Kategorien
Dev Note Gradle Jenkins Tools

DEV-NOTES|Gradle: Injecting project version and Jenkins build number into project resources

Gradles project model provides a consistent way of expressing a version of an artifact. The following task uses the version number and makes it accessible to application code. Furthermore it adds the number of the build given by the Jenkins CI server.

/**
 * Read the version number from gradle (multi-) project definition
 * and add the build number from Jenkins-ci if available, otherwise use "IDE"
 */
task injectVersion << {
    def lineSep = System.getProperty("line.separator", "n")

    def file = file("$sourceSets.main.output.resourcesDir/version.properties")
    file.newWriter().withWriter { w ->
        w << "version=" << rootProject.version << lineSep
        w << "buildNumber=" << (System.getenv("BUILD_NUMBER") as String ?: "IDE") << lineSep
    }
}

// the inject version task requires the output folders to be already created
injectVersion.mustRunAfter processResources

// the version properties file have to be added to the classpath resource
classes.dependsOn injectVersion

It is worth to notice that the inject version task relies on the existence of the resource output directory from the „main“ source set. Therefore it is not allowed to run before the processResources has been completed and it depends on the classes task.

Someone might consider extending the processResources task putting the version.properties file creation into the doLast step like:

processResources.doLast {
    def lineSep = System.getProperty("line.separator", "n")

    def file = file("$sourceSets.main.output.resourcesDir/version.properties")
   file.newWriter().withWriter { w ->
        w << "version=" << rootProject.version << lineSep
        w << "buildNumber=" << (System.getenv("BUILD_NUMBER") as String ?: "IDE") << lineSep
    }
}

This works well except for changing numbers without cleaning, because gradle could not decide whether the build number has changed or is still unchanged during its configuration phase.


References

Kategorien
Allgemein Continous Integration Javascript Jenkins

Krama, Jenkins and Bitbucket colluding continuous integration

Having an automatic build process, high grade unit and integration tests and a CI (continuous integration) system helps to enforce a certain level of quality. Runtraction is a Javascript HTML5 based mobile (web) application. It was scaffolded using Yeoman utilizing:

  • Yo for scaffolding the intial project structure and additional components,
  • Grunt for build automation and
  • Bowers dependency management.

The Yo utility creates Karma tests suites beside the source and various other artifacts. Karma integrates well with several CI products like Jenkins CI and Travis CI. Travis CI provides a free continuous integration service and pthe integration into an own project is just a matter of adding an appropriate .travis.yml configuration file.

The Runtraction source code lives at Bitbucket.

So everything seems to be fine – but unfortunately Travis CI is very tightened to Github so it is not possible to use it from Bitbucket directly. Furthermore there is no service trigger for Tavis CI in Bitbucket too.