Gradle is a build tool with a focus on build automation and support for multi-language development. If you are building, testing, publishing, and deploying software on any platform, Gradle offers a flexible model that can support the entire development lifecycle from compiling and packaging code to publishing web sites. Gradle has been designed to support build automation across multiple languages and platforms including Java, Scala, Android, C/C++, and Groovy, and is closely integrated with development tools and continuous integration servers including Eclipse, IntelliJ, and Jenkins.
Note that if you are mounting a volume and the uid running Docker is not 1000, you should run as user root (-u root
).
Run this from the directory of the Gradle project you want to build.
docker run --rm -v "$PWD":/home/gradle/project -w /home/gradle/project gradle:latest gradle <gradle-task>
The local Gradle cache can be reused across containers by creating a volume and mounting it to /home/gradle/.gradle. Note that sharing between concurrently running containers doesn't work currently (see #851).
Also, currently it's not possible to override the volume declaration of the parent.
So if you are using this image as a base image and want the Gradle cache to be written into the next layer, you will need to use a new user (or use the --gradle-user-home
/-g
argument) so that a new cache is created that isn't mounted to a volume.
docker volume create --name gradle-cache
docker run --rm -v gradle-cache:/home/gradle/.gradle -v "$PWD":/home/gradle/project -w /home/gradle/project gradle:latest gradle <gradle-task>
- Run
update.sh
orupdate.ps1
. - Commit and push the changes.
- Update official-images (and docs if appropriate).