Is this work open to contribution of non committers?

Edward


Em seg, 5 de nov de 2018 15:01, Gus Heck <gus.h...@gmail.com escreveu:

> I'm quite fond of gradle, and even wrote a very simple plugin for
> uploading and downloading solr configs to zookeeper from gradle. +1 to use
> gradle.
>
> I'll definitely check it out and give it a whirl, maybe I'll help some if
> I can.
>
> On Sun, Nov 4, 2018 at 2:13 PM Đạt Cao Mạnh <caomanhdat...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi guys,
>>
>> Recently, I had a chance of working on modifying different build.xml of
>> our project. To be honest that was a painful experience, especially the
>> number of steps for adding a new module in our project. We reach the
>> limitation point of Ant and moving to Gradle seems a good option since it
>> has been widely used in many projects. There are several benefits of the
>> moving here that I would like to mention
>> * The capability of caching result in Gradle make running task much
>> faster. I.e: rerunning forbiddenApi check in Gradle only takes 5 seconds
>> (comparing to more than a minute of Ant).
>> * Adding modules is much easier now.
>> * Adding dependencies is a pleasure now since we don't have to run ant
>> clean-idea and ant idea all over again.
>> * Natively supported by different IDEs.
>>
>> On my very boring long flight from Montreal back to Vietnam, I tried to
>> convert the Lucene/Solr Ant to Gradle, I finally achieved something here by
>> being able to import project and run tests natively from IntelliJ IDEA
>> (branch jira/gradle).
>>
>> I'm converting ant precommit for Lucene to Gradle. But there are a lot of
>> things need to be done here and my limitation understanding in our Ant
>> build and Gradle may make the work take a lot of time to finish.
>>
>> Therefore, I really need help from the community to finish the work and
>> we will be able to move to a totally new, modern, powerful build tool.
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>>
>
> --
> http://www.the111shift.com
>

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