Skip to content

amirmv2006/mps-gradle-plugin

 
 

Repository files navigation

mps-gradle-plugin

Miscellaneous tasks that were found useful when building MPS-based projects with Gradle.

Using the Plugin

Add the following buildscript block to your build script:

buildscript {
    repositories {
        maven { url 'https://projects.itemis.de/nexus/content/repositories/mbeddr' }
        mavenCentral()
    }

    dependencies {
        classpath 'de.itemis.mps:mps-gradle-plugin:1.2.+'
    }
}

Use a fully specified version such as 1.0.123 for better build reproducibility.

Tasks

RunAntScript

Is the base for a collection of tasks (BuildLanguages, TestLanguages) that all have the interface. These tasks are used to execute generated ant files from MPS. Especially useful when you can't use the ANT integration of gradle to run generated ANT XML files during the build because they are generated during the build.

Usage

Parameters:

  • script: path to the ANT to execute
  • scriptClasspath: classpath used for the JVM that will execute the generated ANT script. Needs to contain ANT to be able to run the build script. See below section "Providing Global Defaults" for project wide defaults.
  • scriptArgs: additional command line arguments provided to the JVM that will execute the generated ANT scripts. This is often used to provide property valued via "-Dprop=value". See below section "Providing Global Defaults" for project wide defaults.
  • executable: the java executable to use. Optional. If itemis.mps.gradle.ant.defaultJavaExecutable extended property is set, its value is used as the default value for the parameter.
  • includeDefaultArgs: controls whether the project-wide default values for arguments are used. It's set to true by default.
  • includeDefaultClasspath: controls whether the project-wide default values for the classpath are used. It's set to true by default.
  • targets(): the targets to execute of the ANT files.

Providing Global Defaults For Class Path And Arguments

All tasks derived from the RunAntScript base class allow to specify default values for the classpath and script arguments via project properties. By default these values are added to the value specified for the parameters scriptArgs and scriptClasspath if they are present. To opt out from the defaults see above the parameters includeDefaultArgs and includeDefaultClasspath.

The property itemis.mps.gradle.ant.defaultScriptArgs controls the default arguments provided to the build scripts execution. In belows example the default arguments contain the version and build date. At runtime the default arguments are combined with the arguments defined via scriptArgs.

The property itemis.mps.gradle.ant.defaultScriptClasspath controls the default classpath provided to the build scripts execution. In belows example the classpath contains ANT (via dependency configuration) and the tools jar from the JDK. At runtime the default classpath are combined with the classpath defined via scriptClasspath.

def defaultScriptArgs = ["-Dversion=$version", "-DbuildDate=${new Date().toString()}"]
def buildScriptClasspath = project.configurations.ant_lib.fileCollection({true}) + project.files("$project.jdk_home/lib/tools.jar")

ext["itemis.mps.gradle.ant.defaultScriptArgs"] = defaultScriptArgs
ext["itemis.mps.gradle.ant.defaultScriptClasspath"] = buildScriptClasspath

Providing Global Defaults For The Java Executable

The itemis.mps.gradle.ant.defaultJavaExecutable property specifies the value to use as the underlying JavaExec.executable. The executable parameter of each individual task takes precedence over the global default.

CreateDmg

(macOS only) Creates a .dmg installer by combining an RCP artifact (as created by an MPS-generated Ant script), a JDK, and a background image.

Usage

task buildDmg(type: de.itemis.mps.gradle.CreateDmg) {
    rcpArtifact file('path/to/RCP.tgz')

    jdkDependency "com.jetbrains.jdk:jdk:${jdkVersion}:osx_x64@tgz"
    // -or -
    jdk file('path/to/jdk.tgz')

    backgroundImage file('path/to/background.png')
    dmgFile file('output.dmg')

    signKeyChain file("/path/to/my.keychain-db")

    signKeyChainPassword "my.keychain-db-password"

    signIdentity "my Application ID Name"
}

Parameters:

  • rcpArtifact - the path to the RCP artifact produced by a build script.
  • jdkDependency - the coordinates of a JDK in case it's available in a repository and can be resolved as a Gradle dependency.
  • jdk - the path to a JDK .tgz file.
  • backgroundImage - the path to the background image.
  • dmgFile - the path and file name of the output DMG image. Must end with .dmg.
  • signKeyChain (optional) - the path and file name of the keychain which contains a code signing certificate.
  • signKeyChainPassword (optional) - the password which should be use to unlock the keychain.
  • signIdentity (optional) - the application ID of the code signing certificate.

Operation

The task unpacks rcpArtifact into a temporary directory, unpacks the JDK given by jdkDependency/jdk under the jre subdirectory of the unpacked RCP artifact, fixes file permissions and creates missing symlinks. If the additional properties for code signing (signKeyChain, signKeyChainPassword, signIdentity) are defined, the application will be signed with the given certificate. Afterwards a DMG image is created and its layout is configured using the background image. Finally, the DMG is copied to dmgFile.

BundleMacosJdk

(Linux/macOS) Creates a .tar.gz by combining an RCP artifact and a JDK. This task is intended as a substitute for the macOS-specific CreateDmg task.

Usage

task bundleMacosJdk(type: de.itemis.mps.gradle.BundleMacosJdk) {
    rcpArtifact file('path/to/RCP.tgz')

    jdkDependency "com.jetbrains.jdk:jdk:${jdkVersion}:osx_x64@tgz"
    // -or -
    jdk file('path/to/jdk.tgz')

    outputFile file('output.tar.gz')
}

Parameters:

  • rcpArtifact - the path to the RCP artifact produced by a build script.
  • jdkDependency - the coordinates of a JDK in case it's available in a repository and can be resolved as a Gradle dependency.
  • jdk - the path to a JDK .tgz file.
  • outputFile - the path and file name of the output gzipped tar archive.

Operation

The task unpacks rcpArtifact into a temporary directory, unpacks the JDK given by jdkDependency/jdk under the jre subdirectory of the unpacked RCP artifact, fixes file permissions and creates missing symlinks. Finally, the file is repackaged again as tar/gzip.

GenerateLibrariesXml

Generates a .mps/libraries.xml file using data from property files.

Usage

task generateLibrariesXml(type: de.itemis.mps.gradle.GenerateLibrariesXml) {
    defaults rootProject.file('projectlibraries.properties')
    overrides rootProject.file('projectlibraries.overrides.properties')
    destination file('.mps/libraries.xml')
}

Parameters:

  • defaults - path to default properties (checked in to version control)
  • overrides - path to property overrides (ignored, not checked in to version control, absent by default)
  • destination - path to the output libraries.xml

Operation

The task reads properties file defaults, then overrides (if present). destination is then generated based on the properties.

Each property represents an entry in destination (a project library), where the property name is the library name and the property value is the path to the library.

Generate

Generate a specific or all models in a project without the need for a MPS model.

While technically possible generating languages with this task makes little sense as there is no way of packaging the generated artifacts into JAR files. We only recommend using this for simple tasks where user defined models should be generated in the CI build or from the commandline.

Usage

A minimal build script to generate a MPS project with no external plugins would look like this:

apply plugin: 'generate-models'

configurations {
    mps
}

ext.mpsVersion = '2018.3.6'

generate {
    projectLocation = new File("./mps-prj")
    mpsConfig = configurations.mps
}

dependencies {
    mps "com.jetbrains:mps:$mpsVersion"
}

Parameters:

  • mpsConfig - the configuration used to resolve MPS. Currently only vanilla MPS is supported and no custom RCPs. Custom plugins are supported via the pluginLocation parameter.
  • mpsLocation - optional location where to place the MPS files.
  • javaExec - optional java executable to use.
  • pluginLocation - location where to load the plugins from. Structure needs to be a flat folder structure similar to the plugins directory inside of the MPS installation.
  • plugins - optional list of plugins to load before generation is attempted. The notation is new Plugin("pluginID", "somePath"). The first parameter is the plugin id. For the second parameter "somePath" there are several options:
    • if it's an absolute path, the plugin is loaded from that path
    • if it's a folder located under pluginLocation the plugin is loaded from that folder
    • otherwise it should be a plugin folder located under the default mps/plugins
  • models - optional list of models to generate. If omitted all models in the project will be generated. Only full name matched are supported and no RegEx or partial name matching.
  • macros - optional list of path macros. The notation is new Macro("name", "value").
  • projectLocation - location of the MPS project to generate.
  • debug - optionally allows to start the JVM that is used to generated with a debugger. Setting it to true will cause the started JVM to suspend until a debugger is attached. Useful for debugging classloading problems or exceptions during the build.

Model Check

Run the model check on a subset or all models in a project directly from gradle.

This functionality currently runs all model checks (typesystem, structure, constrains, etc.) from gralde. By default if any of checks fails the complete build is failed. All messages (Info, Warning or Error) are reported through log4j to the command line.

Usage

A minimal build script to check all models in a MPS project with no external plugins would look like this:

apply plugin: 'modelcheck'

configurations {
    mps
}

dependencies {
    mps "com.jetbrains:mps:$mpsVersion"
}

ext.mpsVersion = '2018.3.6'

modelcheck {
    projectLocation = new File("./mps-prj")
    mpsConfig = configurations.mps
    macros = listOf(Macro("mypath", "/your/path"))
}

Parameters:

  • mpsConfig - the configuration used to resolve MPS. Currently only vanilla MPS is supported and no custom RCPs. Custom plugins are supported via the pluginLocation parameter.
  • mpsLocation - optional location where to place the MPS files.
  • javaExec - optional java executable to use.
  • pluginLocation - location where to load the plugins from. Structure needs to be a flat folder structure similar to the plugins directory inside of the MPS installation.
  • plugins - optional list of plugins to load before generation is attempted. The notation is new Plugin("pluginID", "somePath"). The first parameter is the plugin id. For the second parameter "somePath" there are several options:
    • if it's an absolute path, the plugin is loaded from that path
    • if it's a folder located under pluginLocation the plugin is loaded from that folder
    • otherwise it should be a plugin folder located under the default mps/plugins
  • models - optional list of models to check. RegEx can be used for matching multiple models.
  • modules - optional list of modules to check. Expects ordinary name (w/o virtual folders). RegEx can be used for matching multiple modules. If both parameters, models and modules, are omitted - all models in the project will be checked.
  • macros - optional list of path macros. The notation is new Macro("name", "value").
  • projectLocation - location of the MPS project to check.
  • errorNoFail - report errors but do not fail the build.
  • warningAsError - handles warnings as errors and will fail the build if any is found when errorNoFail is not set.
  • debug - optionally allows to start the JVM that is used to load MPS project with a debugger. Setting it to true will cause the started JVM to suspend until a debugger is attached. Useful for debugging classloading problems or exceptions during the build.
  • junitFile - allows storing the the results of the model check as a JUnit XML file. By default, the file will contain one testcase for each model that was checked (s. junitFormat).
  • junitFormat - allows to change the format of the JUnit XML file, how the model checking errors will be reported. Possible options:
    • model (default) - generates one testcase for each model that was checked. If the model check reported any error for the model, the testcase will fail and the message of the model checking error will be reported.
    • message - generates one testcase for each model check error. For uniqueness reasons, the name of the testcase will reflect the specific model check error and the name of the testclass will be constructed from the checked node ID and its containing root node. Full error message and the node URL will be reported in the testcase failure. Checked models will be mapped to testsuites with this option.
  • maxHeap - maximum heap size setting for the JVM that executes the modelchecker. This is useful to limit the heap usage in scenarios like containerized build agents where the OS reported memory limit is not the maximum to be consumed by the container. The value is a string understood by the JVM command line argument -Xmx e.g. 3G or `512M

Additional Plugins

By default only the minimum required set of plugins are loaded. This includes base language and some utilities like the HTTP server from MPS. If your project requires additional plugins to be loaded this is done by setting plugin location to the place where your jar files are placed and adding your plugin id and folder name to the plugins list:

apply plugin: 'modelcheck'
...

modelcheck {
    pluginLocation = new File("path/to/my/plugins")
    plugins = [new Plugin("com.mbeddr.core", "mbeddr.core")]
    projectLocation = new File("./mps-prj")
    mpsConfig = configurations.mps
}

Dependencies of the specified plugins are automatically loaded from the pluginlocation and the plugins directory of MPS. If they are not found the the build will fail.

Download JetBrains Runtime

When building MPS projects with the JatBrains Runtime, the JDK/JRE used by MPS and other intellij based IDEs, it's required to download the correct version of the runtime. Since the runtime is platform dependent it's required to download a platform dependent binary. While it's possible to add the logic to your own build script we provide a convenient way of doing this with a gradle plugin.

The download-jbr plugin will add new dependencies and a task to your build. It will add a dependency to com.jetbrains.jdk:jbr to your build, you need to make sure that it is available in your dependency repositories. The itemis maven repository at https://projects.itemis.de/nexus/content/repositories/mbeddr provides this dependency, but you can create your own with the scripts located in mbeddr/build.publish.jdk

For easy consumption and incremental build support the plugin creates a task downloadJbr which exposes the location of the java executable via the javaExecutable property. See the tests in src/test/kotlin/JBRDownload.kt for an example how to use it.

Usage

Kotlin:

plugins {
    id("download-jbr")
}

repositories {
    mavenCentral()
    maven {
        url = URI("https://projects.itemis.de/nexus/content/repositories/mbeddr")
    }
}

downloadJbr {
    jbrVersion = "11_0_6-b520.66"
}

Groovy:

apply plugin: 'download-jbr'
...

repositories {
    maven { url 'https://projects.itemis.de/nexus/content/repositories/mbeddr' }
    mavenCentral()
}

downloadJbr {
    jbrVersion = '11_0_6-b520.66'
}

Parameters

  • jbrVersion - version of the JBR to download. While this supports maven version selectors we highly recomment not using wildcards like * or + in there for reproducible builds.
  • downloadDir - optional directory where the downloaded JBR is downloaded and extracted to. The plugin defaults to build/jbrDownload

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Kotlin 56.8%
  • Perl 27.2%
  • Groovy 10.3%
  • Shell 5.7%