Render the caching report from structured CacheReport data using a single unified layout, replacing the three divergent code paths (NoOp / basic / enhanced) that previously each rendered their own markdown. Every variant now shares one skeleton: a section heading (`#### <icon> Gradle Caching — <Provider> (<status>)`), a status line, an integrated provider note, and an expandable cache-entry-details section. The Enhanced/Basic provider note is woven into the report under the heading and is now shown unconditionally (no longer gated on license acceptance). The two disabled variants (explicitly disabled, and skipped due to a pre-existing Gradle User Home) render as compact callouts with no expandable section. - caching-report.ts: new central renderer + all framing copy. - cache-service.ts: CacheReport/CacheEntryReport/status types; save() returns CacheReport. - cache-service-loader.ts: NoOp returns a CacheReport, drop LicenseWarningCacheService, add getProviderNote(). - cache-service-basic.ts: build a CacheReport, so basic caching now also gets expandable entry details. - job-summary.ts / setup-gradle.ts: thread CacheReport + ProviderNote. - configuration.ts: remove now-unused isCacheLicenseAccepted(). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
GitHub Actions for Gradle builds
This repository contains a set of GitHub Actions that are useful for building Gradle projects on GitHub.
Note
⚡️ Choice of caching providers in v6
To provide the fastest possible build experience this action includes Enhanced Caching via
gradle-actions-caching, an optimized provider powered by proprietary technology. This feature is free for all public repositories and is currently available as a Free Preview for private repositories.Prefer a 100% Open Source (MIT) path? We also provide a Basic Caching provider as a thin wrapper over
actions/cache. This provider is free for all repositories (public and private) and can be enabled at any time by settingcache-provider: basic.For a full breakdown of the components, usage tiers, and our Safe Harbor data privacy commitment, see our Distribution & Licensing Guide.
The setup-gradle action
The setup-gradle action can be used to configure Gradle for optimal execution on any platform supported by GitHub Actions.
This replaces the previous gradle/gradle-build-action, which now delegates to this implementation.
The recommended way to execute any Gradle build is with the help of the Gradle Wrapper, and the examples assume that the Gradle Wrapper has been configured for the project. See this example if your project doesn't use the Gradle Wrapper.
Example usage
name: Build
on:
push:
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout sources
uses: actions/checkout@v6
- name: Setup Java
uses: actions/setup-java@v5
with:
distribution: 'temurin'
java-version: 17
- name: Setup Gradle
uses: gradle/actions/setup-gradle@v6
- name: Build with Gradle
run: ./gradlew build
See the full action documentation for more advanced usage scenarios.
The dependency-submission action
Generates and submits a dependency graph for a Gradle project, allowing GitHub to alert about reported vulnerabilities in your project dependencies.
The following workflow will generate a dependency graph for a Gradle project and submit it immediately to the repository via the Dependency Submission API. For most projects, this default configuration should be all that you need.
Simply add this as a new workflow file to your repository (eg .github/workflows/dependency-submission.yml).
name: Dependency Submission
on:
push:
branches: [ 'main' ]
permissions:
contents: write
jobs:
dependency-submission:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout sources
uses: actions/checkout@v6
- name: Setup Java
uses: actions/setup-java@v5
with:
distribution: 'temurin'
java-version: 17
- name: Generate and submit dependency graph
uses: gradle/actions/dependency-submission@v6
See the full action documentation for more advanced usage scenarios.
The wrapper-validation action
The wrapper-validation action validates the checksums of all Gradle Wrapper JAR files present in the repository and fails if any unknown Gradle Wrapper JAR files are found.
The action should be run in the root of the repository, as it will recursively search for any files named gradle-wrapper.jar.
Starting with v4 the setup-gradle action will perform wrapper validation on each execution.
If you are using setup-gradle in your workflows, it is unlikely that you will need to use the wrapper-validation action.
Example workflow
name: "Validate Gradle Wrapper"
on:
push:
pull_request:
jobs:
validation:
name: "Validation"
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v6
- uses: gradle/actions/wrapper-validation@v6
See the full action documentation for more advanced usage scenarios.