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Thrift Java Software Library

License

Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file to you 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.

Building and installing from source

When using a CMake build from the source distribution on Linux the easiest way to build and install is this simple command line:

make all && sudo make install/fast

It is important to use the install/fast option to eliminate the automatic rebuild by dependency that causes issues because the build tooling is designed to work with cached files in the user home directory during the build process. Instead this builds the code in the expected local build tree and then uses CMake install code to copy to the target destination.

Building Thrift with Gradle without CMake/Autoconf

The Thrift Java source is not build using the GNU tools, but rather uses the Gradle build system, which tends to be predominant amongst Java developers.

Currently we use gradle 8 to build the Thrift Java source. The usual way to setup gradle project is to include the gradle-wrapper.jar in the project and then run the gradle wrapper to bootstrap setting up gradle binaries. However to avoid putting binary files into the source tree we have ignored the gradle wrapper files. You are expected to install it manually, as described in the gradle documentation, or following this step (which is also done in the travis CI docker images):

export GRADLE_VERSION="8.4"
# install dependencies
apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends openjdk-17-jdk-headless wget unzip
# download gradle distribution
wget https://services.gradle.org/distributions/gradle-$GRADLE_VERSION-bin.zip -q -O /tmp/gradle-$GRADLE_VERSION-bin.zip
# check binary integrity
echo "3e1af3ae886920c3ac87f7a91f816c0c7c436f276a6eefdb3da152100fef72ae  /tmp/gradle-$GRADLE_VERSION-bin.zip" | sha256sum -c -
# unzip and install
unzip -d /tmp /tmp/gradle-$GRADLE_VERSION-bin.zip
mv /tmp/gradle-$GRADLE_VERSION /usr/local/gradle
ln -s /usr/local/gradle/bin/gradle /usr/local/bin

After the above step, gradle binary will be available in /usr/local/bin/. You can further choose to locally create the gradle wrapper (even if they are ignored) using:

gradle wrapper --gradle-version $GRADLE_VERSION

To compile the Java Thrift libraries, simply do the following:

gradle

Yep, that's easy. Look for libthrift-<version>.jar in the build/libs directory.

The default build will run the unit tests which expect a usable Thrift compiler to exist on the system. You have two choices for that.

  • Build the Thrift executable from source at the default location in the source tree. The project is configured to look for it there.

  • Install the published binary distribution to have Thrift executable in a known location and add the path to the ~/.gradle/gradle.properties file using the property name "thrift.compiler". For example this would set the path in a Windows box if Thrift was installed under C:\Thrift

    thrift.compiler=C:/Thrift/thrift.exe

To just build the library without running unit tests you simply do this.

gradle assemble

To install the library in the local Maven repository location where other Maven or Gradle builds can reference it simply do this.

gradle publishToMavenLocal

The library will be placed in your home directory under .m2/repository

To include Thrift in your applications simply add libthrift.jar to your classpath, or install if in your default system classpath of choice.

Build Thrift behind a proxy:

gradle -Dhttp.proxyHost=myproxyhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080 -Dhttp.proxyUser=thriftuser -Dhttp.proxyPassword=topsecret

or via

./configure --with-java GRADLE_OPTS='-Dhttp.proxyHost=myproxyhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080 -Dhttp.proxyUser=thriftuser -Dhttp.proxyPassword=topsecret'

Unit Test HTML Reports

The build will automatically generate an HTML Unit Test report. This can be found under build/reports/tests/test/index.html. It can be viewed with a browser directly from that location.

Clover Code Coverage for Thrift

The build will optionally generate Clover Code coverage if the Gradle property cloverEnabled=true is set in ~/.gradle/gradle.properties or on the command line via -PcloverEnabled=true. The generated report can be found under the location build/reports/clover/html/index.html. It can be viewed with a browser directly from that location. Additionally, a PDF report is generated and is found under the location build/reports/clover/clover.pdf.

The following command will build, unit test, and generate Clover reports:

gradle -PcloverEnabled=true

Publishing Maven Artifacts to Maven Central

The Automake build generates a Makefile that provides the correct parameters when you run the build provided the configure.ac has been set with the correct version number. The Gradle build will receive the correct value for the build. The same applies to the CMake build, the value from the configure.ac file will be used if you execute these commands:

make maven-publish   -- This is for an Automake Linux build
make MavenPublish    -- This is for a CMake generated build

The publish task in Gradle is preconfigured with all necessary details to sign and publish the artifacts from the build to the Apache Maven staging repository. The task requires the following externally provided properties to authenticate to the repository and sign the artifacts. The preferred approach is to create or edit the ~/.gradle/gradle.properties file and add the following properties to it.

# Signing key information for artifacts PGP signature (values are examples)
signing.keyId=24875D73
signing.password=secret
signing.secretKeyRingFile=/Users/me/.gnupg/secring.gpg

# Apache Maven staging repository user credentials
mavenUser=meMyselfAndI
mavenPassword=MySuperAwesomeSecretPassword

NOTE: If you do not have a secring.gpg file, see the gradle signing docs for instructions on how to generate it.

It is also possible to manually publish using the Gradle build directly. With the key information and credentials in place the following will generate if needed the build artifacts and proceed to publish the results.

gradle -Prelease=true publish

It is also possible to override the target repository for the Maven Publication by using a Gradle property, for example you can publish signed JAR files to your company internal server if you add this to the command line or in the ~/.gradle/gradle.properties file. The URL below assumes a Nexus Repository.

maven-repository-url=https://my.company.com/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2

Or the same on the command line:

gradle -Pmaven-repository-url=https://my.company.com/service/local/staging/deploy/maven2 -Prelease=true -Pthrift.version=0.11.0 publish

Dependencies

Gradle http://gradle.org/

Breaking Changes

0.13.0

  • The signature of the 'process' method in TAsyncProcessor and TProcessor has changed to remove the boolean return type and instead rely on Exceptions.

  • Per THRIFT-4805, TSaslTransportException has been removed. The same condition is now covered by TTansportException, where TTransportException.getType() == END_OF_FILE.

0.12.0

The access modifier of the AutoExpandingBuffer class has been changed from public to default (package) and will no longer be accessible by third-party libraries.

The access modifier of the ShortStack class has been changed from public to default (package) and will no longer be accessible by third-party libraries.