Write and publish a Kobalt plug-in in ten minutes
In this example, we'll write a Kobalt plug-in that simply counts the number of source files and lines in your project. Starting from scratch, we'll have this plug-in published to JCenter and ready to use in ten minutes.
Let's start by creating our project:
$ mkdir linecount $ mkdir -p src/main/kotlin/com/beust/plugin/linecount $ touch src/main/kotlin/com/beust/plugin/linecount/Main.kt $ $KOBALT_HOME/kobaltw --init
I create an empty Main.kt
in the example above so that calling ./kobaltw --init
will detect the project as a Kotlin one. This way, the Build.kt
file generated is already configured for Kotlin. Since we will be publishing this project to a Maven repository, we need to make sure that its group
, artifactId
and version
are correct. The only thing that the generator can't guess is the group
, so let's go ahead and fix it:
val project = kotlinProject { name = "kobalt-line-count" group = "com.beust.kobalt" artifactId = name version = "0.1" ...
Next, we need to create our kobalt-plugin.xml
file in the src/main/resources/META-INF
directory.
Once there, it will be automatically copied in the right place in our jar file:
<kobalt-plugin> <name>kobalt-line-count</name> <plugins> <class-name>com.beust.kobalt.plugin.linecount.LineCountPlugin</class-name> </plugins> </kobalt-plugin>
Now we're ready to code.
Let's start by writing the simplest plug-in we can:
package com.beust.kobalt.plugin.linecount import com.beust.kobalt.api.* public class Main : BasePlugin() { override val name = "kobalt-line-count" override fun apply(project: Project, context: KobaltContext) { println("*** Applying plugin $name with project $project") } }
Before we can upload it, we need to create the package in bintray, as explained here. Once this is done, we are ready to do our first upload:
$ ./kobaltw uploadJcenter ... ========== kobalt-line-count:uploadJcenter kobalt-line-count: Found 2 artifacts to upload All artifacts successfully uploaded ############# Time to Build: 3590 ms
If you go to the maven section of your bintray account, you will now see that the new package has two unpublished files. Your new plug-in won't be visible by clients until you publish those files, so let's update our build file to automatically publish files from now on:
jcenter { publish = true }
And now, let's implement our logic, which is pretty simple:
// Main.kt @Task(name = "lineCount", description = "Count the lines", runBefore = arrayOf("compile")) fun lineCount(project: Project): TaskResult { var fileCount = 0 var lineCount : Long = 0 val matcher = FileSystems.getDefault().getPathMatcher("glob:**.kt") project.sourceDirectories.forEach { Files.walkFileTree(Paths.get(it), object: SimpleFileVisitor<Path>() { override public fun visitFile(path: Path, attrs: BasicFileAttributes): FileVisitResult { if (matcher.matches(path)) { fileCount++ lineCount += Files.lines(path).count() } return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE } }) } log(1, "Found $lineCount lines in $fileCount files") return TaskResult() }
We create a task called "lineCount"
in which we look for all files ending in ".kt" in all the source directories of the project. Finally, we display a count of files and lines at the end by using log()
, which is automatically supplied by the Kobalt API:
public class Main : BasePlugin() {
Let's bump our version to 0.2 (since version 0.1 is already uploaded and JCenter won't allow us to overwrite it) and upload our new plug-in:
$ ./kobaltw uploadJcenter ... kobalt-line-count: Compilation succeeded ========== kobalt-line-count:assemble Created /Users/beust/kotlin/kobalt-line-count/kobaltBuild/libs/kobalt-line-count-0.2.jar ========== kobalt-line-count:generatePom Wrote /Users/beust/kotlin/kobalt-line-count/kobaltBuild/libs/kobalt-line-count-0.2.pom ========== kobalt-line-count:uploadJcenter kobalt-line-count: Found 2 artifacts to upload All artifacts successfully uploaded Time to Build: 5907 ms
Finally, let's use our plug-in from another project. Since we didn't link this project to JCenter, it's uploaded in the user's maven repository, so we will have to add this maven repository to the build file where we want to use the plug-in. Adjust this line to point to your own maven repo:
val repos = repos("https://dl.bintray.com/cbeust/maven/") val plugins = plugins("com.beust.kobalt:kobalt-line-count:0.2")
Now let's launch a build:
$ ./kobaltw assemble ... ========== kobalt:lineCount Found 4972 lines in 65 files ========== kobalt:compile ...
Note that our plugin ran before the compile
task, as we requested in the @Task
annotation. We can also verify that it's activated and we can invoke the task directly instead of having it run as part of the build:
$ ./kobaltw --tasks ===== kobalt-line-count ===== lineCount Count the lines $ ./kobaltw lineCount Found 4972 lines in 65 files
And that's it! You can now iterate on your plug-in and upload it with additional ./kobaltw uploadJcenter
. This plug-in is available on github.
When your plug-in is activated, Kobalt will invoke its apply()
function:
override fun apply(project: Project, context: KobaltContext) { }
project
is the project that your plug-in is currently being initialized for (keep in mind there can be multiple projects in a build) and the context
gives you some information about other external data you might find useful, such as the command line that was passed to Kobalt.
The simplest way to run your plug-in in your IDE is to create a main function in the main class of your plug-in as follows:
fun main(argv: Array<String>) { com.beust.kobalt.main(argv) } public class Main : BasePlugin() { // ...
Now you can simply create a launch configuration for your main class, which will invoke Kobalt.
The next step is to have Kobalt invoke your plug-in, so you will have to modify your build file
to call it. As long as you haven't deployed your plug-in to JCenter, you might want to use the
file()
directive to declare your dependency, so that Kobalt will use the jar file
on your file system:
val p = plugins( file(homeDir("kotlin/kobalt-line-count/kobaltBuild/libs/kobalt-line-count-0.8.jar")) )
You can now set a breakpoint in your plug-in and launch the configuration you created above.