This project uses Quarkus, the Supersonic Subatomic Java Framework.
If you want to learn more about Quarkus, please visit its website: https://quarkus.io/ .
Check basexhttp on DockerHub for a running BaseX docker container.
You can run your application in dev mode that enables live coding using:
./gradlew quarkusDev
The application can be packaged using ./gradlew quarkusBuild
.
It produces the compas-cim-mapping-1.0-SNAPSHOT-runner.jar
file in the build
directory.
Be aware that it’s not an über-jar as the dependencies are copied into the build/lib
directory.
The application is now runnable using java -jar build/compas-cim-mapping-1.0-SNAPSHOT-runner.jar
.
If you want to build an über-jar, just add the --uber-jar
option to the command line:
./gradlew quarkusBuild --uber-jar
You can create a native executable using: ./gradlew build -Dquarkus.package.type=native
.
Or, if you don't have GraalVM installed, you can run the native executable build in a container using: ./gradlew build -Dquarkus.package.type=native -Dquarkus.native.container-build=true
.
You can then execute your native executable with: ./build/compas-cim-mapping-1.0-SNAPSHOT-runner
If you want to learn more about building native executables, please consult https://quarkus.io/guides/gradle-tooling#building-a-native-executable.