[GRADLE-3520] Incremental Java compile does not rebuild when upstream classes are deleted Created: 06/Aug/16 Updated: 10/Feb/17 Resolved: 10/Feb/17 |
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Status: | Resolved |
Project: | Gradle |
Affects Version/s: | None |
Fix Version/s: | None |
Type: | Bug | ||
Reporter: | Sterling Greene | Assignee: | Unassigned |
Resolution: | Won't Fix | Votes: | 5 |
Known Issue Of: |
Description |
Given a project: When 'A.java' is deleted, compileTestJava should be rebuilt and fail compilation. Instead, Gradle reports compileTestJava as up-to-date. If the incremental compiler is not used, compileTestJava would be re-executed. |
Comments |
Comment by Lóránt Pintér [ 05/Oct/16 ] |
Now tasks clean up their previous output after all their sources are gone. |
Comment by Lóránt Pintér [ 05/Oct/16 ] |
Sorry, this is only fixed for the non-incremental compiler. Turns out, this is a different issue than |
Comment by Benjamin Muschko [ 15/Nov/16 ] |
As announced on the Gradle blog we are planning to completely migrate issues from JIRA to GitHub. We intend to prioritize issues that are actionable and impactful while working more closely with the community. Many of our JIRA issues are inactionable or irrelevant. We would like to request your help to ensure we can appropriately prioritize JIRA issues you’ve contributed to. Please confirm that you still advocate for your JIRA issue before December 10th, 2016 by:
We look forward to collaborating with you more closely on GitHub. Thank you for your contribution to Gradle! |
Comment by Benjamin Muschko [ 10/Feb/17 ] |
Thanks again for reporting this issue. We haven't heard back from you after our inquiry from November 15th. We are closing this issue now. Please create an issue on GitHub if you still feel passionate about getting it resolved. |