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Merge pull request #520 from metafacture/484-gradle8
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Upgrade Gradle wrapper to version 8.6
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blackwinter authored Feb 29, 2024
2 parents 0b85363 + 3165f2e commit cfafdea
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion .editorconfig
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Expand Up @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ trim_trailing_whitespace = true
end_of_line = crlf
trim_trailing_whitespace = false

[*.{gradle,yml}]
[*.{g,gradle,json,xml,xsd,yml}]
indent_size = 2

[metafacture-io/src/test/resources/org/metafacture/io/compressed.txt]
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion .github/workflows/publish.yml
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Expand Up @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ jobs:
with:
java-version: 1.8
- name: Publish package
run: ./gradlew publish
run: ./gradlew publishAllPublicationsToGitHubPackagesRepository
env:
GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}

1 change: 0 additions & 1 deletion .gitignore
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Expand Up @@ -32,7 +32,6 @@ tmp
.classpath
.project
.settings/
bin/

# Ignore IntelliJ project files:
*.ipr
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56 changes: 28 additions & 28 deletions CONTRIBUTING.md
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Expand Up @@ -180,43 +180,43 @@ We use semantic versioning in release numbers `A`.`B`.`C`, i.e. increase `A` whe
The following commands trigger a release build.

1. Create a signed tag:
```
git tag -s metafacture-core-A.B.C
```
```
git tag -s metafacture-core-A.B.C
```
1. When prompted, add a sensible commit message. For instance, something like:
```
Publish first release of the Metafacture A line
```
```
Publish first release of the Metafacture A line
```
1. You can now test the build locally by invoking:
```
./gradlew assemble
```
```
./gradlew assemble
```
1. Finally, push the new tag to GitHub to trigger the actual release build:
```
git push --follow-tags metafacture-core-A.B.C
```
```
git push --follow-tags metafacture-core-A.B.C
```
#### Publish to Maven Central
Upload archives to sonatype (where they can be released to Maven Central)
1. Make sure to have a clean directory (otherwise only a SNAPSHOT will be built):
```
git status
```
```
git status
```
1. You need a `gradle.properties` in the root directory that looks like this:
```
signing.gnupg.executable=gpg
signing.gnupg.useLegacyGpg=true
signing.gnupg.homeDir=$e.g."~/.gnupg"
signing.gnupg.keyName=$yourKeyName
signing.gnupg.passphrase=$keysPassphrase
releaseRepositoryUrl=https://oss.sonatype.org/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2/
releaseRepositoryUser=$yourSonatypeUsername
releaseRepositoryPassword=$yourSonatypePassword
```
```
signing.gnupg.executable=gpg
signing.gnupg.useLegacyGpg=true
signing.gnupg.homeDir=$e.g."~/.gnupg"
signing.gnupg.keyName=$yourKeyName
signing.gnupg.passphrase=$keysPassphrase
releaseRepositoryUrl=https://oss.sonatype.org/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2/
releaseRepositoryUser=$yourSonatypeUsername
releaseRepositoryPassword=$yourSonatypePassword
```
1. Let the release be built, signed and uploaded:
```
./gradlew uploadArchives
```
```
./gradlew publishAllPublicationsToMavenRepository
```
1. Finally, go to oss.sonatype.org , check the `Staging Repositories` when it's finished, and release it by clicking `close`
71 changes: 41 additions & 30 deletions README.md
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Expand Up @@ -17,23 +17,32 @@ You can either use Metafacture as a stand-alone application or include it as a J
## Metafacture as a stand-alone application

If you are only interested in running Flux scripts without doing any Java programming this is the way to go. The instructions assume that you are using a \*nix-like shell. [See more information in the wiki page about Flux](https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-core/wiki/Flux-user-guide).
You can `build` the stand-alone application yourself or `download` it.

1. Download the latest distribution package from the [release page](https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-core/releases). Make sure that you do download a distribution package and *not* a source code package (the file name should include `*-dist*`).

2. Extract the downloaded archive:
```bash
$ tar xzf metafacture-core-$VERSION-dist.tar.gz
```
This will create a new directory containing a ready-to-use Metafacture distribution.
3. Change into the newly created directory:
```bash
$ cd metafacture-core-$VERSION
```
4. Run one of the example scripts:
```bash
$ ./flux.sh examples/read/marc21/read-marc21.flux
```
This example will print a number of MARC 21 records on standard output.
a) Build

Proceed as described in [Building metafacture-core from source](#build_from_source).

b) Download

Download the latest distribution package from the [release page](https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-core/releases). Make sure that you do download a distribution package and *not* a source code package (the file name should include `*-dist*`).

Regardless if you've built or downloaded, go on with:

1. Extract the archive:
```bash
$ tar xzf metafacture-core-$VERSION-dist.tar.gz
```
This will create a new directory containing a ready-to-use Metafacture distribution.
2. Change into the newly created directory:
```bash
$ cd metafacture-core-$VERSION
```
3. Run one of the example scripts:
```bash
$ ./flux.sh examples/read/marc21/read-marc21.flux
```
This example will print a number of MARC 21 records on standard output.

The `examples` folder contains many more examples which provide a good starting point for learning Metafacture. If you have any questions please join our [mailing list](http://lists.dnb.de/mailman/listinfo/metafacture) or use our issue-based discussion forum over at [metafacture-documentation](https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-documentation).

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -66,25 +75,27 @@ Occasionally, we publish snapshot builds on [Sonatype OSS Repository](https://os
TODO: Link to getting started tutorial
-->


<a name="build_from_source"></a>
# Building metafacture-core from source

Building metafacture-core from source is easy. All you need is git and JDK 8:

1. Clone the metafacture-core repository and change into the directory:

```bash
$ git clone https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-core.git
$ cd metafacture-core
```

2. Invoke the Gradle wrapper to download Gradle and build metafacture-core (on Windows call `gradlew.bat install` instead):

```bash
$ ./gradlew install
```

Besides the resulting distribution in `metafacture-core/metafacture-runner/build/distributions/` this also provides builds in your local maven repository.

```bash
$ git clone https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-core.git
$ cd metafacture-core
```

2. Invoke the Gradle wrapper to download Gradle and build metafacture-core (on Windows call `gradlew.bat publishToMavenLocal` instead) and publish these to your local Maven repository:
```bash
$ ./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
```

3. Create a distribution if you need one. The resulting distribution can be found in `metafacture-core/metafacture-runner/build/distributions/`:
```bash
$ ./gradlew assembleDist
```

See [Code Quality and Style](https://github.com/metafacture/metafacture-core/wiki/Code-Quality-and-Style) on the wiki for further information on the sources.

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