element-android/tools/gradle/doctor.gradle

94 lines
3.8 KiB
Groovy

// Default configuration copied from https://runningcode.github.io/gradle-doctor/configuration/
def isCiBuild = System.env.GITHUB_ACTIONS == "true"
println "Is CI build: $isCiBuild"
doctor {
/**
* Throw an exception when multiple Gradle Daemons are running.
*
* Windows is not supported yet, see https://github.com/runningcode/gradle-doctor/issues/84
*/
disallowMultipleDaemons = false
/**
* Show a message if the download speed is less than this many megabytes / sec.
*/
downloadSpeedWarningThreshold = 0.5f
/**
* The level at which to warn when a build spends more than this percent garbage collecting.
*/
GCWarningThreshold = 0.10f
/**
* The level at which to fail when a build spends more than this percent garbage collecting.
*/
GCFailThreshold = 0.9f
/**
* Print a warning to the console if we spend more than this amount of time with Dagger annotation processors.
*/
daggerThreshold = 5000
/**
* By default, Gradle caches test results. This can be dangerous if tests rely on timestamps, dates, or other files
* which are not declared as inputs.
*/
enableTestCaching = true
/**
* By default, Gradle treats empty directories as inputs to compilation tasks. This can cause cache misses.
*/
failOnEmptyDirectories = true
/**
* Do not allow building all apps simultaneously. This is likely not what the user intended.
*/
allowBuildingAllAndroidAppsSimultaneously = false
/**
* Warn if using Android Jetifier. It slows down builds.
*/
warnWhenJetifierEnabled = false
/**
* Negative Avoidance Savings Threshold
* By default the Gradle Doctor will print out a warning when a task is slower to pull from the cache than to
* re-execute. There is some variance in the amount of time a task can take when several tasks are running
* concurrently. In order to account for this there is a threshold you can set. When the difference is above the
* threshold, a warning is displayed.
*/
negativeAvoidanceThreshold = 500
/**
* Warn when not using parallel GC. Parallel GC is faster for build type tasks and is no longer the default in Java 9+.
*/
// Note: Actually, if set to true, it fails the build. See https://lightrun.com/answers/runningcode-gradle-doctor-warnwhennotusingparallelgc-fails-the-build-warn-is-a-confusing-keyword-here
warnWhenNotUsingParallelGC = false
/**
* Throws an error when the `Delete` or `clean` task has dependencies.
* If a clean task depends on other tasks, clean can be reordered and made to run after the tasks that would produce
* output. This can lead to build failures or just strangeness with seemingly straightforward builds
* (e.g., gradle clean build).
* http://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/2488
*/
disallowCleanTaskDependencies = true
/**
* Warn if using the Kotlin Compiler Daemon Fallback. The fallback is incredibly slow and should be avoided.
* https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-48843
*/
warnIfKotlinCompileDaemonFallback = true
/** Configuration properties relating to JAVA_HOME */
javaHome {
/**
* Ensure that we are using JAVA_HOME to build with this Gradle.
*/
ensureJavaHomeMatches = true
/**
* Ensure we have JAVA_HOME set.
*/
ensureJavaHomeIsSet = true
/**
* Fail on any `JAVA_HOME` issues.
*/
failOnError.set(false)
/**
* Extra message text, if any, to show with the Gradle Doctor message. This is useful if you have a wiki page or
* other instructions that you want to link for developers on your team if they encounter an issue.
*/
extraMessage.set("Here's an extra message to show.")
}
}