Thursday, 28 September, 2017 UTC


Summary

Eclipse Vert.x is a versatile toolkit, and as such it does not have any strong opinion on the tools that you should be using.
Gradle is a popular build tool in the JVM ecosystem, and it is quite easy to use for building Vert.x project as show in one of the vertx-examples samples where a so-called fat Jar is being produced.
The new Vert.x Gradle plugin offers an opinionated plugin for building Vert.x applications with Gradle.
It automatically applies the following plugins:
  • java (and sets the source compatibility to Java 8),
  • application + shadow to generate fat Jars with all dependencies bundled,
  • nebula-dependency-recommender-plugin so that you can omit versions from modules from the the Vert.x stack.
The plugin automatically adds io.vertx:vertx-core as a compile dependency, so you don’t need to do it.
The plugin provides a vertxRun task that can take advantage of the Vert.x auto-reloading capabilities, so you can just run it then have your code being automatically compiled and reloaded as you make changes.
Getting started
A minimal build.gradle looks like:
plugins { id 'io.vertx.vertx-plugin' version '0.0.4' } repositories { jcenter() } vertx { mainVerticle = 'sample.App' }
Provided sample.App is a Vert.x verticle, then:
  1. gradle shadowJar builds an executable Jar with all dependencies: java -jar build/libs/simple-project-fat.jar, and
  2. gradle vertxRun starts the application and automatically recompiles (gradle classes) and reloads the code when any file under src/ is being added, modified or deleted.
Using with Kotlin (or Groovy, or…)
The plugin integrates well with plugins that add configurations and tasks triggered by the classes task.
Here is how to use the plugin with Kotlin (replace the version numbers with the latest ones…):
plugins { id 'io.vertx.vertx-plugin' version 'x.y.z' id 'org.jetbrains.kotlin.jvm' version 'a.b.c' } repositories { jcenter() } dependencies { compile 'io.vertx:vertx-lang-kotlin' compile 'org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-stdlib-jre8' } vertx { mainVerticle = "sample.MainVerticle" } tasks.withType(org.jetbrains.kotlin.gradle.tasks.KotlinCompile).all { kotlinOptions { jvmTarget = "1.8" } }
Using with WebPack (or any other custom task)
WebPack is popular to bundle web assets, and there is even a guide for its integration with Gradle.
Mixing the Vert.x Gradle plugin with WebPack is very simple, especially in combination with the com.moowork.node plugin that integrates Node into Gradle.
Suppose we want to mix Vert.x code and JavaScript with Gradle and WebPack. We assume a package.json as:
{ "name": "webpack-sample", "version": "0.0.1", "description": "A sample with Vert.x, Gradle and Webpack", "main": "src/main/webapp/index.js", "scripts": { "test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1" }, "author": "", "license": "ISC", "devDependencies": { "webpack": "^2.7.0" }, "dependencies": { "axios": "^0.16.2" } }
and webpack.config.js as:
module.exports = { entry: './src/main/webapp/index.js', output: { filename: './build/resources/main/webroot/bundle.js' } }
The build.gradle file is the following:
plugins { id 'io.vertx.vertx-plugin' version '0.0.4' id 'com.moowork.node' version '1.2.0' } repositories { jcenter() } dependencies { compile "io.vertx:vertx-web" } vertx { mainVerticle = "sample.MainVerticle" watch = ["src/**/*", "build.gradle", "yarn.lock"] onRedeploy = ["classes", "webpack"] } task webpack(type: Exec) { inputs.file("$projectDir/yarn.lock") inputs.file("$projectDir/webpack.config.js") inputs.dir("$projectDir/src/main/webapp") outputs.dir("$buildDir/resources/main/webroot") commandLine "$projectDir/node_modules/.bin/webpack" }
This custom build exposes a webpack task that invokes WebPack, with proper file tracking so that Gradle knows when the task is up-to-date or not.
The Node plugin adds many tasks, and integrates fine with npm or yarn, so fetching all NPM dependencies is done by calling ./gradlew yarn.
The vertxRun task now redeploys on modifications to files in src/ (and sub-folders), build.gradle and yarn.lock, calling both the classes and webpack tasks:
Summary
The Vert.x Gradle plugin provides lots of defaults to configure a Gradle project for Vert.x applications, producing fat Jars and offering a running task with automatic redeployment. The plugin also integrates well with other plugins and external tools for which a Gradle task is available.
The project is still in its early stages and we are looking forward to hearing from you!

Links

  • The project on GitHub
  • The plugin on the Gradle plugins portal