Bash and Zsh completion support for Gradle.
This provides fast tab completion for:
- Gradle tasks for the current project and sub-projects
- Gradle CLI switches (e.g.
--parallel
) - Common Gradle properties (e.g.
-Dorg.gradle.debug
)
It also handles custom default build files, so rootProject.buildFileName = 'build.gradle.kts'
is supported.
See instructions for bash or for zsh, then consider optional additional configuration.
Here's a demo for the gradle project itself:
Install via Homebrew
brew install gradle-completion
# Ensure /usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions is on $fpath. You should get a result from the following
echo $fpath | grep "/usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions"
Install as oh-my-zsh plugin
Download and place the plugin and completion script into your oh-my-zsh plugins directory.
git clone git://github.com/gradle/gradle-completion ~/.oh-my-zsh/plugins/gradle-completion
Add gradle-completion
to the plugins array in your '.zshrc' file.
plugins+=(gradle-completion)
Download and place _gradle
on your $fpath
. I recommend $HOME/.zsh/gradle-completion
:
git clone git://github.com/gradle/gradle-completion ~/.zsh/gradle-completion
Add the following do your '.zshrc' file:
echo "\nfpath=($HOME/.zsh/gradle-completion \$fpath)" >> ~/.zshrc
Start a new terminal session. You may need to disable the gradle
plugin for oh-my-zsh
.
Completion cache initialization happens the first time you invoke completion, and usually takes a few seconds, depending on the size of your project. You can manually initialize the cache and avoid interrupting your development mojo by running:
cd path/to/your-project
source ~/.zsh/gradle-completion/_gradle 1>&2 2>/dev/null; __gradle-completion-init
Install via Homebrew
brew install gradle-completion
# Source completion scripts from bash-completion in your bash profile
echo '[[ -r "/usr/local/etc/profile.d/bash_completion.sh" ]] && . "/usr/local/etc/profile.d/bash_completion.sh"' >> ~/.bash_profile
# Load changes to bash profile
source ~/.bash_profile
Download and place gradle-completion.bash
in your bash_completion.d
folder, usually /etc/bash_completion.d
, /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d
, or $HOME/bash_completion.d
:
mkdir $HOME/bash_completion.d
curl -LA gradle-completion https://edub.me/gradle-completion-bash -o $HOME/bash_completion.d/gradle-completion.bash
NOTE: Ensure bash-completion
1.2+ is installed using your favorite package manager or by following the bash-completion installation instructions.
Add the following to your .bash_profile
(macOS) or .bashrc
(Linux) file:
source $HOME/bash_completion.d/gradle-completion.bash
Start a new terminal session.
Completion cache initialization happens the first time you invoke completion, and usually takes a few seconds, depending on the size of your project. You can manually initialize the cache and avoid interrupting your development mojo by running:
cd path/to/your-project
__gradle-completion-init
Tab completion checks known build scripts to see if they've been changed and refreshes the task cache if so. You can exclude build scripts from this check (and speed up completion) by specifying:
# Default is `"/(build|integTest|out)/"`
export GRADLE_COMPLETION_EXCLUDE_PATTERN="/(build|integTest|samples|smokeTest|testFixtures|templates|out|features)/"
# Essentially turn off checking for changed scripts
export GRADLE_COMPLETION_EXCLUDE_PATTERN="gradle"
One can manually (re)generate the completion cache by invoking __gradle-completion-init
after the
completion script has been sourced. This graciously avoids an unexpected cache build when invoking
completion.
The build script cache is invalidated if any *.gradle or *.gradle.kts files change. However, these completion scripts do not search for new build scripts every time completion is invoked, because that would make completion ~20x slower (unless you have so really good ideas on this).
By default, the build script cache is invalidated every 3 weeks (30240 minutes).
You can configure this value by exporting a new value for $GRADLE_CACHE_TTL_MINUTES
:
export GRADLE_CACHE_TTL_MINUTES=$(expr 1440 \* number_of_days_you_want)
Gradle allows you to access tasks of subprojects from the project root implicitly. For example, given these tasks:
:foo
:help
:bar:baz
You can execute gradle baz
from the project root and it will execute :bar:baz
.
gradle-completion will not tab complete these tasks by default because it adds a significant number of completion options, which may not be what you want and negatively impacts completion speed.
To allow completion of implicit tasks, set $GRADLE_COMPLETION_UNQUALIFIED_TASKS=true
:
export GRADLE_COMPLETION_UNQUALIFIED_TASKS="true"
You may need to invalidate the cache using the cache config above or by executing touch build.gradle
.
If zsh completion isn't working, first try checking your $fpath
with echo $fpath
.
zsh completion using ./gradlew
may not work on Linux if you don't have .
on your $PATH
,
so I recommend adding it in your ~/.zshrc
file:
export PATH=".:$PATH"
HEADS UP: If you get an error 'parse error near `]]"', please upgrade zsh. zsh 5.0.5 has a bug in script parsing that is fixed as of zsh 5.0.8. See issues #4 and #7 for more details.
If zsh completion reports "Generating Gradle task cache..." every time, the zsh completion cache
may be disabled. Enable it by adding the following to your ~/.zshrc
file:
zstyle ':completion:*' use-cache on
See the contributing guide.
Bash completion is inspired by Nolan Lawson's Gradle tab completion for bash.
Zsh completion is an improved version of zsh's built-in Gradle completion.
Current improvements over built-in support:
- Subproject tasks are completed
- Gradle CLI options are current as of Gradle 5.2
- Common Gradle properties are completed
- Handles default build file as specified in settings.gradle
- ~20x faster completion speed for medium to large projects
- Completion cache updates in the background after first invocation