Appendix C. Gradle Command Line

The gradle command has the following usage:

gradle [option...] [task...]

The command-line options available for the gradle command are listed below:

-?, -h, --help

Shows a help message.

-C, --cache

Specifies how compiled build scripts should be cached. Possible values are: rebuild or on. Default value is on. See Section 12.7, “Caching”.

-D, --system-prop

Sets a system property of the JVM, for example -Dmyprop=myvalue. See Section 12.2, “Gradle properties and system properties”.

-I, --init-script

Specifies an initialization script. See Chapter 46, Initialization Scripts.

-P, --project-prop

Sets a project property of the root project, for example -Pmyprop=myvalue. See Section 12.2, “Gradle properties and system properties”.

-S, --full-stacktrace

Print out the full (very verbose) stacktrace for any exceptions. See Chapter 16, Logging.

-a, --no-rebuild

Do not rebuild project dependencies.

--all

Shows additional detail in the task listing. See Section 10.5.2, “Listing tasks”.

-b, --build-file

Specifies the build file. See Section 10.4, “Selecting which build to execute”.

-c, --settings-file

Specifies the settings file.

-d, --debug

Log in debug mode (includes normal stacktrace). See Chapter 16, Logging.

-e, --embedded

Specify an embedded build script.

-g, --gradle-user-home

Specifies the Gradle user home directory. The default is the .gradle directory in the user's home directory.

--gui

Launches the Gradle GUI. See Chapter 11, Using the Gradle Graphical User Interface.

-i, --info

Set log level to info. See Chapter 16, Logging.

-m, --dry-run

Runs the build with all task actions disabled. See Section 10.6, “Dry Run”.

--no-color

Do not use color in the console output.

-p, --project-dir

Specifies the start directory for Gradle. Defaults to current directory. See Section 10.4, “Selecting which build to execute”.

--profile

Profiles build execution time and generates a report in the buildDir/reports/profile directory. See Section 10.5.5, “Profiling a build”.

--project-cache-dir

Specifies the project-specific cache directory. Default value is .gradle in the root project directory. See Section 12.7, “Caching”.

-q, --quiet

Log errors only. See Chapter 16, Logging.

-s, --stacktrace

Print out the stacktrace also for user exceptions (e.g. compile error). See Chapter 16, Logging.

-u, --no-search-upwards

Don't search in parent directories for a settings.gradle file.

-v, --version

Prints version info.

-x, --exclude-task

Specifies a task to be excluded from execution. See Section 10.2, “Excluding tasks”.

The above information is printed to the console when you execute gradle -h.

C.1. Deprecated command-line options

The following options are deprecated and will be removed in a future version of Gradle:

-n, --dependencies

(deprecated) Show list of all project dependencies. You should use gradle dependencies instead. See Section 10.5.3, “Listing project dependencies”.

-r, --properties

(deprecated) Show list of all available project properties. You should use gradle properties instead. See Section 10.5.4, “Listing project properties”.

-t, --tasks

(deprecated) Show list of available tasks. You should use gradle tasks instead. See Section 10.5.2, “Listing tasks”.

C.2. Experimental command-line options

The following options are experimental:

--continue

Continues task execution after a task failure.

--daemon

Uses the Gradle daemon to run the build. Starts the daemon if not running.

--foreground

Starts the Gradle daemon in the foreground.

--no-daemon

Do not use the Gradle daemon to run the build.

--stop

Stops the Gradle daemon if it is running.

C.3. System properties

The following system properties are available for the gradle command. Note that command-line options take precedence over system properties.

gradle.user.home

Specifies the Gradle user home directory.

org.gradle.daemon

When set to true, use the Gradle daemon to run the build.

C.4. Environment variables

The following environment variables are available for the gradle command. Note that command-line options and system properties take precedence over environment variables.

GRADLE_OPTS

Specifies command-line arguments to use to start the JVM. This can be useful for setting the system properties to use for running Gradle. For example you could set GRADLE_OPTS="-Dorg.gradle.daemon=true" to use the Gradle daemon without needing to use the --daemon option every time you run Gradle.

GRADLE_USER_HOME

Specifies the Gradle user home directory.