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xjc-gradle-plugin

A Gradle plugin for running the XJC binding compiler to generate Java source code from XML schemas (xsd files) using JAXB.

Requirements and features

  • The plugin requires Gradle version 6.7 or later.
  • It has been tested with Java 8 and Java 17.
  • It has been tested with XJC version 2.3.3 (using the javax namespace) and 3.0.2 (using the jakarta namespace). Defaults to the jakarta variant.
  • It supports the Gradle build cache (enabled by setting "org.gradle.caching=true" in your gradle.properties file).
  • It supports the Gradle configuration cache (enabled by setting org.gradle.configuration-cache=true in your gradle.properties file").
  • It supports project relocation for the build cache (e.g. you move your project to a new path, or make a new copy/clone of it). This is especially useful in a CI context, where you might clone PRs and/or branches for a repository in their own locations.
  • It supports parallel execution (enabled with "org.gradle.parallel=true", possibly along with "org.gradle.priority=low", in your gradle.properties file).
  • It supports most, but not all (yet), of the functionality provided by XJC. Check the configuration section and the road map section to get an idea of what is possible.

Configuration

Apply the plugin ID "com.github.bjornvester.xjc" as documented in the Gradle Plugin portal page, e.g. like this:

plugins {
    id("com.github.bjornvester.xjc") version "1.8.1"
}

You can configure the plugin using the "xjc" extension like this:

xjc {
    // Set properties here...
}

Here is a list of all available properties:

Property Type Default Description
xsdDir DirectoryProperty "$projectDir/src
/main/resources"
The directory holding the xsd files to compile.
includes ListProperty<String> [empty] An optional include pattern for the files in the xsdDir property
excludes ListProperty<String> [empty] An optional exclude pattern for the files in the xsdDir property
bindingFiles ConfigurableFileCollection xsdDir.asFileTree.matching
{ include("**/*.xjb") }
The binding files to use in the schema compiler
outputJavaDir DirectoryProperty "$buildDir/generated
/sources/xjc/java"
The output directory for the generated Java sources.
Note that it will be deleted when running XJC.
outputResourcesDir DirectoryProperty "$buildDir/generated
/sources/xjc/resources"
The output directory for the generated resources (if any).
Note that it will be deleted when running XJC.
useJakarta Provider<Boolean> true Set to use the jakarta namespace. If false, uses the javax namespace. This value determines the default version of XJC and the JAXB binding provider.
xjcVersion Provider<String> "3.0.2" for jakarta /
"2.3.8" for javax
The version of XJC to use.
defaultPackage Provider<String> [not set] The default package for the generated Java classes.
If empty, XJC will infer it from the namespace.
generateEpisode Provider<Boolean> false If true, generates an Episode file for the generated Java classes.
markGenerated Provider<Boolean> false If true, marks the generated code with the annotation @javax.annotation.Generated.
options ListProperty<String> [empty] Options to pass to either the XJC core, or to third party plugins in the xjcPlugins configuration
groups NamedDomainObjectContainer [empty] Allows you to group a set of XSDs and generate sources with different configurations. Requires Gradle 7.0 or higher. See below for details.
addCompilationDependencies Provider<Boolean> true Adds dependencies to the implementation configuration for compiling the generated sources. These includes jakarta.xml.bind:jakarta.xml.bind-api and possibly jakarta.annotation:jakarta.annotation-api.

Choosing which schemas to generate source code for

By default, it will compile all XML schemas (xsd files) found in the src/main/resource folder. You can change to another folder through the following configuration:

xjc {
    xsdDir.set(layout.projectDirectory.dir("src/main/xsd"))
}

All referenced resources must be located under this directory, or up-to-date checking might not work properly.

If you don't want to compile all schemas in the folder, you can specify which ones through the includes and excludes properties. These are both Ant patterns. Here is an example where all schema files are referenced relative to the xsdDir property:

xjc {
    xsdFiles = project.files(
        xsdDir.file("MySchema1.xsd"),
        xsdDir.file("MySchema2.xsd")
    )
    // Or
    xsdFiles = xsdDir.asFileTree.matching { include("subfolder/**/*.xsd") }
}

Customizing the build dependencies

By default, it will use XJC version 3.0.2 to compile the schemas. You can set another version through the xjcVersion property like this:

xjc {
    xjcVersion.set("2.3.8")
    useJakarta.set(false)
}

If you specify a version in the 2.x range, which generates source code with the javax namespace, you should also set the useJakarta configuration to false. Note that setting useJakarta to false, it will by default select an appropriate version in the 2.x range.

By applying the plugin, it will register the Java plugin as well if it isn't there already (so the generated source code can be compiled). It will also by default add the dependency jakarta.xml.bind:jakarta.xml.bind-api to your implementation configuration, as this is needed to compile the source code. If your project is going to be deployed on a Java/Jakarta EE application server, you may want to exclude this dependency from your runtime and instead use whatever your application server is providing. This can be done by setting the configuration addCompilationDependencies to false.

Choosing the file encoding

If your schemas contain characters that do not match your default platform encoding (on western versions of Windows, this will probably be CP-1252), set the encoding through the file.encoding property for Gradle. For example, to use UTF-8, put this in your gradle.property file:

org.gradle.jvmargs=-Dfile.encoding=UTF-8

If you are on a POSIX operating system (e.g. Linux), you may in addition to this need to set your operating system locale to one that supports your encoding. Otherwise, Java (and therefore also Gradle and XJC) may not be able to create files with names outside of what your default locale supports. Especially some Docker images, like the Java ECR images from AWS, are by default set to a locale supporting ASCII only. If this is the case for you, and you want to use UTF-8, you could export an environment variable like this:

export LANG=C.UTF-8

Enabling the use of the @Generated annotation

If you like to have the generated source code marked with the @javax.annotation.Generated annotation, set the markGenerated property to true like this:

xjc {
    markGenerated.set(true)
}

Note that while this annotation is found in the Java 8 SDK, it is not present in Java 9 and later. (However, there is a @javax.annotation.processing.Generated annotation, notice the processing sub-package, but this is not yet supported by this plugin.)

Generating episode files

XJC can generate an episode file, which is basically an extended binding file that specifies how the schema types are associated with the generated Java classes.

You can enable the generation using the generateEpisode property like this:

xjc {
    generateEpisode.set(true)
}

The file will be generated at META-INF/sun-jaxb.episode and added as a resource to the main source set.

Consuming episode files

XJC can consume the episode files so that it is possible to compile java classes from a schema in one project, and consume it in XJC generators in other projects, so you don't have to compile the same schemas multiple times. To do this, you need to add the jar file to the configuration named "xjcBindings". This is done using normal Gradle dependency management.

For multi-projects, assuming the episode file is generated in a project called "test-producer", you can do this like this:

dependencies {
    implementation(project(":test-producer"))
    xjcBindings(project(":test-producer"))
}

Consuming binding files

You can also provide your own binding files (or custom episode files) through the bindingFiles property:

xjc {
    bindingFiles.setFrom(layout.projectDirectory.dir("src/main/xjb").asFileTree.matching { include("**/*.xjb") }) // Files with an .xjb extension in the "src/main/xjb" directory
}

Activating (third party) XJC plugins

To use third party plugins, supply the relevant dependencies to the xjcPlugins configuration. Then set the plugin options through the options property.

For example, to use the "Copyable" plugin from the JAXB2 Basics project, configure the following:

dependencies {
    xjcPlugins("org.jvnet.jaxb2_commons:jaxb2-basics:0.13.1")
}

xjc {
    options.add("-Xcopyable")
}

Note that the above plugin is only compatible with JAXB 2.x, at least at the time of this writing. There is a fork here that you may try for JAXB 3.x and the jakarta namespace.

If you have trouble activating a plugin and is unsure whether it has been registered, you can run Gradle with the --debug option. This will print additional information on what plugins were found, what their option names are, and what plugins were activated. Note that in order to activate a third-party plugin, you must always provide at least one option (and usually just one) from the plugin.

Supporting Date/Time APIs introduced in Java 8

By default, XJC will map date and time types to difficult-to-use Java types like XMLGregorianCalendar. If you like to use the newer Data/Time APIs from package java.time, you must use a mapper and write a custom binding file.

An example of a mapper project is threeten-jaxb, but there are others as well. If you like to use this one, include it as a dependency:

dependencies {
    implementation("io.github.threeten-jaxb:threeten-jaxb-core:2.1.0") // This version is for Jakarta
}

Then create a binding file with content with the types you like to map:

<bindings xmlns="https://jakarta.ee/xml/ns/jaxb"
          xmlns:xjc="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/jaxb/xjc"
          jaxb:version="3.0"
          jaxb:extensionBindingPrefixes="xjc">
    <globalBindings>
        <xjc:javaType name="java.time.LocalDate" xmlType="xs:date" adapter="io.github.threetenjaxb.core.LocalDateXmlAdapter"/>
        <xjc:javaType name="java.time.LocalDateTime" xmlType="xs:dateTime" adapter="io.github.threetenjaxb.core.LocalDateTimeXmlAdapter"/>
        <xjc:javaType name="java.time.YearMonth" xmlType="xs:gYearMonth" adapter="io.github.threetenjaxb.core.YearMonthXmlAdapter"/>
        <xjc:javaType name="java.time.Duration" xmlType="xs:duration" adapter="io.github.threetenjaxb.core.DurationXmlAdapter"/>
        <xjc:javaType name="java.time.OffsetDate" xmlType="xs:date" adapter="io.github.threetenjaxb.core.OffsetTimeXmlAdapter"/>
        <xjc:javaType name="java.time.OffsetDateTime" xmlType="xs:dateTime" adapter="io.github.threetenjaxb.core.OffsetDateTimeXmlAdapter"/>
    </globalBindings>
</bindings>

The above configuration is for jakarta. For javax, use version 1.2.0 and the binding attributes to xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/jaxb" version="2.1".

Lastly, for both jakarta and javax, configure the plugin to use the binding file (in this case it is called src/main/bindings/bindings.xml):

xjc {
    bindingFiles.setFrom(layout.projectDirectory.dir("src/main/xjb").asFileTree.matching { include("**/*.xjb") })
}

Note that some use .xml as the extension for the binding files, and some use .xjb. This makes no difference to XJC and you can choose whatever you like.

Generate resources with different configurations

The grouping functionality described here requires Gradle 7.0 or higher

If you require building a subset of XSDs with different configurations (e.g. package names), you can use group property. Each group has the same configuration properties as otherwise, except for the XJC version as this can't be controlled individually. The configurations in the outermost block are considered defaults, and you can then override them in each group.

Example:

xjc {
    // Defaults
    markGenerated.set(true)

    groups {
        register("group1") {
            includes.set(listOf("MySchemaWithFunnyChar.xsd"))
            defaultPackage.set("com.example.group1")
        }
        register("group2") {
            includes.set(listOf("MySchemaWithFunnyChar.xsd"))
            defaultPackage.set("com.example.group2")
        }
    }
}

Note that if you enable episode generation, XJC will generate multiple files (one for each group) but with the same name. You will have to merge these yourself. You will also not be able to reference between groups. If you require this, you should instead separate the build into individual projects.

Road map

Here are some of the features I like to implement at some point.

  • Support the "-npa" option in XJC, suppressing the generation of package level annotations.
  • Support for catalog files.
  • Support for schemas in wsdl files.
  • Support for optionally adding "if-exists" attributes to generated episode files to prevent failures on unreferenced schemas.
  • Document how to register multiple XJC tasks yourself in the same project (for instance for testing only)

You are welcome to create issues and PRs for anything else.

Alternatives

If you need additional functionality than what is provided here, you may want to try the one from unbroken-dome. Just be aware that, at least at the time of this writing, the latest version is 2.0.0, which has some known issues with the jakarta dependencies and the Gradle configuration cache.