Building gRPC-Java ================== Building is only necessary if you are making changes to gRPC-Java. Building requires JDK 8, as our tests use TLS. grpc-java has a C++ code generation plugin for protoc. Since many Java developers don't have C compilers installed and don't need to modify the codegen, the build can skip it. To skip, create the file `/gradle.properties` and add `skipCodegen=true`. Then, to build, run: ``` $ ./gradlew build ``` To install the artifacts to your Maven local repository for use in your own project, run: ``` $ ./gradlew install ``` ### Notes for IntelliJ Building in IntelliJ works best when you import the project as a Gradle project and delegate IDE build/run actions to Gradle. You can find this setting at: ```Settings -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> Build Tools -> Gradle -> Runner -> Delegate IDE build/run actions to gradle. ``` How to Build Code Generation Plugin ----------------------------------- This section is only necessary if you are making changes to the code generation. Most users only need to use `skipCodegen=true` as discussed above. ### Build Protobuf The codegen plugin is C++ code and requires protobuf 3.0.0 or later. For Linux, Mac and MinGW: ``` $ git clone https://github.com/google/protobuf.git $ cd protobuf $ git checkout v3.5.1 $ ./autogen.sh $ ./configure $ make $ make check $ sudo make install ``` If you are comfortable with C++ compilation and autotools, you can specify a ``--prefix`` for Protobuf and use ``-I`` in ``CXXFLAGS``, ``-L`` in ``LDFLAGS``, ``LD_LIBRARY_PATH``, and ``PATH`` to reference it. The environment variables will be used when building grpc-java. Protobuf installs to ``/usr/local`` by default. For Visual C++, please refer to the [Protobuf README](https://github.com/google/protobuf/blob/master/cmake/README.md) for how to compile Protobuf. gRPC-java assumes a Release build. #### Linux and MinGW If ``/usr/local/lib`` is not in your library search path, you can add it by running: ``` $ sudo sh -c 'echo /usr/local/lib >> /etc/ld.so.conf' $ sudo ldconfig ``` #### Mac Some versions of Mac OS X (e.g., 10.10) doesn't have ``/usr/local`` in the default search paths for header files and libraries. It will fail the build of the codegen. To work around this, you will need to set environment variables: ``` $ export CXXFLAGS="-I/usr/local/include" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib" ``` ### Notes for Visual C++ When building on Windows and VC++, you need to specify project properties for Gradle to find protobuf: ``` .\gradlew install ^ -PvcProtobufInclude=C:\path\to\protobuf-3.5.1\src ^ -PvcProtobufLibs=C:\path\to\protobuf-3.5.1\vsprojects\Release ^ -PtargetArch=x86_32 ``` Since specifying those properties every build is bothersome, you can instead create ``\gradle.properties`` with contents like: ``` vcProtobufInclude=C:\\path\\to\\protobuf-3.5.1\\src vcProtobufLibs=C:\\path\\to\\protobuf-3.5.1\\vsprojects\\Release targetArch=x86_32 ``` By default, the build script will build the codegen for the same architecture as the Java runtime installed on your system. If you are using 64-bit JVM, the codegen will be compiled for 64-bit. Since Protobuf is only built for 32-bit by default, the `targetArch=x86_32` is necessary. ### Notes for MinGW on Windows If you have both MinGW and VC++ installed on Windows, VC++ will be used by default. To override this default and use MinGW, add ``-PvcDisable=true`` to your Gradle command line or add ``vcDisable=true`` to your ``\gradle.properties``. ### Notes for Unsupported Operating Systems The build script pulls pre-compiled ``protoc`` from Maven Central by default. We have built ``protoc`` binaries for popular systems, but they may not work for your system. If ``protoc`` cannot be downloaded or would not run, you can use the one that has been built by your own, by adding this property to ``/gradle.properties``: ``` protoc=/path/to/protoc ```