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    Kotlin
  • License
    Apache License 2.0
  • Created over 6 years ago
  • Updated about 1 year ago

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Repository Details

Gradle plugin to use the error-prone compiler for Java

gradle-errorprone-plugin

This plugin configures JavaCompile tasks to use the Error Prone compiler.

Requirements

This plugin requires using at least Gradle 6.8.

While JDK 8 is supported, it is recommended to use at least a JDK 9 compiler. See note below about JDK 8 support.

Usage

plugins {
    id("net.ltgt.errorprone") version "<plugin version>"
}

This plugin creates a configuration named errorprone, and configures the <sourceSet>AnnotationProcessor configuration for each source set to extend it. This allows configuring Error Prone dependencies from a single place.

Error Prone needs to be added as a dependency in this configuration:

repositories {
    mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
    errorprone("com.google.errorprone:error_prone_core:$errorproneVersion")
}

CAUTION: Using a dynamic or changing version for Error Prone, such as latest.release or 2.+, means that your build could fail at any time, if a new version of Error Prone adds or enables new checks that your code would trigger.

Error Prone can then be configured on the JavaCompile tasks:

import net.ltgt.gradle.errorprone.errorprone

tasks.withType<JavaCompile>().configureEach {
    options.errorprone.disableWarningsInGeneratedCode.set(true)
}
with Groovy DSL
tasks.withType(JavaCompile).configureEach {
    options.errorprone.disableWarningsInGeneratedCode = true
}

and can also be disabled altogether:

tasks {
    compileTestJava {
        options.errorprone.isEnabled.set(false)
    }
}
with Groovy DSL
tasks {
    compileTestJava {
        options.errorprone.enabled = false
    }
}

Note that this plugin only enables Error Prone on tasks for source sets (i.e. compileJava for the main source set, compileTestJava for the test source set, and compileIntegTestJava for a custom integTest source set).

If you're creating custom compile tasks, then you'll have to configure them manually to enable Error Prone
tasks.register<JavaCompile>("compileCustom") {
    source("src/custom/")
    include("**/*.java")
    classpath = configurations["custom"]
    sourceCompatibility = "8"
    targetCompatibility = "8"
    destinationDir = file("$buildDir/classes/custom")

    // Error Prone must be available in the annotation processor path
    options.annotationProcessorPath = configurations["errorprone"]
    // Enable Error Prone
    options.errorprone.isEnabled.set(true)
    // It can then be configured for the task
    options.errorprone.disableWarningsInGeneratedCode.set(true)
}
with Groovy DSL
tasks.register("compileCustom", JavaCompile) {
    source "src/custom/"
    include "**/*.java"
    classpath = configurations.custom
    sourceCompatibility = "8"
    targetCompatibility = "8"
    destinationDir = file("$buildDir/classes/custom")

    // Error Prone must be available in the annotation processor path
    options.annotationProcessorPath = configurations.errorprone
    // Enable Error Prone
    options.errorprone.enabled = true
    // It can then be configured for the task
    options.errorprone.disableWarningsInGeneratedCode = true
}

JDK 8 support

Error Prone requires at least a JDK 9 compiler. When using a JDK 8 compiler, the plugin will configure the JavaCompile tasks to use a forking compiler and will override the compiler by prepending the Error Prone javac to the bootstrap classpath (using a -Xbootclasspath/p: JVM argument).

You can configure JavaCompile tasks to use a specific JDK compiler, independently of the JDK used to run Gradle itself. The plugin will use the toolchain version, if any is specified, to configure the task. This allows you to enforce compilation with JDK 11 while running Gradle with JDK 8. (In case you would want to enforce compilation with JDK 8 instead, the plugin would detect it and properly configure the bootstrap classpath as described above)

Note that the plugin will ignore any task that forks and defines either a javaHome or an executable, and thus won't configure the bootstrap classpath if you're e.g. running Gradle with a more recent JDK and forking the compilation tasks to use JDK 8.

JDK 16+ support

Starting with JDK 16, due to JEP 396: Strongly Encapsulate JDK Internals by Default, --add-opens and --add-exports arguments need to be passed to the compiler's JVM.

The plugin will automatically use a forking compiler and pass the necessary JVM arguments whenever it detects such a JDK is being used and ErrorProne is enabled (unless the Gradle daemon's JVM already was given the appropriate options through org.gradle.jvmargs).

That detection will only take into account the toolchain used by the JavaCompile task, or the JDK used to run Gradle in case no toolchain is being used. The plugin will ignore any task that forks and defines either a javaHome or an executable, and thus won't configure the JVM arguments if you're e.g. running Gradle with an older JDK and forking the compilation tasks to use JDK 17.

Note that the plugin also configures the JVM arguments for any JDK above version 9 to silence related warnings, but they will then only be used if the task is explicitly configured for forking (or if the configured toolchain is incompatible with the JDK used to run Gradle, which will then implicitly fork a compiler daemon).

Custom Error Prone checks

Custom Error Prone checks can be added to the errorprone configuration too:

dependencies {
    errorprone("com.uber.nullaway:nullaway:$nullawayVersion")
}

or alternatively to the <sourceSet>AnnotationProcessor configuration, if they only need to be enabled for a given source set:

dependencies {
    annotationProcessor("com.google.guava:guava-beta-checker:$betaCheckerVersion")
}

and can then be configured on the tasks; for example:

tasks.withType<JavaCompile>().configureEach {
    options.errorprone {
        option("NullAway:AnnotatedPackages", "net.ltgt")
    }
}
tasks.compileJava {
    // The check defaults to a warning, bump it up to an error for the main sources
    options.errorprone.error("NullAway")
}
with Groovy DSL
tasks.withType(JavaCompile).configureEach {
    options.errorprone {
        option("NullAway:AnnotatedPackages", "net.ltgt")
    }
}
tasks.compileJava {
    // The check defaults to a warning, bump it up to an error for the main sources
    options.errorprone.error("NullAway")
}

Configuration

As noted above, this plugin adds an errorprone extension to the JavaCompile.options. It can be configured either as a property (options.errorprone.xxx) or script block (options.errorprone { โ€ฆ }).

In a *.gradle.kts script, the Kotlin extensions need to be imported:

import net.ltgt.gradle.errorprone.errorprone

Properties

Please note that all properties are lazy, so while you can use = in place of .set(โ€ฆ) in the Groovy DSL, you cannot use << or += to add to lists for instance.

Property Description
isEnabled (enabled with Groovy DSL) Allows disabling Error Prone altogether for the task. Error Prone will still be in the annotation processor path, but -Xplugin:ErrorProne won't be passed as a compiler argument. Defaults to true for source set tasks, false otherwise.
disableAllChecks Disable all Error Prone checks; maps to -XepDisableAllChecks. This will be the first argument, so checks can then be re-enabled on a case-by-case basis. Defaults to false.
disableAllWarnings Maps to -XepDisableAllWarnings (since ErrorProne 2.4.0). Defaults to false.
allErrorsAsWarnings Maps to -XepAllErrorsAsWarnings. Defaults to false.
allDisabledChecksAsWarnings Enables all Error Prone checks, checks that are disabled by default are enabled as warnings; maps to -XepDisabledChecksAsWarnings. Defaults to false.
disableWarningsInGeneratedCode Disables warnings in classes annotated with javax.annotation.processing.Generated or @javax.annotation.Generated; maps to -XepDisableWarningsInGeneratedCode. Defaults to false.
ignoreUnknownCheckNames Maps to -XepIgnoreUnknownCheckNames. Defaults to false.
ignoreSuppressionAnnotations Maps to -XepIgnoreSuppressionAnnotations (since Error Prone 2.3.3). Defaults to false.
isCompilingTestOnlyCode (compilingTestOnlyCode with Groovy DSL) Maps to -XepCompilingTestOnlyCode. Defaults to false. (defaults to true for a source set inferred as a test source set)
excludedPaths A regular expression pattern (as a string) of file paths to exclude from Error Prone checking; maps to -XepExcludedPaths. Defaults to null.
checks A map of check name to CheckSeverity, to configure which checks are enabled or disabled, and their severity; maps each entry to -Xep:<key>:<value>, or -Xep:<key> if the value is CheckSeverity.DEFAULT. Defaults to an empty map.
checkOptions A map of check options to their value; maps each entry to -XepOpt:<key>=<value>. Use an explicit "true" value for a boolean option. Defaults to an empty map.
errorproneArgs Additional arguments passed to Error Prone. Defaults to an empty list.
errorproneArgumentProviders A list of CommandLineArgumentProvider for additional arguments passed to Error Prone. Defaults to an empty list.

Methods

Method Description
enable(checkNames...) Adds checks with their default severity. Useful in combination with disableAllChecks to selectively re-enable checks. Equivalent to check(checkName, CheckSeverity.DEFAULT) for each check name.
disable(checkNames...) Disable checks. Equivalent to check(checkName, CheckSeverity.OFF) for each check name.
warn(checkNames...) Adds checks with warning severity. Equivalent to check(checkName, CheckSeverity.WARNING) for each check name.
error(checkNames...) Adds checks with error severity. Equivalent to check(checkName, CheckSeverity.ERROR) for each check name.
check(checkName to severity...) (Kotlin DSL only) Adds pairs of check name to severity. Equivalent to checks.put(first, second) for each pair.
check(checkName, severity) Adds a check with a given severity. The severity can be passed as a provider for lazy configuration. Equivalent to checks.put(checkName, severity).
option(optionName) Enables a boolean check option. Equivalent to option(checkName, true).
option(optionName, value) Adds a check option with a given value. Value can be a boolean or a string, or a provider of string. Equivalent to checkOptions.put(name, value).

A check severity can take values: DEFAULT, OFF, WARN, or ERROR.
Note that the net.ltgt.gradle.errorprone.CheckSeverity needs to be imported into your build scripts (see examples above).