Gradle 8.8 introduces new features that allow us to avoid using
timestamp manipulation to force the cleanup of the Gradle User Home directory.
This solution is simpler and more robust, but relies on Gradle 8.8+ always being
used for the cache cleanup operation.
Fixes#24
- Always fetch a token for every hostname in the access key
- Use any tokens that are successfully fetched
- Retain access key if no tokens can be fetched
The setup-gradle action tries to get a short-lived access token given the supplied Develocity access key.
This key can be passed either with the `DEVELOCITY_ACCESS_KEY` env var or via the `develocity-access-key` input parameter.
If a token can be retrieved, then the `DEVELOCITY_ACCESS_KEY` env var will be set to the token.
Otherwise the `DEVELOCITY_ACCESS_KEY` will be set to a blank string, to avoid a leak.
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Co-authored-by: daz <daz@gradle.com>
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>