Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
57 lines (41 loc) · 2.45 KB

readme.md

File metadata and controls

57 lines (41 loc) · 2.45 KB

paperweight

paperweight consists of three Gradle plugins:

  • paperweight-core: Used to build Paper
  • paperweight-patcher: Used to create forks of Paper or other paperweight-patcher-based forks
  • paperweight-userdev: Used to develop internals plugins using Mojang mappings

How to use this for testing:

  • Install paperweight to Maven Local:
./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
  • Add mavenLocal() for plugin resolution in your test project (see the Gradle docs for more details)
  • Adjust the paperweight version in your test project
    • Local versions of paperweight will use have the -SNAPSHOT suffix in the version from gradle.properties replaced by -LOCAL-SNAPSHOT

Most output paperweight creates goes into <project-root>/.gradle/caches/paperweight

Debugging

Create a remote JVM debug run configuration in IntelliJ which connects to port 5005, then run Gradle in debug mode:

./gradlew --no-daemon -Dorg.gradle.debug=true <task>

Gradle will not start until the debugger is connected so you don't need to worry about missing a breakpoint.

Style Guide

This projects follows the opinionated ktlint linter and formatter. It uses the ktlint-gradle plugin to automatically check and format the code in this repo.

Run the format task to automatically reformat the project using ktlint - which should handle most cases - to maintain a consistent code style. Adjust any errors ktlint can't fix itself before committing.

./gradlew format

IDE Setup

It's recommended to run the ktlintApplyToIdea and addKtlintFormatGitPreCommitHook tasks to configure your IDE with ktlint style settings and to automatically format this project's code before committing:

./gradlew ktlintApplyToIdea addKtlintFormatGitPreCommitHook

This project uses many new Gradle features to make sure we're ready for Gradle 7.0 and beyond, and we don't find ourselves stuck in a bad position where it's too hard for us to update. That being said, Gradle always marks new APIs as unstable for a bit until the next major version, so you should probably disable the "Unstable API Usages" inspection in IntelliJ as well. The easiest way to do this is just find any place where an "unstable API" is used (tons in Paperweight.kt) and disable the inspection from there.