The org.gradle.toolchains.foojay-resolver
plugin provides a repository for downloading JVMs.
It is based on the foojay DiscoAPI.
Requires Gradle 7.6 or later to work.
TAKE HEED! As opposed to most of the Gradle plugins, which are Project plugins and must be applied in
build.gradle[.kts]
files, this is a SETTINGS PLUGIN and must be applied insettings.gradle[.kts]
files.
To make use of the plugin add following to your settings.gradle[.kts]
file.
Kotlin DSL
// settings.gradle.kts
plugins {
id("org.gradle.toolchains.foojay-resolver-convention") version "0.8.0"
}
Groovy DSL
// settings.gradle
plugins {
id("org.gradle.toolchains.foojay-resolver-convention") version "0.8.0"
}
This is a convention plugin meant to simplify configuration. What it does is equivalent to applying the base plugin and some extra configuration:
Kotlin DSL
// settings.gradle.kts
plugins {
id("org.gradle.toolchains.foojay-resolver") version "0.8.0"
}
toolchainManagement {
jvm {
javaRepositories {
repository("foojay") {
resolverClass.set(org.gradle.toolchains.foojay.FoojayToolchainResolver::class.java)
}
}
}
}
Groovy DSL
// settings.gradle
plugins {
id("org.gradle.toolchains.foojay-resolver") version "0.8.0"
}
toolchainManagement {
jvm {
javaRepositories {
repository("foojay") {
resolverClass = org.gradle.toolchains.foojay.FoojayToolchainResolver
}
}
}
}
Feel free to use either approach.
For further information about using Toolchain Download Repositories consult the Gradle Manual.
The main thing the plugin does is to match Gradle's toolchain specifications to foojay DiscoAPI distributions and packages.
There is mostly a 1-to-1 relationship between the DiscoAPI's distributions and Gradle vendors. The plugin works with the following mapping:
Gradle JVM Vendor | Foojay Distribution |
---|---|
ADOPTIUM | Temurin |
ADOPTOPENJDK | AOJ |
AMAZON | Corretto |
APPLE | - |
AZUL | Zulu |
BELLSOFT | Liberica |
GRAAL_VM | Graal VM CE 8/11/16/17/19 |
HEWLETT_PACKARD | - |
IBM | Semeru |
IBM_SEMERU | Semeru |
MICROSOFT | Microsoft |
ORACLE | Oracle OpenJDK |
SAP | SAP Machine |
To note: Not all Gradle vendors have an equivalent DiscoAPI distribution, empty cells indicate that no toolchain will be provisioned. If no vendor is specified, distributions are iterated in the order they are provided by the DiscoAPI, and the first one that has a compatible installation package available is selected. The exception to the Foojay ordering of distributions is that "Temurin" (ADOPTIUM) and then "AOJ" (ADOPTOPENJDK) come first, due to the history of the auto-provisioning feature in Gradle, specifically that AdoptOpenJDK/Adoptium have been the default sources for downloading JVMs.
When specifying toolchains Gradle distinguishes between J9
JVMs and VENDOR_SPECIFIC
ones (ie. any other).
What this criteria does in the plugin is to influence the Vendor-to-Distribution matching table.
VENDOR_SPECIFICATION
doesn't change it at all, while J9
alter it like this:
Gradle JVM Vendor | Foojay Distribution |
---|---|
<no vendor specified> | Semeru |
ADOPTIUM | - |
ADOPTOPENJDK | AOJ OpenJ9 |
AMAZON | - |
APPLE | - |
AZUL | - |
BELLSOFT | - |
GRAAL_VM | - |
HEWLETT_PACKARD | - |
IBM | Semeru |
IBM_SEMERU | Semeru |
MICROSOFT | - |
ORACLE | - |
SAP | - |
Empty cells indicate that no toolchain will be provisioned
Once the vendor and the implementation values of the toolchain spec have been used to select a DiscoAPI distribution, a specific package of that distribution needs to be picked by the plugin, in order for it to obtain a download link. The inputs it uses to do this are:
- the major Java version number for the spec
- the operating system running the build that made the request
- the CPU architecture of the system running the build that made the request
Additional criteria used for selection:
- for each major version number only packages having the latest minor version will be considered
- only packages containing an archive of a format known to Gradle will be considered (zip, tar, tgz)
- JDKs have priority over JREs