We forked this to adjust it to work again because the fork of an abandoned project is now also abandoned :/
Either build this project yourself, and include the .jar
in your buildscript dependencies,
or use our Maven repo. The plugin is applied using apply plugin: 'aspectj'
.
The version of AspectJ to use can be defined using either ext.aspectjVersion
,
or the aspectj
extension's version
attribute.
If the AspectJ version is not set, version 1.8.12
is used as the default.
Something like this:
buildscript {
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath "net.uberfoo.gradle:gradle-aspectj:2.2"
}
}
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
apply plugin: 'aspectj'
// Optionally
project.ext {
aspectjVersion = '1.9.0'
}
// Or
aspectj {
version = '1.9.0'
}
Note that version 2.0+ is only compatible with Gradle 4+. Use version 1.6 for earlier Gradle versions.
Use the aspectpath
, ajInpath
, testAspectpath
and testAjInpath
to specify external aspects or external code to weave:
dependencies {
aspectpath "org.springframework:spring-aspects:${springVersion}"
}
By default, xlint: ignore
is used. Specify a different value for the xlint
variable of the compileAspect
or
compileTestAspect
task to show AspectJ warnings:
compileAspect {
xlint = 'warning'
}
It is possible to specify a different value for the maxmem
variable of the compileAspect
or
compileTestAspect
task to increase or decrease the max heap size:
compileAspect {
maxmem = '1024m'
}
To specify additional ajc arguments, you can use additionalAjcArgs
. If xlint
or maxmem
are also specified in additionalAjcArgs
, the values in additionalAjcArgs
will take precedence. For example, to preserve debug symbols,
compileAspect {
additionalAjcArgs = ['debug' : '', 'X' : 'noInline', 'preserveAllLocals' : '']
}
To specify additional Java compiler arguments, you can use additionalCompilerArgs
,
compileAspect {
additionalCompilerArgs = ['--add-modules', 'java.xml.bind,java.io']
}
This project was forked from an abandoned project. The project is now maintained by us.
The project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license. Most/all of the code
originated from the Spring Security project and was created by Luke Taylor and
Rob Winch. See LICENSE
for details.