Apache Ant
Bazel
Apache Ant | Bazel | |
---|---|---|
9 | 136 | |
406 | 22,315 | |
0.2% | 0.5% | |
7.7 | 10.0 | |
15 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Apache Ant
-
My final take on Gradle (vs. Maven)
-- https://ant.apache.org/
-
Want to Get Better at Java? Go Old School.
I will not suggest truly old-school Java programming. When I started in Java, we built Java classes with the javac command. This led to writing shell scripts to build complex projects and finally, Makefiles using the Unix and Windows commands make and nmake respectively. I remember being thrilled when the Ant utility came out and we had a pure Java build tool.
-
I am about to write my first code but god has a different plan.
Didn't know that people still use Ant for building their source code.
-
Better CI/CD caching with new-gen build systems
A build system is a program that orchestrates the execution of underlying tools such as compilers, code generators, test runners, linters and so on. Examples of build systems include the venerable Make, the JVM-centric Ant, Maven and Gradle, and newer systems such as Pants and Bazel (full disclosure: I am one of the maintainers of Pants).
-
Build error when running 'nix build', running build steps by hand with 'nix develop' works
You are missing a dependency: antlr. You have ant instead, which is something completely different.
-
QZ Tray: Impressão em impressoras térmicas pelo navegador
3) Recomendo realizar o download do JDK 7 ou superior, Apache Ant e Open SSL;
-
what are the best resources to learn makefile and how to understand large codebases
make has many detractors, but I've shipped some fairly large projects using nothing but it as the build system. Once you've settled on a particular implementation of make, you can get a lot done with it. The pain comes in when you want to do even modestly interesting things and you need it to work on both GNU make and SysV (or BSD) make. Its syntax also speaks loudly as to the era which it's from, but the same could be (unfavorably) said of things like Visual Studio project files and Ant.
Bazel
-
Hello World
Wow, if you curl it, there's a lot of boilerplate code there.
Maybe built using Bazel?
https://bazel.build
-
Things I learned while building projects with NX
Bazel by Google
-
Show HN: Flox 1.0 – Open-source dev env as code with Nix
Luckily a feature to limit the disk cache size is in development: https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/issues/5139
-
How to write unit tests in C++ relying on non-code files?
This is a problem that Bazel (https://bazel.build) solves in a very convenient way. You can just keep using the paths relative to the repository root, and as long as you properly declare your test needs that file it will access it without problems. Or you can use the runfile libraries to access them too.
-
blade-build VS Bazel - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 28 Jan 2024
- Bazel 7.0 LTS
-
My first Software Release using GitHub Release
When doing research for this lab exercise I looked at both vcpkg and conan. Both are package managers that would automate the installation and configuration of my program with its dependencies. However, when it came to releasing and sharing my program my options were limited. For example, the central public registry for conan packages is conan-center, but these packages are curated and the process is very involved. There was no way conan-center would accept a class project like mine. Alternatively, I could host a conan package on a public Artifactory repository, but accessing the package requires users to add the repository to their conan remote. This already sounded like too many steps to expect regular users to follow - I already haven't setup any conan remotes, there's no way I could expect regular users to know about conan remotes, let alone have conan installed on their system. After discussing with people online and consulting my instructor, I ultimately decided to do a GitHub release. However, in the future I was encouraged to look into using CMake or bazel.
-
Declarative Gradle is a cool thing I am afraid of: Maven strikes back
NOTE: I won’t mention SBT and Leiningen here because, with all due respect, they are niche build tools. I also won’t discuss Kobalt for the same reason (besides, it’s no longer actively maintained). Additionally, I won’t touch upon Bazel and Buck in this context, mainly because I’m not very familiar with them. If you have insights or comments about these tools, please feel free to share them in the comments 👇
- Bazel
-
A Modern C Development Environment
> None of this solves C's only REAL problem (in my opinion) which is the lack of dependency management.
Bazel solves this really nicely, I know some people have strong opinions on it but I cannot recommend it enough
https://bazel.build/
What are some alternatives?
Apache Maven - Apache Maven core
Buck - A fast build system that encourages the creation of small, reusable modules over a variety of platforms and languages.
Google Web Toolkit - GWT Open Source Project
nx - Smart Monorepos · Fast CI
Quartz - Code for Quartz Scheduler
meson - The Meson Build System
cglib - cglib - Byte Code Generation Library is high level API to generate and transform Java byte code. It is used by AOP, testing, data access frameworks to generate dynamic proxy objects and intercept field access.
Gradle - Adaptable, fast automation for all
ninja - a small build system with a focus on speed
pymake - Parse GNU Makefiles with Python. Work in progress!
turborepo - Incremental bundler and build system optimized for JavaScript and TypeScript, written in Rust – including Turborepo and Turbopack. [Moved to: https://github.com/vercel/turbo]