standard configuration for the production artifacts of a project.
Note that the assemble
task generates all artifacts that are attached to the archives
configuration.
Contributed extensions
The Base Plugin adds the base
extension to the project.
This allows to configure the following properties inside a dedicated DSL block.
base
extensionbase {
archivesName.set("gradle")
distsDirectory.set(layout.buildDirectory.dir("custom-dist"))
libsDirectory.set(layout.buildDirectory.dir("custom-libs"))
}
base {
archivesName = "gradle"
distsDirectory = layout.buildDirectory.dir('custom-dist')
libsDirectory = layout.buildDirectory.dir('custom-libs')
}
archivesName
— default:$project.name
-
Provides the default AbstractArchiveTask.getArchiveBaseName() for archive tasks.
distsDirectory
— default:$buildDir/distributions
-
Default name of the directory in which distribution archives, i.e. non-JARs, are created.
libsDirectory
— default:$buildDir/libs
-
Default name of the directory in which library archives, i.e. JARs, are created.
The plugin also provides default values for the following properties on any task that extends AbstractArchiveTask:
destinationDirectory
-
Defaults to
distsDirectory
for non-JAR archives andlibsDirectory
for JARs and derivatives of JAR, such as WARs. archiveVersion
-
Defaults to
$project.version
or 'unspecified' if the project has no version. archiveBaseName
-
Defaults to
$archivesBaseName
.
Conventions (deprecated)
The Base Plugin also adds conventions related to the creation of archives, such as ZIPs, TARs and JARs. These are deprecated and superseded by the extension described above. See the BasePluginConvention DSL documentation for information on them.