4.9 will be needed for some things being added to a few of our plugins. It adds the new lazy configuration tasks which help a good amount in some cases.
* Revert "Force OpenCV to 3.1.0 (#602)"
This reverts commit 50ed55e8e2.
* Removes Simulation
* Removes old build system
* Removes old gtest
* Adds new gmock and gtest
* Updates to new ni-libraries
* removes MyRobot (to be replaced)
* moves files to new location
* Adds new sim backend and new test executables
* updates .styleguide and .gitignore
* Changes cpp WPILibVersion to a function
MSVC throws an AV with the old version.
* Disables USBCamera on all systems except for linux
* 2018 NI Libraries
* New build system
Updated to gradle 3.2.1. This also moves all of the task graph listeners for dependency setup to use the gradle model, making it both safer and reducing line count.
Updates the gradle version to 2.14. In doing so, some model elements have changed. Additionally, some redundant elements have been removed from the gradle scripts.
This is a major restructuring of the WPILib repository to simply build
procedures and remove the remnants of Maven from everything except the
eclipse plugins. Gradle files have been largely simplified or rewritten,
taking advantage of splitting up parts of the build into separate build
files for ease of reading.
The eclipse plugins are now in a separate project, as is ntcore. All
dependencies are resolved via Maven dependencies, with the
Jenkins-maintained WPILib repo. Project structures have also been
simplified: we no longer have separate subprojects inside wpilibc and
wpilibj. Where possible, these changes hav been done with git renames,
to make sure we still have full history for all repositories. Other
unrelated subprojects have also been broken out: OutlineViewer is now a
separate project.
Change-Id: Ib4e2a6e1a2f66427a14f16612b0e0d69ed661878
This updates our Gradle wrapper to version 2.5. The Gradle update
requires no changes to developer systems.
Change-Id: Ia2846600579b182c1a8e12889cdcaa8ffd82a812
This adds gradle support for building wpilibj and wpilibc. At this
point, both of these libraries should be fully ready to go.
Gradle should give us a number of improvements, including less
dependencies for getting building up and running, and MUCH faster build
times. I'm noticing significantly faster build times already compared to
Maven, with neither system building the plugins. The changes here should
be pretty straight forward. The basic command for gradle is './gradlew'.
This is the gradle wrapper, and it will find and download the correct
gradle executable for your system. There is no need to install anything
yourself. To see every task available, run './gradlew tasks'. The
important tasks for us are listed under the WPILib header when the tasks
command is run. To generate unit test binaries, the
fRCUserProgramExecutable command will create the C++ tester, and the
wpilibjIntegrationTestJar command will create the Java tester. The Jenkins
deploy scripts have been modified to know the difference between maven
generated and gradle generated jars with an environment variable. Creating
the eclipse plugins still requires Maven, but gradle will handle calling
it correctly and generating the proper dependencies for it. Create the
plugins by calling ./gradlew eclipsePlugins.
Jenkins can now be modified to support the new build system. Unit tests
are run with ./gradlew test. Generating the integration tests uses the
above two commands, and then process proceeds exactly as it did before.
For publishing documentation, a new task has been created, ./gradlew
publishDocs, which handles putting the documentation where Jenkins expects
for publishing.
Change-Id: I9a260d391984f98ef9170993efe933e4026161dc