diff options
| author | Mavlushechka <mavlushechka@gmail.com> | 2022-01-10 19:29:05 +0500 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Mavlushechka <mavlushechka@gmail.com> | 2022-01-10 19:29:05 +0500 | 
| commit | 7f35bd71343f931e97e5df2928583ee3e35fa91f (patch) | |
| tree | 39c4b95f6ded0858327d4f42f174bdaedf962c66 /gradlew | |
| parent | b13569f3c089582187234539b7636cb52cde6a43 (diff) | |
Update gradle
Diffstat (limited to 'gradlew')
| -rwxr-xr-x | gradlew | 257 | 
1 files changed, 153 insertions, 104 deletions
| @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ -#!/usr/bin/env sh +#!/bin/sh  # -# Copyright 2015 the original author or authors. +# Copyright ? 2015-2021 the original authors.  #  # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");  # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. @@ -17,67 +17,101 @@  #  ############################################################################## -## -##  Gradle start up script for UN*X -## +# +#   Gradle start up script for POSIX generated by Gradle. +# +#   Important for running: +# +#   (1) You need a POSIX-compliant shell to run this script. If your /bin/sh is +#       noncompliant, but you have some other compliant shell such as ksh or +#       bash, then to run this script, type that shell name before the whole +#       command line, like: +# +#           ksh Gradle +# +#       Busybox and similar reduced shells will NOT work, because this script +#       requires all of these POSIX shell features: +#         * functions; +#         * expansions ?$var?, ?${var}?, ?${var:-default}?, ?${var+SET}?, +#           ?${var#prefix}?, ?${var%suffix}?, and ?$( cmd )?; +#         * compound commands having a testable exit status, especially ?case?; +#         * various built-in commands including ?command?, ?set?, and ?ulimit?. +# +#   Important for patching: +# +#   (2) This script targets any POSIX shell, so it avoids extensions provided +#       by Bash, Ksh, etc; in particular arrays are avoided. +# +#       The "traditional" practice of packing multiple parameters into a +#       space-separated string is a well documented source of bugs and security +#       problems, so this is (mostly) avoided, by progressively accumulating +#       options in "$@", and eventually passing that to Java. +# +#       Where the inherited environment variables (DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS, JAVA_OPTS, +#       and GRADLE_OPTS) rely on word-splitting, this is performed explicitly; +#       see the in-line comments for details. +# +#       There are tweaks for specific operating systems such as AIX, CygWin, +#       Darwin, MinGW, and NonStop. +# +#   (3) This script is generated from the Groovy template +#       https://github.com/gradle/gradle/blob/master/subprojects/plugins/src/main/resources/org/gradle/api/internal/plugins/unixStartScript.txt +#       within the Gradle project. +# +#       You can find Gradle at https://github.com/gradle/gradle/. +#  ##############################################################################  # Attempt to set APP_HOME +  # Resolve links: $0 may be a link -PRG="$0" -# Need this for relative symlinks. -while [ -h "$PRG" ] ; do -    ls=`ls -ld "$PRG"` -    link=`expr "$ls" : '.*-> \(.*\)$'` -    if expr "$link" : '/.*' > /dev/null; then -        PRG="$link" -    else -        PRG=`dirname "$PRG"`"/$link" -    fi +app_path=$0 + +# Need this for daisy-chained symlinks. +while +    APP_HOME=${app_path%"${app_path##*/}"}  # leaves a trailing /; empty if no leading path +    [ -h "$app_path" ] +do +    ls=$( ls -ld "$app_path" ) +    link=${ls#*' -> '} +    case $link in             #( +      /*)   app_path=$link ;; #( +      *)    app_path=$APP_HOME$link ;; +    esac  done -SAVED="`pwd`" -cd "`dirname \"$PRG\"`/" >/dev/null -APP_HOME="`pwd -P`" -cd "$SAVED" >/dev/null + +APP_HOME=$( cd "${APP_HOME:-./}" && pwd -P ) || exit  APP_NAME="Gradle" -APP_BASE_NAME=`basename "$0"` +APP_BASE_NAME=${0##*/}  # Add default JVM options here. You can also use JAVA_OPTS and GRADLE_OPTS to pass JVM options to this script.  DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS='"-Xmx64m" "-Xms64m"'  # Use the maximum available, or set MAX_FD != -1 to use that value. -MAX_FD="maximum" +MAX_FD=maximum  warn () {      echo "$*" -} +} >&2  die () {      echo      echo "$*"      echo      exit 1 -} +} >&2  # OS specific support (must be 'true' or 'false').  cygwin=false  msys=false  darwin=false  nonstop=false -case "`uname`" in -  CYGWIN* ) -    cygwin=true -    ;; -  Darwin* ) -    darwin=true -    ;; -  MSYS* | MINGW* ) -    msys=true -    ;; -  NONSTOP* ) -    nonstop=true -    ;; +case "$( uname )" in                #( +  CYGWIN* )         cygwin=true  ;; #( +  Darwin* )         darwin=true  ;; #( +  MSYS* | MINGW* )  msys=true    ;; #( +  NONSTOP* )        nonstop=true ;;  esac  CLASSPATH=$APP_HOME/gradle/wrapper/gradle-wrapper.jar @@ -87,9 +121,9 @@ CLASSPATH=$APP_HOME/gradle/wrapper/gradle-wrapper.jar  if [ -n "$JAVA_HOME" ] ; then      if [ -x "$JAVA_HOME/jre/sh/java" ] ; then          # IBM's JDK on AIX uses strange locations for the executables -        JAVACMD="$JAVA_HOME/jre/sh/java" +        JAVACMD=$JAVA_HOME/jre/sh/java      else -        JAVACMD="$JAVA_HOME/bin/java" +        JAVACMD=$JAVA_HOME/bin/java      fi      if [ ! -x "$JAVACMD" ] ; then          die "ERROR: JAVA_HOME is set to an invalid directory: $JAVA_HOME @@ -98,7 +132,7 @@ Please set the JAVA_HOME variable in your environment to match the  location of your Java installation."      fi  else -    JAVACMD="java" +    JAVACMD=java      which java >/dev/null 2>&1 || die "ERROR: JAVA_HOME is not set and no 'java' command could be found in your PATH.  Please set the JAVA_HOME variable in your environment to match the @@ -106,80 +140,95 @@ location of your Java installation."  fi  # Increase the maximum file descriptors if we can. -if [ "$cygwin" = "false" -a "$darwin" = "false" -a "$nonstop" = "false" ] ; then -    MAX_FD_LIMIT=`ulimit -H -n` -    if [ $? -eq 0 ] ; then -        if [ "$MAX_FD" = "maximum" -o "$MAX_FD" = "max" ] ; then -            MAX_FD="$MAX_FD_LIMIT" -        fi -        ulimit -n $MAX_FD -        if [ $? -ne 0 ] ; then -            warn "Could not set maximum file descriptor limit: $MAX_FD" -        fi -    else -        warn "Could not query maximum file descriptor limit: $MAX_FD_LIMIT" -    fi +if ! "$cygwin" && ! "$darwin" && ! "$nonstop" ; then +    case $MAX_FD in #( +      max*) +        MAX_FD=$( ulimit -H -n ) || +            warn "Could not query maximum file descriptor limit" +    esac +    case $MAX_FD in  #( +      '' | soft) :;; #( +      *) +        ulimit -n "$MAX_FD" || +            warn "Could not set maximum file descriptor limit to $MAX_FD" +    esac  fi -# For Darwin, add options to specify how the application appears in the dock -if $darwin; then -    GRADLE_OPTS="$GRADLE_OPTS \"-Xdock:name=$APP_NAME\" \"-Xdock:icon=$APP_HOME/media/gradle.icns\"" -fi +# Collect all arguments for the java command, stacking in reverse order: +#   * args from the command line +#   * the main class name +#   * -classpath +#   * -D...appname settings +#   * --module-path (only if needed) +#   * DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS, JAVA_OPTS, and GRADLE_OPTS environment variables.  # For Cygwin or MSYS, switch paths to Windows format before running java -if [ "$cygwin" = "true" -o "$msys" = "true" ] ; then -    APP_HOME=`cygpath --path --mixed "$APP_HOME"` -    CLASSPATH=`cygpath --path --mixed "$CLASSPATH"` - -    JAVACMD=`cygpath --unix "$JAVACMD"` - -    # We build the pattern for arguments to be converted via cygpath -    ROOTDIRSRAW=`find -L / -maxdepth 1 -mindepth 1 -type d 2>/dev/null` -    SEP="" -    for dir in $ROOTDIRSRAW ; do -        ROOTDIRS="$ROOTDIRS$SEP$dir" -        SEP="|" -    done -    OURCYGPATTERN="(^($ROOTDIRS))" -    # Add a user-defined pattern to the cygpath arguments -    if [ "$GRADLE_CYGPATTERN" != "" ] ; then -        OURCYGPATTERN="$OURCYGPATTERN|($GRADLE_CYGPATTERN)" -    fi +if "$cygwin" || "$msys" ; then +    APP_HOME=$( cygpath --path --mixed "$APP_HOME" ) +    CLASSPATH=$( cygpath --path --mixed "$CLASSPATH" ) + +    JAVACMD=$( cygpath --unix "$JAVACMD" ) +      # Now convert the arguments - kludge to limit ourselves to /bin/sh -    i=0 -    for arg in "$@" ; do -        CHECK=`echo "$arg"|egrep -c "$OURCYGPATTERN" -` -        CHECK2=`echo "$arg"|egrep -c "^-"`                                 ### Determine if an option - -        if [ $CHECK -ne 0 ] && [ $CHECK2 -eq 0 ] ; then                    ### Added a condition -            eval `echo args$i`=`cygpath --path --ignore --mixed "$arg"` -        else -            eval `echo args$i`="\"$arg\"" +    for arg do +        if +            case $arg in                                #( +              -*)   false ;;                            # don't mess with options #( +              /?*)  t=${arg#/} t=/${t%%/*}              # looks like a POSIX filepath +                    [ -e "$t" ] ;;                      #( +              *)    false ;; +            esac +        then +            arg=$( cygpath --path --ignore --mixed "$arg" )          fi -        i=`expr $i + 1` +        # Roll the args list around exactly as many times as the number of +        # args, so each arg winds up back in the position where it started, but +        # possibly modified. +        # +        # NB: a `for` loop captures its iteration list before it begins, so +        # changing the positional parameters here affects neither the number of +        # iterations, nor the values presented in `arg`. +        shift                   # remove old arg +        set -- "$@" "$arg"      # push replacement arg      done -    case $i in -        0) set -- ;; -        1) set -- "$args0" ;; -        2) set -- "$args0" "$args1" ;; -        3) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" ;; -        4) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" "$args3" ;; -        5) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" "$args3" "$args4" ;; -        6) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" "$args3" "$args4" "$args5" ;; -        7) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" "$args3" "$args4" "$args5" "$args6" ;; -        8) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" "$args3" "$args4" "$args5" "$args6" "$args7" ;; -        9) set -- "$args0" "$args1" "$args2" "$args3" "$args4" "$args5" "$args6" "$args7" "$args8" ;; -    esac  fi -# Escape application args -save () { -    for i do printf %s\\n "$i" | sed "s/'/'\\\\''/g;1s/^/'/;\$s/\$/' \\\\/" ; done -    echo " " -} -APP_ARGS=`save "$@"` +# Collect all arguments for the java command; +#   * $DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS, $JAVA_OPTS, and $GRADLE_OPTS can contain fragments of +#     shell script including quotes and variable substitutions, so put them in +#     double quotes to make sure that they get re-expanded; and +#   * put everything else in single quotes, so that it's not re-expanded. + +set -- \ +        "-Dorg.gradle.appname=$APP_BASE_NAME" \ +        -classpath "$CLASSPATH" \ +        org.gradle.wrapper.GradleWrapperMain \ +        "$@" + +# Use "xargs" to parse quoted args. +# +# With -n1 it outputs one arg per line, with the quotes and backslashes removed. +# +# In Bash we could simply go: +# +#   readarray ARGS < <( xargs -n1 <<<"$var" ) && +#   set -- "${ARGS[@]}" "$@" +# +# but POSIX shell has neither arrays nor command substitution, so instead we +# post-process each arg (as a line of input to sed) to backslash-escape any +# character that might be a shell metacharacter, then use eval to reverse +# that process (while maintaining the separation between arguments), and wrap +# the whole thing up as a single "set" statement. +# +# This will of course break if any of these variables contains a newline or +# an unmatched quote. +# -# Collect all arguments for the java command, following the shell quoting and substitution rules -eval set -- $DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS $JAVA_OPTS $GRADLE_OPTS "\"-Dorg.gradle.appname=$APP_BASE_NAME\"" -classpath "\"$CLASSPATH\"" org.gradle.wrapper.GradleWrapperMain "$APP_ARGS" +eval "set -- $( +        printf '%s\n' "$DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS $JAVA_OPTS $GRADLE_OPTS" | +        xargs -n1 | +        sed ' s~[^-[:alnum:]+,./:=@_]~\\&~g; ' | +        tr '\n' ' ' +    )" '"$@"'  exec "$JAVACMD" "$@" |