UPDATE: 28-06-2016: Android support to unused-dependency
In June, 2017, they have released the 4.0.0 version
and renamed the root project name "gradle-lint-plugin"
to
"nebula-lint-plugin"
. They have also added Android support to
unused-dependency.
In May 2016 Gradle has implemented the Gradle lint plugin for finding and removing unwanted dependency
The Gradle Lint plugin is a pluggable and configurable linter tool for
identifying and reporting on patterns of misuse or deprecations in
Gradle scripts and related files.
This plugin has various rules. Unused Dependency Rule is one of them. It has three specific characteristics.
- Removes unused dependencies.
- Promotes transitive dependencies that are used directly by your code
to explicit first order dependencies.
- Relocates dependencies to the 'correct' configuration.
To apply the rule, add:
gradleLint.rules += 'unused-dependency'
Details of Unused Dependency Rule is given in the last part.
To apply the Gradle lint plugin:
buildscript { repositories { jcenter() } }
plugins {
id 'nebula.lint' version '0.30.2'
}
Alternatively:
buildscript {
repositories { jcenter() }
dependencies {
classpath 'com.netflix.nebula:gradle-lint-plugin:latest.release'
}
}
apply plugin: 'nebula.lint'
Define which rules you would like to lint against:
gradleLint.rules = ['all-dependency'] // Add as many rules here as you'd like
For an enterprise build, we recommend defining the lint rules in a init.gradle script or in a Gradle script that is included via the Gradle apply from mechanism.
For multimodule projects, we recommend applying the plugin in an allprojects
block:
allprojects {
apply plugin: 'nebula.lint'
gradleLint.rules = ['all-dependency'] // Add as many rules here as you'd like
}
To apply the rule, add:
gradleLint.rules += 'unused-dependency'
The rule inspects compiled binaries emanating from your project's source sets looking for class references and matches those references to the dependencies that you have declared in your dependencies block.
Specifically, the rule makes the following adjustments to dependencies:
1. Removes unused dependencies
- Family-style jars like com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk are removed, as
they don't contain any code
2. Promotes transitive dependencies that are used directly by your code to explicit first order dependencies
- This has the side effect of breaking up family style JAR files, like
com.amazonaws:aws-java-sdk, into the parts that you are actually
using, and adding those as first order dependencies
3. Relocates dependencies to the 'correct' configuration
- Webjars are moved to the runtime configuration
- JAR files that don't contain any classes and content outside of META-INF are
moved to runtime
- 'xerces', 'xercesImpl', 'xml-apis' should always be runtime scoped
- Service providers (JAR files containing META-INF/services) like
mysql-connector-java are moved to runtime if there isn't any provable
compile-time reference
- Dependencies are moved to the highest source set configuration
possible. For example, 'junit' is relocated to testCompile unless
there is an explicit dependency on it in the main source set (rare).
UPDATE: Previous plugins
For your kind information, I want to share about previous plugins
- The Gradle plugin that finds unused dependencies, declared and transitive is com.github.nullstress.dependency-analysis
But its latest version 1.0.3 is created 23 December 2014. After that there aren't any updates.
N.B: Many of our engineers are being confused about this plugin as they
updated only the version number, nothing else.