This plugin has been deprecated, and the development has been taken over by the fine folks over at the gradle-clojure org. You should use their plugin rather than this one.
A deliberately minimal Gradle plugin for Clojure compilation and test running.
plugins {
id "com.cursive-ide.clojure" version "1.1.0"
}
compileClojure {
aotCompile = true // Defaults to false
copySourceToOutput = false // Defaults to !aotCompile
reflectionWarnings {
enabled = true // Defaults to false
projectOnly = true // Only show warnings from your project, not dependencies - default false
asErrors = true // Treat reflection warnings as errors and fail the build
// If projectOnly is true, only warnings from your project are errors.
}
// Compiler options for AOT
disableLocalsClearing = true // Defaults to false
elideMeta = ['doc', 'file', 'line', 'added'] // Defaults to []
directLinking = true // Defaults to false
// compileClojure implements the standard JavaForkOptions interface, and thus supports the
// standard Gradle mechanisms for configuring a Java process:
// systemProperty systemProperties minHeapSize maxHeapSize
// jvmArgs bootstrapClasspath classpath enableAssertions debug environment
systemProperty 'java.awt.headless', true
maxHeapSize '2048m'
jvmArgs '-agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=n,address=5005'
}
compileTestClojure {
// compileTestClojure accepts the same options as compileClojure, but you're unlikely to AOT
// compile your tests
// Select the files for testing using the standard Gradle include/exclude mechanisms
exclude 'cursive/**/*generative*'
}
testClojure {
// Standard JVM execution options here for test process
systemProperty 'java.awt.headless', true
// Specifying junitReport will trigger JUnit XML report generation
// in addition to standard console output (turned off by default)
junitReport = file("$buildDir/reports/junit-report.xml")
}
This plugin assumes you're using a sane layout for your Clojure code - namespaces corresponding
to your source code layout, and one namespace per file. The plugin uses the filenames to
calculate the namespaces involved, it does not parse the files looking for ns
forms.
This plugin currently only implements compilation and test running. More features may be added, but features provided by Gradle itself will not be (uberjarring, project publishing). I don't use those features myself, examples of build script snippets to perform them for the doc would be very welcome.
There is currently no functionality for running a REPL - you'll need to run an application which starts an nREPL server, or something similar.
- Android support - the Kotlin plugin has an example of this. I'm planning to add this soon so that Cursive can be used with Android Studio.
- Code execution support with project classpath.
Apache License, Version 2.0