T
- Type of value represented by providerBinaryProvider<T>
, DirectoryProperty
, FileSystemLocationProperty<T>
, ListProperty<T>
, MapProperty<K,V>
, NamedDomainObjectProvider<T>
, Property<T>
, RegularFileProperty
, SetProperty<T>
, TaskProvider<T>
@NonExtensible public interface Provider<T>
get()
or getOrNull()
.
A provider may not always have a value available, for example when the value may not yet be known but will be known
at some point in the future. When a value is not available, isPresent()
returns false
and retrieving
the value will fail with an exception.
A provider may not always provide the same value. Although there are no methods on this interface to change the value, the provider implementation may be mutable or use values from some changing source. A provider may also provide a value that is mutable and that changes over time.
A provider may represent a task output. Such a provider carries information about the task producing its value. When this provider is attached to an input of another task, Gradle will automatically determine the task dependencies based on this connection.
A typical use of a provider is to pass values from one Gradle model element to another, e.g. from a project extension to a task, or between tasks. Providers also allow expensive computations to be deferred until their value is actually needed, usually at task execution time.
There are a number of ways to create a Provider
instance. Some common methods:
Property
, extend Provider
and can be used directly as a provider.map(Transformer)
to create a new provider from an existing provider.TaskContainer.register(String)
, which is a provider that represents the task instance.Directory
and DirectoryProperty
to produce file providers.ProviderFactory.provider(Callable)
or Project.provider(Callable)
to create a new provider from a Callable
.
For a provider whose value can be mutated, see Property
and the methods on ObjectFactory
.
Note: This interface is not intended for implementation by build script or plugin authors.
Modifier and Type | Method | Description |
---|---|---|
<S> Provider<S> |
flatMap(Transformer<? extends @Nullable Provider<? extends S>,? super T> transformer) |
Returns a new
Provider from the value of this provider transformed using the given function. |
Provider<T> |
forUseAtConfigurationTime() |
Deprecated.
|
T |
get() |
Returns the value of this provider if it has a value present, otherwise throws
java.lang.IllegalStateException . |
T |
getOrElse(T defaultValue) |
Returns the value of this provider if it has a value present.
|
T |
getOrNull() |
Returns the value of this provider if it has a value present.
|
boolean |
isPresent() |
Returns
true if there is a value present, otherwise false . |
<S> Provider<S> |
map(Transformer<? extends @Nullable S,? super T> transformer) |
Returns a new
Provider whose value is the value of this provider transformed using the given function. |
Provider<T> |
orElse(Provider<? extends T> provider) |
Returns a
Provider whose value is the value of this provider, if present, otherwise uses the
value from the given provider, if present. |
Provider<T> |
orElse(T value) |
Returns a
Provider whose value is the value of this provider, if present, otherwise the
given default value. |
<U,R> |
zip(Provider<U> right,
java.util.function.BiFunction<? super T,? super U,? extends @Nullable R> combiner) |
Returns a provider which value will be computed by combining this provider value with another
provider value using the supplied combiner function.
|
T get()
java.lang.IllegalStateException
.java.lang.IllegalStateException
- if there is no value present@Nullable T getOrNull()
null
a value is not available.null
T getOrElse(T defaultValue)
<S> Provider<S> map(Transformer<? extends @Nullable S,? super T> transformer)
Provider
whose value is the value of this provider transformed using the given function.
The resulting provider will be live, so that each time it is queried, it queries the original (this) provider and applies the transformation to the result. Whenever the original provider has no value, the new provider will also have no value and the transformation will not be called.
When this provider represents a task or the output of a task, the new provider will be considered an output of the task and will carry dependency information that Gradle can use to automatically attach task dependencies to tasks that use the new provider for input values.
transformer
- The transformer to apply to values. May return null
, in which case the provider will have no value.<S> Provider<S> flatMap(Transformer<? extends @Nullable Provider<? extends S>,? super T> transformer)
Provider
from the value of this provider transformed using the given function.
While very similar in functionality to the regular map
operation, this method
offers a convenient way of connecting together task inputs and outputs. (For a deeper understanding of
the topic see the Lazy Configuration
section of the Gradle manual.)
Task inputs and outputs often take the form of providers
or properties
,
the latter being a special case of provider whose value can be changed at will. An example of using
flatMap
for connecting such properties would be following:
class Producer extends DefaultTask {
@OutputFile
abstract RegularFileProperty getOutputFile()
//irrelevant details omitted
}
class Consumer extends DefaultTask {
@InputFile
abstract RegularFileProperty getInputFile()
//irrelevant details omitted
}
def producer = tasks.register("producer", Producer)
def consumer = tasks.register("consumer", Consumer)
consumer.configure {
inputFile = producer.flatMap { it.outputFile }
}
An added benefit of connecting input and output properties like this is that Gradle can automatically
detect task dependencies based on such connections. To make this happen at code level, any task
details associated with this provider (the one on which flatMap
is being called) are ignored.
The new provider will use whatever task details are associated with the return value of the transformation.
The new provider returned by flatMap
will be live, so that each time it is queried, it queries
this provider and applies the transformation to the result. Whenever this provider has no value, the new
provider will also have no value and the transformation will not be called.
transformer
- The transformer to apply to values. May return null
, in which case the
provider will have no value.boolean isPresent()
true
if there is a value present, otherwise false
.true
if there is a value present, otherwise false
Provider<T> orElse(T value)
Provider
whose value is the value of this provider, if present, otherwise the
given default value.value
- The default value to use when this provider has no value.Provider<T> orElse(Provider<? extends T> provider)
Provider
whose value is the value of this provider, if present, otherwise uses the
value from the given provider, if present.provider
- The provider whose value should be used when this provider has no value.@Deprecated Provider<T> forUseAtConfigurationTime()
Provider
which can be safely read at configuration time.<U,R> Provider<R> zip(Provider<U> right, java.util.function.BiFunction<? super T,? super U,? extends @Nullable R> combiner)
If the supplied providers represents a task or the output of a task, the resulting provider will carry the dependency information.
U
- the type of the second providerR
- the type of the result of the combinerright
- the second provider to combine withcombiner
- the combiner of values. May return null
, in which case the provider
will have no value.