Kotlin with Gradle
If you are familiar with the build tool landscape, you might be in one of three camps: Maven, Gradle, or SBT (more likely if you are a Scala dev). I am not going to go into the details, but we will present the basics of Gradle, the modern open source polyglot build automation system, and leave it up to the curious to find out more from http://gradle.org. Before we continue, please make sure you have it installed and available in your classpath in order to be accessible from the terminal. If you have SDKMAN, you can install it using this command:
$ sdk install gradle 3.0
The build system comes with some baked-in templates, although limited, and in its latest 3.0 version Kotlin is not yet included. Hopefully, this shortfall will be dealt with sooner rather than later. However, it takes very little to configure support for it. First, let's see how you can interrogate for the available templates:
$ gradle help --task :init
You should see the following being printed out on the terminal:
Options --type Set type of build to create. Available values are: basic groovy-library java-library pom scala-library
Let's go and use the Java template and create our project structure by executing this bash
command:
$ gradle init --type java-library
This template will generate a bunch of files and folders; if you have been using Maven, you will see that this structure is similar:
Project Folders layout
As it stands, the Gradle project is not ready for Kotlin. First, go ahead and delete Library.java
and LibraryTest.java
, and create a new folder named kotlin
, a sibling of the java one. Then, using a text editor, open the build.gradle
file. We need to add the plugin enabling the Gradle system to compile Kotlin code for us, so at the top of your file you have to add the following snippet:
buildscript { ext.kotlin_version = '1.1-M04' repositories { maven { url "https://dl.bintray.com/kotlin/kotlin-dev" } mavenCentral() } dependencies { classpath "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-gradle-plugin:$kotlin_version" } }
The preceding instructions tell Gradle to use the plugin for Kotlin, and set the dependency maven repository. Since Kotlin 1.1 is only at milestone 4, there is a specific repository to pick it from. See last entry in repositories
. We are not done yet; we still need to enable the plugin. The template generated will already have an applied plugin: java
. Replace it with the following:
apply plugin: 'kotlin' apply plugin: 'application' mainClassName = 'com.programming.kotlin.chapter01.ProgramKt'
Now Kotlin plugin support is enabled; you may have noticed that we have also added the application plugin, and set the class containing the program entry point. The reason for this is to allow the program to run directly, as we will see shortly.
We are not quite done. We still need to link to the Kotlin standard library. Replace the repositories
and dependencies
sections with the following:
repositories { maven { url "https://dl.bintray.com/kotlin/kotlin-dev" } mavenCentral() } dependencies { compile "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-stdlib:$kotlin_version" testCompile 'io.kotlintest:kotlintest:1.3.3' }
Now let's create the file named HelloWorld.Kt
. This time, we will set a namespace and thus avoid having our class as part of the default one. If you are not yet familiar with the term, don't worry; it will be covered in the next chapter.
From the terminal, run the following:
$ mkdir -p src/main/kotlin/com/programming/kotlin/chapter01 $ echo "" >> src/main/kotlin/com/programming/kotlin/chapter01/Program.kt $ cat <<EOF >> src/main/kotlin/com/programming/kotlin/chapter01/Program.kt package com.programming.kotlin.chapter01 fun main(args: Array<String>) { println("Hello World!") }
We are now in a position to build and run the application:
$ gradle build $ gradle run
Now we want to be able to run our program using java -jar [artefact]
. Before we can do that, we need to adapt the build.gradle
. First, we need to create a manifest
file and set the main class; the JVM will look for the main function to start executing it:
jar { manifest { attributes( 'Main-Class': 'com.programming.kotlin.chapter01.ProgramKt' ) } from { configurations.compile.collect { it.isDirectory() ? it : zipTree(it) } } }
Furthermore, we also embed into the JARÂ the dependency for kotlin-stdlib
, as well as kotlin-runtime
. If we leave out these dependencies, we will need to add them to the classpath  when we run the application. Now you are ready to build and run the code.