Welcome to KSP!
Kotlin Symbol Processing (KSP) is an API that you can use to develop lightweight compiler plugins. KSP provides a simplified compiler plugin API that leverages the power of Kotlin while keeping the learning curve at a minimum. Compared to KAPT, annotation processors that use KSP can run up to 2x faster.
Most of the documentation of KSP can be found on kotlinlang.org. Here are some handy links:
- Overview
- Quickstart
- Libraries that support KSP
- Why KSP?
- Examples
- How KSP models Kotlin code
- Reference for Java annotation processor authors
- Incremental processing notes
- Multiple round processing notes
- KSP on multiplatform projects
- Running KSP from command line
- FAQ
For debugging and testing processors, as well as KSP itself, please check DEVELOPMENT.md
KSP2 is a new implementation of the KSP API. It is faster and easier to use than KSP 1.x. Please refer to the KSP2 introduction for more details.
Starting with KSP 2.0.0, KSP2 is enabled by default. You can still switch back to KSP1 with the Gradle property
ksp.useKSP2=false
, or the ksp
extension in Gradle build scripts:
ksp {
useKsp2 = false
}
KSP1 will not be able to support newer Kotlin language features and will be deprecated starting from Kotlin 2.2.0. This is because KSP1 is a compiler plugin of K1, which is already deprecated. Also, the Kotlin Gradle Plugin is standardizing its API and disallowing accesses to its internal implementations on which KSP1 relies.
The KSP team will try to support KSP1 with best efforts so that users have more time to migrate to KSP2, but no promise can be made. Please plan migrating to KSP2 as early as possible.
KSP1 is deprecated and support will be removed. We are focusing our development efforts on KSP2 to provide better performance, improved APIs, and a more robust architecture for the future.
Please be aware that KSP1 will not be updated to support upcoming major versions of the Android and Kotlin toolchains. Specifically, KSP1 will not be compatible with:
- Kotlin version
2.3.0
and higher. - Android Gradle Plugin (AGP) version
9.0
and higher.
Projects using KSP1 may not behave correctly (or fail the build) if you upgrade to these or any subsequent versions of AGP or Kotlin.
To ensure your annotation processors continue to function correctly and to take advantage of future tooling advancements, it is crucial to migrate your projects to use KSP2 (which has been the default since beginning of 2025)
Please refer to the KSP2 introduction for further details.
Nightly builds of KSP for the latest Kotlin stable releases are published here:
maven("https://central.sonatype.com/repository/maven-snapshots/")
Please let us know what you think about KSP by filing a Github issue
or connecting with our team in the #ksp
channel in the
Kotlin Slack workspace!
If you are interested in sending PRs, please also check out the Contributor guide.
Here are some planned features that have not yet been completely implemented:
- Improve support to multiplatform. E.g., running KSP on a subset of targets / sharing computations between targets
- Improve performance. There are a bunch of optimizations to be done!
- Keep fixing bugs!