Starting with the `v3` release, this action will delegate to `gradle/actions/setup-gradle`.
All repository sources have been migrated to https://github.com/gradle/actions, and
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From v3 onwards, the `gradle-build-action` will be soft deprecated in preference
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for these 2 actions will remain in sync.
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`gradle/actions/setup-gradle`. At a later date, a deprecation warning will be added
to `gradle/gradle-build-action`, encouraging users to migrate.
All of the repository sources have been migrated to the `gradle/actions` repository,
and `gradle/actions/setup-gradle` has been released with `v3.0.0-beta.6`.
Going forward, releases will be first performed for `gradle/actions/setup-gradle`,
with a parallel release of `gradle/gradle-build-action` soon afterward.
Releasing as `gradle/gradle-build-action@v3` will allow dependabot to encourage users
to upgrade from `v2`. The deprecation warning (to be added later) will encourage users
to migrate to `gradle/actions/setup-gradle`.
Bumps the github-actions group with 1 update:
[gradle/gradle-build-action](https://github.com/gradle/gradle-build-action).
Updates `gradle/gradle-build-action` from 2.11.1 to 2.12.0
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/gradle/gradle-build-action/releases">gradle/gradle-build-action's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>v2.12.0</h2>
<p>Adds a new option to clear a previously submitted
dependency-graph.</p>
<pre lang="yaml"><code>steps:
- uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
with:
dependency-graph: clear
</code></pre>
<p>This may prove useful when migrating to a workflow using the upcoming
<code>gradle/actions/dependency-submission</code> action.</p>
<p><strong>Full-changelog</strong>: <a
href="https://github.com/gradle/gradle-build-action/compare/v2.11.1...v2.12.0">https://github.com/gradle/gradle-build-action/compare/v2.11.1...v2.12.0</a></p>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
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<li><a
href="a8f75513ea"><code>a8f7551</code></a>
Build outputs</li>
<li><a
href="9283312acb"><code>9283312</code></a>
Add new option to clear dependency-graph</li>
<li><a
href="7c8a278ea0"><code>7c8a278</code></a>
Remove old clear-dependency-graph action</li>
<li><a
href="d8ca9b7d2e"><code>d8ca9b7</code></a>
Do full checks on release branches</li>
<li>See full diff in <a
href="https://github.com/gradle/gradle-build-action/compare/v2.11.1...v2.12.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
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The default JDK on some runners can have minor differences, resulting
in configuration-cache misses. Setting the Java version explicitly should
ensure consistency.
When changing workflow names or when changing to the new 'dependency-submission'
action, it can be useful to clear existing dependency graph snapshots from previous
submissions. While the old graphs will eventually "age out", the 'clear' option will
submit an empty dependency graph for an existing Job correlator, ensuring that old
dependency graphs don't linger.
When using the `@actions/cache` library to save cache entries, it seems that one
or more Promises remain unresolved after the save completes.
With Node20 this causes a delay when exiting the process: the default behaviour
now wait for these Promises to complete. Adding an explicit `Process.exit()`
removes the delay, returning to the Node 16 behaviour.
Fixes#1038
One goal for the original dependency-graph support was to minimize it's
impact on existing workflows, by operating transparently and not
impacting the build outcome. This meant that any failures in
dependency-graph generation or submission were logged as warnings, but
did not cause the workflow to fail.
However, in some cases the primary purpose of a workflow is to generate
and submit a dependency graph: in these cases it is desirable to have
the workflow fail when this process breaks.
This PR introduces a new `dependency-graph-continue-on-failure`
parameter, which when `false` will enable the latter behaviour. It also
adds test coverage for different failures in dependency graph generation
and submission.
Fixes#1034Fixes#997
- Translate to env var for init-script support
- Use when deciding whether to log or rethrow errors
- Add a custom error type to trigger failure in post action
When state is reused from the configuration cache, no dependencies are resolved.
This fix prevents the action from submitting an empty dependency graph in this case.
Since adding these to the `org.gradle.java.installations.fromEnv` property
is problematic (#1024), this mechanism allows the default toolchains to
be discovered by Gradle via a different mechanism.
The default JDK installations are added to `~/.m2/toolchains.xml` such that
they are discoverable by Gradle toolchain support.
The `setup-java` action also writes to this file, so we merge with any existing
content: this allows both pre-installed and "setup" JDKs to be automatically
detected by Gradle.
Previously, the workflow name was always included when matching a cache entry for the current job.
This can be overly restrictive when job definitions are shared between different workflows.
The workflow name is still encoded in the cache entry key, but not in the restore key searching for entries with a matching job.
Fixes#1017