The following glossary helps you understand Gradle terminology.

A

Artifact

A file or directory produced by a build, such as a JAR, a ZIP distribution, or a native executable.

Artifacts are typically designed to be used or consumed by users and other projects or deployed to hosting systems. In such cases, the artifact is a single file. Directories are common in the case of inter-project dependencies to avoid the cost of producing the publishable artifact.

B

C

Capability

A capability identifies a feature offered by one or multiple components. A capability is identified by coordinates similar to the coordinates used for module versions. By default, each module version offers a capability that matches its coordinates, such as com.google:guava:18.0. Capabilities can be used to express that a component provides multiple feature variants or that two different components implement the same feature (and thus cannot be used together). For more details, see the section on capabilities.

Component

Any single version of a module.

For external libraries, the term component refers to one published library version.

In a build, components are defined by plugins (e.g., the Java Library plugin) and provide a simple way to define a publication for publishing. They comprise artifacts as well as the appropriate metadata that describes a component’s variants in detail. For example, the java component in its default setup consists of a JAR — produced by the jar task — and the dependency information of the Java api and runtime variants. It may also define additional variants, for example, sources and Javadoc, with the corresponding artifacts.

Component metadata rule

A component metadata rule is a rule that modifies a component’s metadata after it is fetched from a repository, e.g., to add missing information or correct incorrect information. In contrast to resolution rules, component metadata rules are applied before resolution starts. Component metadata rules are defined as part of the build logic and can be shared through plugins. For more information, see the section on fixing metadata with component metadata rules.

Configuration

A configuration is a named set of dependencies grouped together for a specific goal. Configurations provide access to the underlying, resolved modules and their artifacts. For more information, see the sections on dependency configurations as well as resolvable and consumable configurations.

The word "configuration" is an overloaded term that has a different meaning outside of dependency management.

D

Dependency

A dependency is a pointer to another piece of software required to build, test, or run a module. For more information, see the section on declaring dependencies.

Dependency constraint

A dependency constraint defines requirements that need to be met by a module to make it a valid resolution result for the dependency. For example, a dependency constraint can narrow down the set of supported module versions. Dependency constraints can be used to express such requirements for transitive dependencies. For more information, see the sections on upgrading and downgrading transitive dependencies.

E

F

Feature Variant

A feature variant is a variant representing a feature of a component that can be individually selected or not. A feature variant is identified by one or more capabilities. For more information, see the sections on modeling feature variants, and optional dependencies.

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

Module

A piece of software that evolves over time e.g., Google Guava. Every module has a name. Each module release is optimally represented by a module version. For convenient consumption, modules can be hosted in a repository.

Module metadata

Releases of a module provide metadata. Metadata is the data that describes the module in more detail, e.g., information about the location of artifacts or required transitive dependencies. Gradle offers its own metadata format called Gradle Module Metadata (.module file) but also supports Maven (.pom) and Ivy (ivy.xml) metadata. See the section on understanding Gradle Module Metadata for more information on the supported metadata formats.

Module version

A module version represents a distinct set of changes of a released module. For example, 18.0 represents the module version with the coordinates com.google:guava:18.0. In practice, there are no limitations to the scheme of the module version. Timestamps, numbers, and special suffixes like -GA are all allowed identifiers. The most widely-used versioning strategy is semantic versioning.

N

O

P

Platform

A platform is a set of modules aimed to be used together. There are different categories of platforms corresponding to different use cases:

  • module set: often a set of modules published together as a whole. Using one module of the set often means we want to use the same version for all modules of the set. For example, if using groovy 1.2, also use groovy-json 1.2.

  • runtime environment: a set of libraries known to work well together, such as the Spring Platform, which recommends versions for both Spring and components that work well with Spring.

  • deployment environment: Java runtime, application server, etc …​

    In addition, Gradle defines virtual platforms.

    Maven’s BOM (bill-of-material) is a popular platform that Gradle supports.
Publication

A description of the files and metadata that should be published to a repository as a single entity for use by consumers.

A publication has a name and consists of one or more artifacts plus information about those artifacts (the metadata).

Q

R

Repository

A repository hosts a set of modules, each of which may provide one or many releases (components) indicated by a module version. The repository can be based on a binary repository product (e.g., Artifactory or Nexus) or a directory structure in the filesystem. For more information, see Declaring Repositories.

Resolution rule

A resolution rule influences the behavior of how a dependency is resolved directly. Resolution rules are defined as part of the build logic. For more information, see the section on customizing resolution of a dependency directly.

S

T

Transitive dependency

A variant of a component can have dependencies on other modules to work properly, so-called transitive dependencies. Releases of a module hosted on a repository can provide metadata to declare those transitive dependencies. By default, Gradle resolves transitive dependencies automatically. The version selection for transitive dependencies can be influenced by declaring dependency constraints.

U

V

Variant (of a component)

Each component consists of one or more variants. A variant consists of a set of artifacts and defines a set of dependencies. It is identified by a set of attributes and capabilities.

Gradle’s dependency resolution is variant-aware and selects one or more variants of each component after a component (i.e., one version of a module) has been selected. It may also fail if the variant selection result is ambiguous, meaning that Gradle does not have enough information to select one of multiple mutual exclusive variants. In that case, more information can be provided through variant attributes. Examples of variants each Java components typically offers are api and runtime variants. Other examples are JDK8 and JDK11 variants. For more information, see the section on variant selection.

Variant Attribute

Attributes are used to identify and select variants. A variant has one or more attributes defined, for example org.gradle.usage=java-api, org.gradle.jvm.version=11. When dependencies are resolved, a set of attributes are requested and Gradle finds the best fitting variant(s) for each component in the dependency graph. Compatibility and disambiguation rules can be implemented for an attribute to express compatibility between values (e.g., Java 8 is compatible with Java 11, but Java 11 should be preferred if the requested version is 11 or higher). Such rules are typically provided by plugins. For more information, see the sections on variant selection and declaring attributes.

W

X

Y

Z