v0.9.0
A ready-to-use CI/CD Pipeline and jobs for Gradle projects.
Attributes
Includes Deno configuration
Repository
Current version released
2 years ago
Dependencies
other
jsr:@std/flags@0.218.2jsr:@std/fmt@0.218.2/colorsjsr:@std/path@0.218.2jsr:@std/testing@0.218.2/assertsjsr:@tsirysndr/env-js@0.1.2jsr:@tsirysndr/fluent-az-pipelines@0.3jsr:@tsirysndr/fluent-circleci@0.3jsr:@tsirysndr/fluent-codepipeline@0.3jsr:@tsirysndr/fluent-gh-actions@0.3jsr:@tsirysndr/fluent-gitlab-ci@0.5npm:graphql-request@6.1.0npm:graphql@16.8.1npm:lodash@4.17.21npm:node-color-log@11.0.2npm:stringify-tree@1.1.1
Gradle Pipeline
A ready-to-use CI/CD Pipeline for your Gradle projects.
🚀 Usage
Run the following command:
fluentci run gradle_pipelineOr, if you want to use it as a template:
fluentci init -t gradleThis will create a .fluentci folder in your project.
Now you can run the pipeline with:
fluentci run .Or simply:
fluentci🧩 Dagger Module
Use as a Dagger module:
dagger mod install github.com/fluent-ci-templates/gradle-pipeline@mod✨ Jobs
| Job | Description |
|---|---|
| check | Check the project |
| test | Run the tests |
| build | Build the project |
build(
src: Directory | string | undefined = "."
): Promise<Directory | string>
check(
src: Directory | string | undefined = "."
): Promise<string>
test(
src: Directory | string | undefined = "."
): Promise<string>
👨💻 Programmatic usage
You can also use this pipeline programmatically:
import { check, test, build } from "jsr:@fluentci/gradle";
await check();
await test();
await build();