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build builder

Generates various builds that can be used for testing, profiling and benchmarking Gradle.

Supported build types:

  • Java application
  • Android application
  • C++ application (Gradle 4.2 and later)
  • Swift application (Gradle 4.5 and later)

Generates one or more projects with source files. Can also be used to add source files to an existing skeleton build. The source files have dependencies between each other, as described below.

Generates JUnit unit tests for Java and Android projects, plus on-device tests for Android projects. Generates XCTest unit tests for Swift projects.

Can optionally generate a composite build.

Can optionally generate a build that uses dependencies from a local HTTP repository. Also generates an HTTP server for this repository.

Can optionally generate a build with source dependencies.

Can optionally generate a build with a buildSrc build.

Can optionally generate a Swift Package Manager build for Swift projects.

Generates a git repository for each build.

Generates a gradle-profiler scenario file for the build.

Generates an HTML file that shows the dependencies between builds and projects.

Command line usage

Installation

Run ./gradlew installDist to build and install into build/install/build-builder.

Create a build

build-builder java|cpp|swift|android [options]

The --dir option specifies the directory to create the build init. Default is the current directory.

The --projects option specifies the number of projects. Default is 1.

The --source-files option specifies the number of source files per project. Default is 3.

The --included-builds option specifies the number of additional included builds to generate. Set to greater than 0 to generate a composite build. Default is 0.

The --http-repo option generates an additional build that produces an HTTP Maven repository that provides external libraries. This repository and its classes are referenced by the generated build. Use gradle -p repo-server run to build the libraries and start the HTTP server. Not available for Swift builds.

The --http-repo-libraries option specifies the number of libraries to include in the HTTP repository. Default is 3.

The --http-repo-versions option specifies the number of versions for each library to include in the HTTP repository. Default is 1.

The --source-dep-builds option specifies the number of additional builds to include as source dependencies. Default is 0.

The --buildsrc option enables generation of a buildSrc build. Default is false.

Android specific options

The --java option includes some Java libraries in an Android build. Default is false.

The --version option specifies the Android plugin version to use. Default is 3.0.0.

C++ specific options

The --header-files option specifies the number of header files per project. Default is 3.

The --boost option specifies that the source files include references to the boost libraries. Default is false.

Swift specific options

The --swift-pm option uses Swift package manager source conventions, and also generates a Swift PM build file.

Build structure and dependency graph

The root project will define an application of the relevant type, and all other projects will define a library of the relevant type.

Project dependency graph

  • The application depends either directly or indirectly on all library projects
  • Libraries are arranged in layers of 3 - 6 projects.
  • The bottom-most libraries, with no dependencies, are suffixed with core.

Here's an example:

Dependencies between source files

  • Each application has a main class. The remaining classes in the project, if any, are implementation classes.
  • Each library has an API class, used by other projects. The remaining classes in the project, if any, are implementation classes and are not used directly by any other project. They are used indirectly.
  • The classes for a project are arranged in layers of 3 - 6 classes.
  • The main class/API class uses the first layer of implementation classes.
  • The implementation classes in the second last layer use the API class for each library that the project depends on.
    • For Android projects, this class also uses the generated R class.
  • The implementation classes in the last layer have no dependencies, and are suffixed with NoDeps.

Here's an example:

Current limitations

Generating builds

  • Android application
    • Should use plugin version 3.0
    • Only a single Java project per layer.
    • Only a single instrumented test per project, doesn't do anything.
    • No multi-dex, multi-apk splits, instant app, etc
  • C++ application
    • There are no external dependencies
    • Add Google tests
    • Very simple header dependency graph
    • API dependencies of classes do not appear on the API
    • Incremental performance scenarios should mutate deepest header and source files for the target project
  • Swift application
    • There are no external dependencies
    • No incremental performance scenarios
    • No implementation dependencies
  • JVM applications
    • No annotation processors are used.
    • No Java 8, 9, 10 source.
    • Only a single Java resource is generated for each project.
    • No incremental performance scenarios
    • No API dependencies
  • External HTTP repo
    • Has fixed size and structure, only a small number of libraries.
    • Not available for Swift
    • Dependencies used by 'impl' class only, and this project uses all libraries from the repo directly rather than some set of API libraries
    • Coordinates collide with previous generated libraries, should generate unique-ish coordinates each time
    • Publishing to the repo is broken
  • Composite builds
    • Doesn't generate a library project with --projects 1 (the default)
    • Dependencies used by 'impl' class only, and this project uses all libraries from the repo directly rather than some set of API libraries
  • External dependencies are the same for all projects.
    • Only a small number of external dependencies
    • slf4j
    • support-core-utils (Android builds only)
  • Only a basic dependency graph is available, between projects and between source files and external libraries
    • Only one layer of a project references classes from other projects
    • Generates a deep and narrow graph, should be wider and have more independent paths
    • Each layer should leak into other layers
    • More incoming and api dependencies
  • Does not clean up previously generated files when build is re-generated.
  • Generated classes are small.
  • There are no transitive API classes.
  • There are no type hierarchies.
  • Implementation classes are public.
  • Improve project and source file names, particularly test files.
  • No build cache performance scenarios

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A tool for creating Gradle builds for performance benchmarking and comparison

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