Awesome
Introduction
Wuff is a gradle plugin for developing and assembling OSGi/Eclipse applications and plugins independently of Eclipse-IDE. If you are familiar with Eclipse Tycho, then think of Wuff as a gradle-based alternative.
What's new :star:
Version 0.0.20
- introduced publicLib configuration for eclipse bundles and applications.
Version 0.0.19
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implemented consistent interpretation of 'provided' configuration: all artifacts in provided are visible at compile-time, but excluded from application bundles
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introduced requireBundle mechanism for wrapped libs
Version 0.0.18
- Using unpuzzle 0.0.22, which incorporates pull request "ArchiveUnpacker now preserves "executable" permissions in Tar and Zip" ( https://github.com/akhikhl/unpuzzle/pull/8 )
Where to start?
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If you are new to Wuff, start your acquaintance with main features.
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If you want to create something from scratch quickly, take a look at the tutorials: first Equinox app, first RCP app and first IDE app.
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If you already have bunch of existing Eclipse plugins and apps, consider converting them to Gradle/Wuff.
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If you want to learn all about Wuff systematically, read wiki pages.
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If you already use Wuff, it is always a good idea to look in what's new file.
How to use Wuff?
- Maven artifacts: 'org.akhikhl.wuff:wuff-plugin:+' at jcenter and maven central.
- Source code: compile, explore, deploy.
See more information on prerequisites and usage wiki page.
Copyright and License
Copyright 2014-2015 (c) Andrey Hihlovskiy and contributors
All versions, present and past, of Wuff are licensed under MIT license.