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Example Multi-Module AEM application built by Gradle Build System

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wttech/gradle-aem-multi

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Gradle Status Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004

Gradle AEM Plugin logo

AEM Multi-Project Example

Description

This project could be used to start developing long-term project based on AEM.

To start developing application/library based on AEM it is recommended to use Gradle AEM Single instead.

Documentation for AEM plugin is available in project Gradle AEM Plugin.

Screenshot

Gradle AEM Multi - Develop task

Table of Contents

Features

Main motivation of this project is to automate all aspects of AEM development and make it a breeze.


Archetyping:

Environment:

Back-end:

Front-end:

Testing:

Maintenance:

Quickstart

  1. Fork project using command:

    git clone https://github.com/wttech/gradle-aem-multi.git && cd gradle-aem-multi && sh gradlew fork

    and specify properties:

    Fork Props Dialog

    and wait until project is forked then enter configured target directory.

  2. Setup user specific project configuration using command:

    sh gradlew props

    and specify properties:

    Fork Props Dialog

  3. Setup local AEM instances with dependencies and AEM dispatcher (see prerequisites) then build application using command:

    sh gradlew environmentHosts
    sh gradlew setup

    and wait till complete AEM environment will be ready to use.

  4. Develop continuously application using command:

    sh gradlew

    which is an alias for:

    sh gradlew develop

    or to just deploy AEM application (without running anything else):

    sh gradlew :app:aem:all:packageDeploy

Prerequisites

Tested on:

  • Java 1.8, 11
  • Gradle 6.7
  • Adobe AEM 6.5
  • Docker 2.4.0.0

Structure

  • app - source code generated from Adobe AEM Archetype 23 and adapted to Gradle / Gradle AEM Plugin,
  • env - resources and configuration related with setting up local AEM instances and AEM dispatcher,
  • test - integration and functional tests requiring full environment setup.

Environment

Project is configured to have local environment which consists of:

  • native AEM instances running on local file system,
  • virtualized Apache HTTP Server with AEM Dispatcher module running on Docker (official httpd image).

Assumptions:

Building

  1. Use command gradlew so that Gradle in version according to project will be downloaded automatically.
  2. Deploy application:
    • Full assembly and run all tests
      • sh gradlew <=> sh gradlew :develop
    • Only assembly package:
      • sh gradlew :app:aem:all:packageDeploy
    • Only single package or bundle:
      • sh gradlew :app:aem:core::bundleInstall,
      • sh gradlew :app:aem:ui.apps:packageDeploy,
      • sh gradlew :app:aem:ui.content:packageDeploy.
  3. Rebuilding front-end only: sh gradlew :app:aem:ui.frontend:build

Tooling

  1. Monitoring errors in logs: sh gradlew instanceTail
  2. Synchronizing JCR content from AEM to local file system: sh gradlew :app:aem:ui.content:packageSync
  3. Interactively updating HTTPD Virtual-Host & AEM Dispatcher configuration: sh gradlew environmentDev
  4. Copying JCR content between AEM instances: sh gradlew instanceRcp -Pinstance.rcp.source=http://user:pass@x.x.x.x:4502 -Pinstance.rcp.target=local-author -Pinstance.rcp.paths=[/content/example,/content/dam/example]

Tips & tricks

  • To run some task only for subproject, use project path as a prefix, for instance: sh gradlew :app:aem:ui.content:packageDeploy.
  • According to recommendations, Gradle daemon should be:
    • enabled on development environments,
    • disabled on continuous integration environments.
  • To see more descriptive errors or want to skip some tasks, see command line documentation.

Running tests

IntelliJ

Certain unit tests may depend on the results of running gradle tasks. One such example is the testing of OSGi Services using OSGi Mocks where in order to run a test, the SCR metadata must be available for a class. Running a test like this in IntelliJ results in errors because the IDE is not aware of the Bundle plugin.

This can be worked around by configuring IntelliJ to delegate test execution to Gradle. In order to set this up, go to Settings > Build, Execution, Deployment > Gradle > Runner and set your IDE to delegate IDE build/run actions to Gradle. Alternatively, you can use a dropdown menu to use a specific runner or to decide on a test-by-test basis.

Attaching debugger

  1. Execute build with options -Dorg.gradle.debug=true --no-daemon, it will suspend,
  2. Attach debugger on port 5005,
  3. Suspension will be released and build should stop at breakpoint.

Extending build

For defining new tasks directly in build see:

The easiest way to implement custom plugins and use them in project is a technique related with buildSrc/ directory. For more details please read documentation.