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Building Eclipse RCP applications with nox on gradle

The nox module provides a set of gradle plugins for building Eclipse RCP applications and exposing custom modules as OSGi bundles. The original scope was to also provide plugins to put together an Eclipse target platform based on Eclipse update sites/p2 repositories and on a collection of automatically converted bundles from standard gradle dependencies, but that functionality was left behind in the original version only and has not been followed upon.

## Importing and using the plugins

All provided plugins are packaged in a single module, nox. To import it into the root of the build use the following buildscript block (only available from jcenter):

buildscript {
  repositories.jcenter()
  dependencies.add("classpath", "com.silvertern.gradle:nox:+")
}

Now one can use all the provided plugins in any of the child projects as follows:

  • plugins.apply(nox.Platform) to define the location of the target platform and the corresponding Ivy repositories to build against
  • plugins.apply(nox.OSGi) to override the default jar-task manifest generation

Compiling against the target platform

Building OSGi applications is akin to building against an application server, such as JBoss, with all dependencies provided. In context of Eclipse RCP they are provided from the target platform.

While the runtime dependency resolution is handled by OSGi itself, we want gradle to handle the build. Therefore, it must understand how to resolve direct and transitive dependencies from the target platform.

It is essential to understand that the dependency resolution mechanisms employed by gradle and OSGi are substantially different. We are not aiming here to mimic OSGi, rather to provide consistent dependencies to build and unit test the code. Under the assumption that the same package is only provided by one module the resulting dependency resolution within OSGi should not be noticeably different. However, it may and this may cause runtime or integration test errors!

The nox.Platform plugin defines the osgi extension shared also by the nox.OSGi plugin, that provides configuration options for wrapping the target platform into an Ivy repository that gradle can use for dependency resolution.

The following snippet demonstrates how to add a gradle Ivy repository for a target platform residing under the targetPlatformRoot:

plugins.apply(nox.Platform)

repositories.add(osgi.repo("e47", targetPlatformRoot))

In abcense of transitive dependencies the above declaration should be sufficient to add compile or runtime dependencies from the target platform as

dependencies {
  compile("plugins:org.slf4j.api:1.7.+")
}

Note that the group and artifactId of artifacts from the target platform are not the same as for the same artifacts coming from a standard Maven repository like Maven Central. The group will always be plugins and the artifact the bundle symbolic name. The bundles in the target platform are supposed to follow the naming convention where jars are named with the bundle symbolic name followed by version separated with a dash or underscore.

To improve clarify that the dependency is coming from the target platform, the above can be written as:

plugins.apply(nox.OSGi)

dependencies {
  compile(osgi.bundle("org.slf4j.api", "1.7.+"))
}

All of the above could be handled easily by gradle without any extra plugin by defining a flatDir repository as we have not been resolving transitive dependencies until now. The power of nox comes in resolving transitive dependencies from the target platform. For that, one need to complement the target platform (now wrapped into an Ivy repository) with Ivy metadata that define transitive dependencies for each module.

The nox.Platform plugin offers the ivynize task, which inspects target platform manifests for imported packages and required bundles and matches those to exported packages and bundle symbolic names in the platform. It then generates Ivy metadata files for all the bundles (jars and directories) in the target platform so that gradle can resolve them.

The trick is that the Ivy metadata must already be present by the time gradle tries to resolve dependencies from the target platform. Therefore, it is best to include the ivynize task as a dependency of assemble in the buildSrc pre-build. So the content of buildSrc/build.gradle may look something like this:

buildscript {
  repositories.jcenter()
  dependencies.add("classpath", "com.silvertern.gradle:nox:+")
}

dependencies {
  tp(group: "eclipse", name: "target-platform", version: tpVersion, ext: "zip", changing: true)
}

task("ensure-target-platform", type: Sync) {
  from(configurations.tp.collect { zipTree(it) })
  into(new File(targetDir, "platform"))
}

ivynize {
  dependsOn("ensure-target-platform")
  targetPlatform = new File(buildDir, "platform")
}

clean.dependsOn(ivynize)
assemble.dependsOn(ivynize)

build.dependsOn(assemble)

This will generate the $targetPlatform/ivy-metadata directory with Ivy metadata files. So your target platform directory needs to be writable, but no existing files will be copied or altered.

Generating OSGi-compliant manifests for source modules

The default handling of the manifest by the nox.OSGi plugin should be good enough to generate a sensible OSGi compatible manifest. The nox.OSGi plugin is a complete rewrite of the standard osgi plugin by gradle. One can only amend the manifest of the jar task with it. No other manifests can be generated.

Importing the nox.OSGi plugin will require a decision on how the manifest should be generated. The two possible options include: supervised instruction-based geneation based on code analysis using bnd-tools and using a manually defined manifest file and only possibly amending the bundle version. In the former case, the manifest file will also be automatically copied into META-INF at the root of the module so that the Eclipse IDE could benefit from having it in the correct place when using source as a bundle. Additionally, the content of META-INF, if complemented with further config files etc, will be automatically copied into the resulting jar similarly to the content of main/resources while not being considered a resources path.

To generate a manifest dynamically the API looks like this:

plugins.apply(nox.OSGi)

jar.manifest {
  spec(project, {
    optionals("com.sun.*")
    instruction("Fragment-Host", "com.company.remote.proxy")
    // other options
  })
}

In the above example the bundle symbolic name and version will be taken from the name and version of the project. An alternative API assumes: spec(name, version, Closure).

Instructions that can be used within the spec clause include:

  • fun instruction(instruction: String, vararg values: String)
  • fun exports(vararg packs: String)
  • fun privates(vararg packs: String)
  • fun optionals(vararg packs: String)
  • fun imports(vararg packs: String)

As an alternative to generating, a manifest can be directly loaded from a manifest file. Here the manifest is placed under the META-INF folder in the project root (turning the source into a bundle):

plugins.apply(nox.OSGi)

jar.manifest {
  spec(Paths.get(projectDir.absolutePath, "META-INF", "MANIFEST.MF"), version)
}

Additionally to manifest operations, the nox.OSGi plugin will generate a build.properties file in the project root that can be used by Eclipse and the PDE build complementary. By default the plugin will use main source and resource paths to generate build.properties source clause and will add META-INF/,. to bin.includes. The plugin provides a nested buildProperties extension on the osgi extension to affect the build properties configuration, e.g.:

osgi.buildProperties {
  binincludes("provided/")
}

The API includes:

fun sources(vararg sources: String)
fun binincludes(vararg binincludes: String)
fun outputs(vararg outputs: String)
fun instruction(key: String, value: String)

Generally speaking the build.properties should not be used if there is no trace of PDE in your build.

Eclipse IDE integration

The following is not provided by the nox plugins, but is a useful complement when developing Eclipse RCP or OSGi applications and building them with gradle. Gradle provides a mechanism to generate Eclipse project setup from gradle. Most of the time this process is automated and one can really exclude all of Eclipse specific artifacts from Git commits (.project, .classpath, .settings/ etc). With OSGi a bit more work is required, but it is ok just to copy & paste the following block to support Eclipse plugin nature for those modules that are in fact OSGi bundles:

import org.gradle.plugins.ide.eclipse.model.EclipseModel

import java.nio.file.Paths

allprojects {
  plugins.apply(EclipsePlugin)

  plugins.withType(JavaPlugin).whenPluginAdded {
    EclipseModel model = (EclipseModel) extensions.findByName("eclipse")
    model.project {
      name(name)
      buildCommand("org.eclipse.jdt.core.javabuilder")
      if (Paths.get(projectDir.absolutePath, "META-INF", "spring").toFile().exists()) {
        buildCommand("org.springframework.ide.eclipse.core.springbuilder")
      }
    }
  }

  plugins.matching { plugin -> plugin.class.name == "nox.OSGi" }.all({
    EclipseModel model = (EclipseModel) extensions.findByName("eclipse")
    model.project {
      natures("org.eclipse.pde.PluginNature")
      buildCommand("org.eclipse.pde.ManifestBuilder")
      buildCommand("org.eclipse.pde.SchemaBuilder")
    }
    model.classpath {
      containers "org.eclipse.pde.core.requiredPlugins"
    }
  })

  plugins.matching { plugin -> plugin.class.name == "nox.AspectJ" }.all({
    EclipseModel model = (EclipseModel) extensions.findByName("eclipse")
    model.project {
      natures("org.eclipse.ajdt.ui.ajnature")
      buildCommand("org.eclipse.ajdt.core.ajbuilder")
    }
  })

  cleanEclipse {
    doLast {
      new File(project.projectDir, ".settings").deleteDir()
    }
  }
}

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