TruEra specific changes are in the truera
branch.
Fetch all tags (which will be releases) from upstream and push it to TruEra fork.
git fetch upstream --tags
git push origin --tags
Update the truera
branch with master
.
git checkout master
git merge upstream/master
git push origin HEAD
git checkout truera
git rebase -i origin/master
We will keep the changes to minimum and hoping that there won't be any merge conflicts.
Official source for each release is maintained as a git tag. When generating a new TruEra version using a particular release start by checking out the tag as a branch. For instance, for v1.15.0 you will need:
git checkout -b release/v1.15.0 v1.15.0
Then cherry-pick the TruEra specific changes onto this branch. Currently there is only one change that needs to be cherry-picked.
git cherry-pick 0f8d45adec4032552bbc0f9c6a26815863b8b273
git push --set-upstream origin release/v1.15.0
Build the source code: NOTE: Since we are increasing the line length, a lot of tests will fail legitimately, please ignore those.
mvn clean install -DskipTests
The Jar will be generated in core/target/google-java-format-<verssion>-all-deps.jar
.
google-java-format
is a program that reformats Java source code to comply with
Google Java Style.
Download the formatter and run it with:
java -jar /path/to/google-java-format-${GJF_VERSION?}-all-deps.jar <options> [files...]
The formatter can act on whole files, on limited lines (--lines
), on specific
offsets (--offset
), passing through to standard-out (default) or altered
in-place (--replace
).
To reformat changed lines in a specific patch, use
google-java-format-diff.py
.
Note: There is no configurability as to the formatter's algorithm for formatting. This is a deliberate design decision to unify our code formatting on a single format.
A
google-java-format IntelliJ plugin
is available from the plugin repository. To install it, go to your IDE's
settings and select the Plugins
category. Click the Marketplace
tab, search
for the google-java-format
plugin, and click the Install
button.
The plugin will be disabled by default. To enable it in the current project, go
to File→Settings...→google-java-format Settings
(or IntelliJ IDEA→Preferences...→Other Settings→google-java-format Settings
on macOS) and
check the Enable google-java-format
checkbox. (A notification will be
presented when you first open a project offering to do this for you.)
To enable it by default in new projects, use File→Other Settings→Default Settings...
.
When enabled, it will replace the normal Reformat Code
action, which can be
triggered from the Code
menu or with the Ctrl-Alt-L (by default) keyboard
shortcut.
The import ordering is not handled by this plugin, unfortunately. To fix the import order, download the IntelliJ Java Google Style file and import it into File→Settings→Editor→Code Style.
The latest version of the google-java-format
Eclipse plugin can be downloaded
from the releases page.
Drop it into the Eclipse
drop-ins folder
to activate the plugin.
The plugin adds a google-java-format
formatter implementation that can be
configured in Window > Preferences > Java > Code Style > Formatter > Formatter Implementation
.
- Gradle plugins
- Apache Maven plugins
- spotless
- spotify/fmt-maven-plugin
- talios/googleformatter-maven-plugin
- Cosium/maven-git-code-format: A maven plugin that automatically deploys google-java-format as a pre-commit git hook.
- SBT plugins
- maltzj/google-style-precommit-hook: A pre-commit (pre-commit.com) hook that will automatically run GJF whenever you commit code to your repository
- Github Actions
- googlejavaformat-action: Automatically format your Java files when you push on github
The formatter can be used in software which generates java to output more legible java code. Just include the library in your maven/gradle/etc. configuration.
google-java-format
uses internal javac APIs for parsing Java source. The
following JVM flags are required when running on JDK 16 and newer, due to
JEP 396: Strongly Encapsulate JDK Internals by Default:
--add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.api=ALL-UNNAMED
--add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.file=ALL-UNNAMED
--add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.parser=ALL-UNNAMED
--add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.tree=ALL-UNNAMED
--add-exports jdk.compiler/com.sun.tools.javac.util=ALL-UNNAMED
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.googlejavaformat</groupId>
<artifactId>google-java-format</artifactId>
<version>${google-java-format.version}</version>
</dependency>
dependencies {
implementation 'com.google.googlejavaformat:google-java-format:$googleJavaFormatVersion'
}
You can then use the formatter through the formatSource
methods. E.g.
String formattedSource = new Formatter().formatSource(sourceString);
or
CharSource source = ...
CharSink output = ...
new Formatter().formatSource(source, output);
Your starting point should be the instance methods of
com.google.googlejavaformat.java.Formatter
.
mvn install
Please see the contributors guide for details.
Copyright 2015 Google Inc.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
the License.