Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Phillip Webb f62f697550 Hide 'doc' changes from jdiff reports 2013-03-13 11:13:01 -07:00
Chris Beams c5c464c885 Remove previousVersion from 'jdiff' Gradle task 2012-12-13 12:52:30 +01:00
Phillip Webb 90cfdbb040 Polish quote styles in gradle files
Replace singe quote-marks with double quote-marks when possible for a
more consistent style.
2012-12-09 21:32:27 -08:00
Phillip Webb a268528726 Polish .gradle file formatting to use tabs
Replace spaces with tabs for consistency with Java source code
2012-12-09 21:32:27 -08:00
Chris Beams 631f24bb32 Introduce jdiff Gradle task
The new jdiff task generates a report of API differences between the
current version (i.e. the value of `version` in gradle.properties) and
any older version of the framework, as specified by -DOLD_VERSION at
the command line, or defaulting to `previousVersion` in
gradle.properties.

Running the command requires a separate clone directory pinned to the
desired old version, as specified by -DOLD_VERSION_ROOT at the command
line. This creates challenges from a build automation perspective,
largely because Gradle doesn't (yet) have APIs for working with Git.

This task may be further automated and included in nightly CI runs, but
in the meantime, a number of reports back to 3.1.3.RELEASE have been
generated manually and uploaded to [1], where one can now find the
following entries in the directory listing:

 - 3.1.3.RELEASE_to_3.2.0.RC1
 - 3.2.0.M1_to_3.2.0.M2
 - 3.2.0.M2_to_3.2.0.RC1
 - 3.2.0.RC1_to_3.2.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT

Ideally, the final entry there would be kept up-to-date on a daily
basis - again we may revisit doing so in the future. Going forward,
reports will be generated and uploaded manually on an as needed basis
and as part of the release process.

The goal of these reports are as follows:

 - to ease the process of ensuring backward compatibility

 - to aid in code reviews, particularly when reviewing large pull
   requests

 - to ease the process of creating migration guides for project
   maintainers, i.e. to help us remember what's changed

 - to allow ambitious end-users to discover what's been changing at the
   API level without without needing to wait for detailed "what's new in
   version X" and/or migration guide documentation

See documentation in jdiff.gradle for usage details.

Note that the jdiff-1.1.1 distribution as downloaded from [2] has been
added wholesale to the source tree under gradle/jdiff instead of
uploading JDiff jars to repo.springsource.org as we would normally do.
This is due to some unfortunate limitations in the implementation of the
jdiff ant task that require a phisical JDIFF_HOME directory. Checking in
the jars and various resources represents the simplest and most
pragmatic solution to this problem, though ambitious contributors are
free to do what's necessary to arrive at a more elegant arrangement.

[1]: http://static.springframework.org/spring-framework/docs
[2]: http://sourceforge.net/projects/javadiff/files/latest/download

Issue: SPR-9957
2012-11-22 21:05:58 +01:00