With this change, the caching functionality of `setup-gradle` and
`dependency-submission` is now provided by `gradle-actions-caching`, a
closed-source library distributed under our [Terms of
Use](https://gradle.com/legal/terms-of-use/). The rest of the action
implementation remains open source.
Using `setup-gradle` or `dependency-submission` with caching enabled
involves loading and using the `gradle-actions-caching` component,
requiring acceptance of the [Terms of
Use](https://gradle.com/legal/terms-of-use/). There are no functional
changes to caching provided by these actions: all workflows will
continue to function as before.
The non-caching aspects of action implementation remain open source. By
running these actions with caching disabled they can be used without
ever loading `gradle-actions-caching` or accepting the license terms.
Supporting the caching infrastructure in this project requires a
substantial engineering investment by Gradle Technologies, which we can
sustain thanks to Develocity, our commercial offering. Caching
technologies are a core part of the Develocity offering, and the caching
in `setup-gradle` fits squarely in that space.
This licensing change lets us continue to build advanced capabilities
that go beyond what we would offer as open source. Proper
production-ready Configuration Cache support will be the first
capability. Improving build performance for self-hosted runners will
follow.
We may introduce functionality restrictions in future updates. However,
caching functionality will remain free for public repositories.
We have a long-standing commitment to open source, as maintainers of
Gradle Build Tool, and by [sponsoring the open source
community](https://gradle.com/oss-sponsored-by-develocity/) with free
Develocity licenses. Public repositories are primarily used by open
source projects, and we remain committed to supporting them.
- Implementation of caching logic to save and restore Gradle User Home
content has been removed, replaced by the `gradle-actions-caching`
component.
- The `@actions/caching` library is still used to cache Gradle
distributions that are downloaded and provisioned by `setup-gradle`.
This PR updates to the latest version of `@actions/caching`, and removes
the patch that is no longer required.
- License notices are now displayed in documentation, logs and the
generated Job Summary.
Previously we were relying on Gradle to substitute JDK environment variables
in toolchains.xml. With this change, the actual path to the JDK is encoded instead.
This should avoid issues where Gradle is not able to successfully resolve the
envioronment variable.
Different runners have different JDKs installed, so using a hard-coded
list for
`toolchains.xml` doesn't work. With this change, the file is generated
based on the available `JAVA_HOME_*` environment variables.
Fixes#89
Thanks @hfhbd for the contribution!
Co-authored-by: hfhbd <22521688+hfhbd@users.noreply.github.com>