The version bump happened in some places already, but many references
were missed.
This fixes the following warning that shows up with newer versions of
Gradle:
> Using TaskInputs.file() with something that doesn't resolve to a File
> object has been deprecated and is scheduled to be removed in Gradle
> 5.0. Use TaskInputs.files() instead.
grpc-netty is still really useful, but for most users who aren't doing
anything advanced using grpc-netty-shaded is much safer from a
dependency basis.
grpc-netty-shaded has seen more usage and has shown itself to be stable
and reduce the number of conflicts due to Netty versions.
This opens up the ability of dependency locking and the now-stable Maven
Publish Plugin. Also failOnVersionConflict no longer needs to be
commented out for the dependency insight report.
... with proper CA certificate to fix SSLV3_ALERT_HANDSHAKE_FAILURE in two host with different IPs setup, switch to required client auth to fail on incorrect configuration
This PR adds an automatic gradle format checker and reformats all the *.gradle files. After this, new changes to *.gradle files will fail to build if not in good format, just like checkStyle failure.
The new jmh plugin fixes a warning for the newer version of Gradle.
The new AppEngine plugin still produces a warning, but updating it
anyway so people know that upgrading the plugin doesn't fix the problem.
The new android-maven plugin fixes a build problem with the newer
Gradle.
The Visual Studio fixes were necessary starting ~4.4.
https://github.com/gradle/gradle-native/issues/34#issuecomment-335222096
describes the change in behavior.
There's nothing immediately being used as part of this update. It's just
to keep us current and to get us over that Visual Studio change hump.
Updates include:
* Build file and dependency updates
* Correcting the gradle wrapper for the clientcache example
* Lint fixes (including making AsyncTask subclasses static)
* Dropping the m-prefix from member variables
* Fixing the code indentation
* Fixing and enabling proguard for the routeguide example.
Spies are really magical and easily produce unexpected results. Using them in
tests can easily yield tests that don't do what you think they do. Delegation
is much safer when possible.
Delegation doesn't work when methods `return true`, final methods, and with
restricted visibility, though. So CensusModulesTest and
MaxConnectionIdleManagerTest are left as-is.
This was deprecated with Bazel 0.8.0, which now uses
@com_google_protobuf instead.
This change will break users that use
grpc_java_repositories(omit_com_google_protobuf_java=True), so I've
added a custom error message to make the resolution clearer.
Refactor the proto file `helloworld_streaming.proto` because Bazel and Gradle have incompatible base directory for proto imports. Bazel's proto import is relative to WORKSPACE, whereas Gradle proto plugin's is relative to `${sourceSet}/proto/`. In `helloworld_streaming.proto` file, `import helloworld.proto` does not work for Bazel. If `import src/main/proto/helloworld.proto`, that works for Bazel, but Gradle and Maven would fail. Some workarounds are very hacky, so use independent proto without imports instead to avoid this issue.