zio / zio-sbt

SBT Plugins For ZIO Projects
https://zio.dev/zio-sbt
Apache License 2.0
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github-actions sbt scala zio

ZIO SBT

ZIO SBT contains multiple sbt plugins that are useful for ZIO projects. It provides high-level SBT utilities that simplify the development of ZIO applications.

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Installation

Add the following lines to your plugin.sbt file:

addSbtPlugin("dev.zio" % "zio-sbt-ecosystem" % "0.4.0-alpha.28")
addSbtPlugin("dev.zio" % "zio-sbt-ci"        % "0.4.0-alpha.28")
addSbtPlugin("dev.zio" % "zio-sbt-website"   % "0.4.0-alpha.28")

Then you can enable them by using the following code in your build.sbt file:

enablePlugins(
  ZioSbtWebsitePlugin,
  ZioSbtEcosystemPlugin,
  ZioSbtCiPlugin
)

ZIO SBT Ecosystem

ZIO SBT Ecosystem plugin is an sbt plugin that provides a set of sbt settings and tasks that are very common and useful for configuring and managing ZIO projects. It is designed help developers to quickly set up a new ZIO project with a minimal amount of effort.

This pluging provides the following settings with default values:

The default values are the latest stable versions of Scala 2.12, 2.13, and Scala 3. All of these settings are of type String and can be overridden by the user.

By having these settings, then we can use them in other sbt settings. For example, we can use them to define the crossScalaVersions setting:

crossScalaVersions := Seq(scala212.value, scala213.value, scala3.value)

There are also some other settings that are useful for configuring the projects:

It also provides some helper methods that are useful for configuring a compiler option for a specific Scala version:

And the same for adding a dependency for a specific Scala version:

ZIO SBT Website

ZIO SBT Website is an SBT plugin that has the following tasks:

ZIO SBT CI Plugin

ZIO SBT CI is an sbt plugin which generates a GitHub workflow for a project, making it easier to set up continuous integration (CI) pipelines for Scala projects. With this plugin, developers can streamline their development workflow by automating the testing and deployment process, reducing manual effort and errors. The plugin is designed to work seamlessly with sbt, the popular build tool for Scala projects, and integrates smoothly with GitHub Actions, the CI/CD platform provided by GitHub.

ZIO SBT CI provides a simple and efficient way to configure, manage, and run CI pipelines, helping teams to deliver high-quality software faster and with greater confidence.

ZIO SBT CI plugin generates a default GitHub workflow that includes common CI tasks such as building, testing, and publishing artifacts. However, users can also manually customize the workflow. This plugin is designed to be flexible and extensible, making it easy for users to tailor the workflow to their specific needs. Additionally, the plugin also provides tons of optional sbt settings that users can modify to change various aspects of the generated workflow. Overall, ZIO SBT CI plugin strikes a balance between automation and flexibility, allowing users to automate their CI process while still giving them control over how the workflow is generated.

Getting Started

To use ZIO SBT CI plugin, add the following lines to your plugins.sbt file:

addSbtPlugin("dev.zio" % "zio-sbt-ci" % "0.4.0-alpha.28")

resolvers ++= Resolver.sonatypeOssRepos("public")

Then in your build.sbt file, enable the plugin by adding the following line:

enablePlugins(ZioSbtCiPlugin)

Now you can generate a Github workflow by running the following command:

sbt ciGenerateGithubWorkflow

This will generate a GitHub workflow file inside the .github/workflows directory, named ci.yml. The workflow file contains following default Jobs:

Note:

To use this plugin, we also need to install ZIO Assistant bot.

Testing Strategies

Default Testing Strategy

The default testing strategy for ZIO SBT CI plugin is to run sbt +test on Corretto Java 11, 17 and 21. So this will generate the following job:

test:
  name: Test
  runs-on: ubuntu-latest
  continue-on-error: false
  strategy:
    fail-fast: false
    matrix:
      java: ['11', '17', '21']
  steps:
  - name: Install libuv
    run: sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y libuv1-dev
  - name: Setup Scala
    uses: actions/setup-java@v3.13.0
    with:
      distribution: corretto
      java-version: ${{ matrix.java }}
      check-latest: true
  - name: Cache Dependencies
    uses: coursier/cache-action@v6
  - name: Git Checkout
    uses: actions/checkout@v4.1.1
    with:
      fetch-depth: '0'
  - name: Test
    run: sbt +test

The sbt +test command will run the test task for all submodules in the project against all Scala versions defined in the crossScalaVersions setting.

Concurrent Testing Strategy

In some cases, we may have multiple submodules in our project and we want to test them concurrently using GitHub Actions matrix strategy.

The ciTargetScalaVersions setting key is used to define a mapping of project names to the Scala versions that should be used for testing phase of continuous integration (CI).

For example, suppose we have a project with the name "submoduleA" and we want to test it against Scala 2.12.19, and for the "submoduleB" we want to test it against Scala 2.12.19 and 2.13.13 and 3.3.3, We can define the ciTargetScalaVersions setting as follows:

ThisBuild / ciTargetScalaVersions := Map(
    "submoduleA" -> Seq("2.12.19"),
    "submoduleB" -> Seq("2.12.19", "2.13.13", "3.3.3")
  )

In the example provided, ciTargetScalaVersions is defined at the ThisBuild level, meaning that the setting will apply to all projects within the build. The setting defines a Map where the key is the name of the current project, obtained by calling the id method on the thisProject setting, and the value is a sequence of Scala versions obtained from the crossScalaVersions of each submodule setting.

To simplify this process, we can populate the versions using each submodule's crossScalaVersions setting as follows:

ThisBuild / ciTargetScalaVersions := Map(
  (submoduleA / thisProject).value.id -> (submoduleA / crossScalaVersions).value,
  (submoduleB / thisProject).value.id -> (submoduleB / crossScalaVersions).value
)

The above code can be simplified further by using targetScalaVersionsFor helper method, it takes a list of submodules and returns a Map of project names to their crossScalaVersions:

ThisBuild / ciTargetScalaVersions := targetScalaVersionsFor(submoduleA, submoduleB).value

This will generate the following job:

test:
  name: Test
  runs-on: ubuntu-latest
  continue-on-error: false
  strategy:
    fail-fast: false
    matrix:
      java: ['11', '17', '21']
      scala-project:
      - ++2.12.19 submoduleA
      - ++2.12.19 submoduleB
      - ++2.13.13 submoduleB
      - ++3.3.3 submoduleB
  steps:
  - name: Install libuv
    run: sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y libuv1-dev
  - name: Setup Scala
    uses: actions/setup-java@v3.10.0
    with:
      distribution: corretto
      java-version: ${{ matrix.java }}
      check-latest: true
  - name: Cache Dependencies
    uses: coursier/cache-action@v6
  - name: Git Checkout
    uses: actions/checkout@v4.1.1
    with:
      fetch-depth: '0'
  - name: Test
    run: sbt ${{ matrix.scala-project }}/test

Documentation

Learn more on the ZIO SBT homepage!

Contributing

For the general guidelines, see ZIO contributor's guide.

TL;DR

Before you submit a PR, make sure your tests are passing, and that the code is properly formatted

sbt prepare

sbt testPlugin

Code of Conduct

See the Code of Conduct

Support

Come chat with us on Badge-Discord.

License

License