March 2025

Welcome to the March 2025 Gradle Build Tool newsletter! Learn about the state of the Configuration Cache and ongoing work towards Gradle 9 and beyond, new Develocity solution page for Gradle Build Tool, upcoming webinars, and new blogs and videos by Gradle community members.

If you’re reading this, consider joining us for a webinar on March 27! In this talk, Stefan Wolf, Principal Software Engineer at Gradle, will discuss troubleshooting local and CI builds for Gradle and Apache Maven. He’ll also show what actually happens when various build and test failures arise and the tools available for solving them rapidly. RSVP here.

From the Community

New Posts

New Videos

New Releases

From the Gradle Team

State of the Configuration Cache - Towards Gradle 9

State of the Configuration Cache - Towards Gradle 9

As Gradle 9.0 approaches, we’re sharing updates on the Configuration Cache—a key feature of the release and one that significantly improves configuration time for large projects. This release will make the Configuration Cache the preferred execution mode, with the goal of enabling it by default in Gradle 10.0. We’ve made substantial progress in 2024, with massive performance and compatibility reporting improvements. As Gradle Fellow Tony Robalik noted:

“I’m excited about all the work Gradle has done to make the Configuration Cache stable and the preferred mechanism for running builds. At work, we’ve observed that enabling Configuration Cache globally will recover roughly 4 years of lost engineering time annually. The configuration cache also lays the foundation for Isolated Projects, which has been an eagerly awaited feature since Gradle first announced it several years ago!”
- Tony Robalik, Gradle Fellow and a Senior Software Engineer at Square

Learn more in our recent blog post!

New Solution Page for Gradle Build Tool and Develocity

New Solution Page for Gradle Build Tool and Develocity

As you may have seen, we recently published multiple new solution pages on Gradle.com, our company website. They cover integrations between our Develocity and Build Scan services with various build tools, CI Systems, IDEs, programming languages, test frameworks, and specifications. Of course, there’s a dedicated page for Gradle Build Tool, check it out!

Monthly Gradle Build Tool Webinars

Monthly Gradle Build Tool Webinars

Starting in March, we’ll be hosting more frequent Gradle Build Tool webinars on Gradle’s webinar platform. We will also continue hosting community events, streaming them to social media as we have in the past. The full schedule will be published soon, and we’re excited to announce the first two webinars:

See all upcoming Gradle events and webinars on our Events page!

GSoC 2025 - Contributor Applications start March 24!

GSoC 2025 - Contributor Applications start March 24!

As we prepare for Google Summer of Code 2025, we’re looking for potential contributors. Thanks to everyone who has already reached out to the team! The applications open on March 24, and the deadline for final applications is April 8.

Below is a list of Gradle-related project ideas that we’re excited to mentor under the Kotlin Foundation. We also welcome any new project proposals you’d like to submit:

If you’re interested in participating, join the #gsoc channels on the Gradle Community Slack and the Kotlin Foundation Slack.

Kotlin Foundation - Annual Report

Kotlin Foundation - 2024 Annual Report

The Kotlin Foundation recently published its 2024 report, which offers an overview of last year’s initiatives and milestones within the Kotlin ecosystem. The report covers Kotlin 2.0 and the K2 compiler, outreach, and grants programs, and new foundation members and committees. These efforts have continued to foster community engagement and drive the ecosystem’s growth. Gradle is happy to contribute to a number of activities, including serving on the foundation’s committees.

So what have we been up to? In 2024, we continued our membership in the Education Committee and participated in Google Summer of Code under the umbrella of the foundation. We supported Kotlin-focused events, including droidCon, user groups, and Kotlinconf. In December, we also joined the Ecosystem Committee to facilitate ecosystem partnerships with the Kotlin Foundation members and the developer community. As part of our open source support program, Gradle provides a free Develocity instance for the Kotlin project. Kotlin—along with the Kotlin compiler, Ktor, and other core projects—rely on Gradle Build Tool and Develocity for speeding up builds and tests and getting insights into failures, flaky tests, and historical performance trends

We’re proud to participate in the Kotlin Foundation and support these projects and their ongoing success. See the full report here.

Upcoming Events

Meet the Gradle team and fellow community members at these upcoming events! We’d love to connect with you and discuss anything related to Gradle Build Tool, Develocity, or Developer Productivity Engineering (DPE).

Troubleshooting Gradle and Maven builds with Develocity

How much time do you spend each day troubleshooting your builds and tests? If you’re like most developers, you regularly see dependencies fail, infrastructure explodes, nonstop flaky tests, and Checkstyle turning into Gandalf (“you shall not pass”). That’s okay, right? At least everything works on your machine. Sarcasm aside, there are many points of failure. We need proper tools to identify and fix the root cause as quickly and easily as possible.

In this talk by Stefan Wolf, Principal Software Engineer at Gradle, we’ll take a look at troubleshooting local and CI builds for Gradle and Apache Maven. We’ll dive deep into observing what is actually happening when various build and test failures arise, and the tools at your disposal for solving them rapidly.

You can learn more about the upcoming webinar and RSVP here.

Spread the Word

We invite you to share news from this newsletter—Let’s help the authors and contributors! As always, this newsletter is also published in our Gradle Newsletter Archive, and you can share it as a link or subscribe via RSS.

Finally, the Call for Proposals for the March newsletter edition is already open.

If you have some news you’d like us to share in the next issue, let us know using the #community-news channel on the Gradle Community Slack or by mentioning @Gradle on Twitter/X.

Until next time!
— The Gradle Team

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