How much time do you spend each day waiting for Gradle? Now you know!
Apply the plugin in your build.gradle
. On Gradle >2.1 you can do this
using the Plugin DSL Syntax:
plugins {
id "net.rdrei.android.buildtimetracker" version "0.11.0"
}
Otherwise, use it as classpath
dependency:
buildscript {
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
classpath "net.rdrei.android.buildtimetracker:gradle-plugin:0.11.+"
}
}
apply plugin: "build-time-tracker"
Configure the plugin:
buildtimetracker {
reporters {
csv {
output "build/times.csv"
append true
header false
}
summary {
ordered false
threshold 50
barstyle "unicode"
}
csvSummary {
csv "build/times.csv"
}
}
}
Using the SNAPSHOT
release:
buildscript {
repositories {
maven { url "https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/" }
}
dependencies {
classpath "net.rdrei.android.buildtimetracker:gradle-plugin:0.12.0-SNAPSHOT"
}
}
--profile
You may wonder why you would want to use this plugin when gradle has
a built-in build
profiler.
The quick version is, that if you just want to quickly check what it is that's
slowing down your build, --profile
will be all you need. However, if you want
to continuously monitor your build and find bottlenecks that develop over time,
this plugin may be the right fit for you. build-time-tracker
writes a
continuous log that is monoidal and can be collected from various different
machines to run statistical analyses. Importantly, the written files contain
identifying information about the machine the build happened on so you can
compare apples with apples.
The csv
reporter takes the following options:
output
: CSV output file location relative to Gradle execution.append
: When set to true
the CSV output file is not truncated. This is
useful for collecting a series of build time profiles in a single CSV.header
: When set to false
the CSV output does not include a prepended
header row with column names. Is desirable in conjunction with append
.A basic R Markdown script, report.Rmd
is
included for ploting and analysing build times using CSV output.
The csvSummary
displays the accumulated total build time from a CSV file.
The reporter takes the following option:
csv
: Path (relative to the gradle file or absolute) to a CSV file created
with the above reporter and the options append = true
and header = false
.The summary
reporter gives you an overview of your tasks at the end of the
build. It has the following options:
threshold
: (default: 50) Minimum time in milliseconds to display a task.ordered
: (default: false) Whether or not to sort the output in ascending
order by time spent.barstyle
: (default: "unicode") Supports "unicode", "ascii" and "none" for
displaying a bar chart of the relative times spent on each task.successOutput
: (default: "true") Redisplay build success or failure message
so you don't miss it if the summary output is long.shortenTaskNames
: (default: "true") Shortens long tasks names.Note This plugin only measures the task times that constitute a build. Specifically, it does not measure the time in configuration at the start of a Gradle run. This means that the time to execute a build with very fast tasks is not accurately represented in output because it is dominated by the time in configuration instead.
This project is built and tested by Travis at passy/build-time-tracker-plugin.
Thanks to Sindre Sorhus for contributing the wonderful logo!
Copyright 2014 Pascal Hartig
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.