This plugin enables you to run any NodeJS script as part of your build. It does
not depend on NodeJS (or NPM) being installed on your system. The plugin will
download and manage NodeJS distributions, unpack them into your local .gradle
directory and use them from there.
Releases of this plugin are hosted at Bintray and is part of the jCenter
repository. Development builds are published for every commit to the master
branch. These SNAPSHOT
s are hosted on the OJO repository and to use them
you will need to add OJO to your buildscript
configuration.
Setup the plugin like this:
plugins {
id "com.moowork.node" version "0.9"
}
Or using the old (pre 2.1) way:
buildscript {
repositories {
jcenter()
// If you want to use a SNAPSHOT build, add the OJO repository:
maven {
name 'JFrog OSS snapshot repo'
url 'https://oss.jfrog.org/oss-snapshot-local/'
}
}
dependencies {
classpath 'com.moowork.gradle:gradle-node-plugin:0.8'
}
}
Include the plugin in your build.gradle file like this:
apply plugin: 'com.moowork.node'
To use this plugin you have to define some tasks in your build.gradle file. If
you have a NodeJS script in src/scripts/my.js
, then you can execute this by
defining the following Gradle task:
task myScript(type: NodeTask) {
script = file('src/scripts/my.js')
}
You can also add arguments, like this:
task myScript(type: NodeTask) {
script = file('src/scripts/my.js')
args = ['arg1', 'arg2']
}
NodeTask
is a wrapper around the core Exec
task. You can set the
ignoreExitValue
property on it:
task myScript(type: NodeTask) {
script = file('src/scripts/my.js')
ignoreExitValue = true
}
You can also customize all other values on the ExecSpec
by passing a closure
to execOverrides
. It's executed last, possibly overriding already set
parameters.
task myScript(type: NodeTask) {
script = file('src/scripts/my.js')
execOverrides {
it.ignoreExitValue = true
it.workingDir = 'somewhere'
it.standardOutput = new FileOutputStream('logs/my.log')
}
}
When executing this for the first time, it will run a nodeSetup task that downloades NodeJS (for your platform) and NPM (Node Package Manager) if on windows (other platforms include it into the distribution).
When adding the node plugin, you will have a npmInstall task already added. This
task will execute npm install
and installs all dependencies in package.json
.
It will only run when changes are made to package.json
or node_modules
.
Execute it like this:
$ gradle npmInstall
All npm command can also be invoked using underscore notation based on a gradle rule:
$ gradle npm_install
$ gradle npm_update
$ gradle npm_list
$ gradle npm_cache_clean
...
These however are not shown when running gradle tasks, as they generated dynamically. However they can be used for dependency declarations, such as:
npm_install.dependsOn(npm_cache_clean)
More arguments can be passed via the build.gradle file:
npm_update {
args = ['--production', '--loglevel', 'warn']
}
If you want to extend the tasks more or create custom variants, you can extend
the class NpmTask
:
task installExpress(type: NpmTask) {
// install the express package only
args = ['install', 'express', '--save-dev']
}
You can configure the plugin using the "node" extension block, like this:
node {
// Version of node to use.
version = '0.11.10'
// Version of npm to use.
npmVersion = '2.1.5'
// Base URL for fetching node distributions (change if you have a mirror).
distBaseUrl = 'http://nodejs.org/dist'
// If true, it will download node using above parameters.
// If false, it will try to use globally installed node.
download = true
// Set the work directory for unpacking node
workDir = file("${project.buildDir}/nodejs")
// Set the work directory where node_modules should be located
nodeModulesDir = file("${project.projectDir}")
}
Note that download
flag is default to false
. This will change in future versions.
The plugin will use a locally-installed npm
if it exists, regardless of the
method of installation.
If you would like the plugin to install use a custom version of npm rather than
the one bundled with the version of node installation, you can set npmVersion
in the node
extension block. The plugin will install the npm to the project's
node_modules
directory by configuring the npmSetup
task.
To build the plugin, just type the following command:
./gradlew clean build