The plugin now outputs to "generated/sources". The IDE configuration
explicitly adding the folders to the source sets hasn't been needed for
some years.
In 61f19d707a I swapped the signatures to use the version catalog. But I
failed to preserve the `@signature` extension and it all seemed to
work... But in fact all the animalsniffer tasks were completing as
SKIPPED as they lacked signatures. The build.gradle changes in this
commit are to fix that while still using version catalog.
But while it was broken violations crept in. Most violations weren't
too important and we're not surprised went unnoticed. For example, Netty
with TLS has long required the Java 8 API
`setEndpointIdentificationAlgorithm()`, so using `Optional` in the same
code path didn't harm anything in particular. I still swapped it to
Guava's `Optional` to avoid overuse of `@IgnoreJRERequirement`.
One important violation has not been fixed and instead I've disabled the
android signature in api/build.gradle for the moment. The violation is
in StatusException using the `fillInStackTrace` overload of Exception.
This problem [had been noticed][PR11066], but we couldn't figure out
what was going on. AnimalSniffer is now noticing this and agreeing with
the internal linter. There is still a question of why our interop tests
failed to notice this, but given they are no longer running on pre-API
level 24, that may forever be a mystery.
[PR11066]: https://github.com/grpc/grpc-java/pull/11066
Bazel had the dependency added because of #5046, where Guava was
depending on it as compile-only and Bazel build have "unknown enum
constant" warnings. Guava now has a compile dependency on j2objc, so
this workaround is no longer needed. There are currently no version skew
issues in Gradle, which was the only usage.
We don't include protobuf in IO_GRPC_GRPC_JAVA_ARTIFACTS, so there might
not actually be an alias available for it to @com_google_protobuf. While
we could add it, it is easier to use the @com_google_protobuf references
directly.
This was preventing `bazel query 'deps(//...)' from succeeding, because
it couldn't find javalite.
The recommended way to load dependencies from `rules_jvm_external`
is to make use of the `@maven` workspace, and the most readable
way of doing that is to use the `artifact` macro provides.
This removes the need to generate the "compat" namespaces, which
`rules_jvm_external` provided for backwards compatibility with
older releases. This change also sets things up for supporting
`bzlmod`: this requires all workspaces accessed by a library to
be named "up front" in the `MODULE.bazel` file. This way, the
only repo that needs to be exported is `@maven`, rather than the
current huge list.
This can avoid creating an additional 736 tasks (previously 502 out of
1591 were not created). That's not all that important as the build time
is essentially the same, but this lets us see the poor behavior of the
protobuf plugin in our own project and increase our understanding of how
to avoid task creation when developing the plugin. Of the tasks still
being created, protobuf is the highest contributor with 165 tasks,
followed by maven-publish with 76 and appengine with 53. The remaining
59 are from our own build, but indirectly caused by maven-publish.
This moves our depedencies into a plain file that can be read and
updated by tooling. While the current tooling is not particularly better
than just using gradle-versions-plugin, it should put us on better
footing. gradle-versions-plugin is actually pretty nice, but will be
incompatible with Gradle 8, so we need to wait a bit to see what the
future holds.
Left libraries as an alias for libs to reduce the commit size and make
it easier to revert if we don't end up liking this approach.
We're using Gradle 7.3.3 where it was an incubating fetaure. But in
Gradle 7.4 is became stable.
failOnVersionConflict has never been good for us. It is equivalent to
Maven dependencyConvergence which we discourage our users to use because
it is too tempermental and _creates_ version skew issues over time.
However, we had no real alternative for determining if our deps would be
misinterpeted by Maven.
failOnVersionConflict has been a constant drain and makes it really hard
to do seemingly-trivial upgrades. As evidenced by protobuf/build.gradle
in this change, it also caused _us_ to introduce a version downgrade.
This introduces our own custom requireUpperBoundDeps implementation so
that we can get back to simple dependency upgrades _and_ increase our
confidence in a consistent dependency tree.
It deprecates ExpectedException and Assert.assertThat(T, org.hamcrest.Matcher).
Without Java 8 we don't want to migrate away from ExpectedException at
this time. We tend to prefer Truth over Hamcrest, so I swapped the one
instance of Assert.assertThat() to use Truth. With this change we get a
warning-less build with JUnit 4.13. We don't yet upgrade because we
still need to support JUnit 4.12 for some use-cases, but will be able to
upgrade to 4.13 soon when they upgrade.
- Use gradle configuration `api` for dependencies that are part of grpc public api signatures.
- Replace deprecated gradle configurations `compile`, `testCompile`, `runtime` and `testRuntime`.
- With minimal change in dependencies: If we need dep X and Y to compile our code, and if X transitively depends on Y, then our build would still pass even if we only include X as `compile`/`implementation` dependency for our project. Ideally we should include both X and Y explicitly as `implementation` dependency for our project, but in this PR we don't add the missing Y if it is previously missing.
Define util function to exclude guava's transitive dependencies jsr305 and animal-sniffer-annotations, and always manually add them as runtimeOnly dependency. error_prone_annotations is an exception: It is also excluded but manually added not as runtimeOnly. It must always compile with guava, otherwise users will see warning spams if guava is in the compile classpath but error_prone_annotations is not.
Examples and android projects were left unchanged. They can be changed
later.
No plugin versions were changed, to make this as non-functional of a
change as possible. Upgrading Gradle to 5.6 was necessary for
pluginManagement in settings.gradle.
io.grpc has fewer dependencies than io.grpc.internal. Moving it to a
separate artifact lets users use the API without bringing in the deps.
If the library has an optional dependency on grpc, that can be quite
convenient.
We now version-pin both grpc-api and grpc-core, since both contain
internal APIs.
I had to change a few tests in grpc-api to avoid FakeClock. Moving
FakeClock to grpc-api was difficult because it uses
io.grpc.internal.TimeProvider, which can't be moved since it is a
production class. Having grpc-api's tests depend on grpc-core's test
classes would be weird and cause a circular dependincy. Having
grpc-api's tests depend on grpc-core is likely possible, but weird and
fairly unnecessary at this point. So instead I rewrote the tests to
avoid FakeClock.
Fixes#1447
This PR adds an automatic gradle format checker and reformats all the *.gradle files. After this, new changes to *.gradle files will fail to build if not in good format, just like checkStyle failure.
gRPC's protobuf-lite auto-selects between full and lite protobuf based on the
value of crosstool_top. If the user is specifying their own
--android_crosstool_top, then it will not auto-detect correctly. One day,
platforms will fix problems like this, but for the moment it seems we get to
live with it.
Previously if protobuf-generated code triggered ErrorProne we'd have to disable
the failing check for all code in that task. With -XepExcludedPaths we can
disable the ErrorProne-checking just for protobuf. Note that we continue using
ErrorProne on our generated code. Also note this only applies to ErrorProne
checks; JDK checks still require task-level disabling.
This was deprecated with Bazel 0.8.0, which now uses
@com_google_protobuf instead.
This change will break users that use
grpc_java_repositories(omit_com_google_protobuf_java=True), so I've
added a custom error message to make the resolution clearer.