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README.md
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README.md
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@ -479,348 +479,15 @@ You can use the `gradle-build-action` on GitHub Enterprise Server, and benefit f
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# GitHub Dependency Graph support
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The `gradle-build-action` has support for submitting a [GitHub Dependency Graph](https://docs.github.com/en/code-security/supply-chain-security/understanding-your-software-supply-chain/about-the-dependency-graph) snapshot via the [GitHub Dependency Submission API](https://docs.github.com/en/rest/dependency-graph/dependency-submission?apiVersion=2022-11-28).
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The dependency graph snapshot is generated via integration with the [GitHub Dependency Graph Gradle Plugin](https://plugins.gradle.org/plugin/org.gradle.github-dependency-graph-gradle-plugin), and saved as a workflow artifact. The generated snapshot files can be submitted either in the same job, or in a subsequent job (in the same or a dependent workflow).
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The generated dependency graph snapshot reports all of the dependencies that were resolved during a build execution, and is used by GitHub to generate [Dependabot Alerts](https://docs.github.com/en/code-security/dependabot/dependabot-alerts/about-dependabot-alerts) for vulnerable dependencies, as well as to populate the [Dependency Graph insights view](https://docs.github.com/en/code-security/supply-chain-security/understanding-your-software-supply-chain/exploring-the-dependencies-of-a-repository#viewing-the-dependency-graph).
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## Enable Dependency Graph generation for a workflow
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You enable GitHub Dependency Graph support by setting the `dependency-graph` action parameter. Valid values are:
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| Option | Behaviour |
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| --- | --- |
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| `disabled` | Do not generate a dependency graph for any build invocations.<p>This is the default. |
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| `generate` | Generate a dependency graph snapshot for each build invocation. |
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| `generate-and-submit` | Generate a dependency graph snapshot for each build invocation, and submit these via the Dependency Submission API on completion of the job. |
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| `generate-and-upload` | Generate a dependency graph snapshot for each build invocation, saving as a workflow artifact. |
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| `download-and-submit` | Download any previously saved dependency graph snapshots, and submit them via the Dependency Submission API. This can be useful to submit [dependency graphs for pull requests submitted from a repository forks](#dependency-graphs-for-pull-request-workflows). |
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Example of a CI workflow that generates and submits a dependency graph:
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```yaml
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name: CI build
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on:
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push:
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permissions:
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contents: write
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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- name: Run the usual CI build (dependency-graph will be generated and submitted post-job)
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run: ./gradlew build
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```
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The `contents: write` permission is required in order to submit (but not generate) the dependency graph file.
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Depending on [repository settings](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/security-guides/automatic-token-authentication#permissions-for-the-github_token), this permission may be available by default or may need to be explicitly enabled in the workflow file (as above).
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> [!IMPORTANT]
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> The above configuration will work for workflows that run as a result of commits to a repository branch,
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> but not when a workflow is triggered by a PR from a repository fork.
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> This is because the `contents: write` permission is not available when executing a workflow
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> for a PR submitted from a forked repository.
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> For a configuration that supports this setup, see [Dependency Graphs for pull request workflows](#dependency-graphs-for-pull-request-workflows).
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### Making dependency graph failures cause Job failures
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By default, if a failure is encountered when generating or submitting the dependency graph, the action will log the failure as a warning and continue.
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This allows your workflow to be resilient to dependency graph failures, in case dependency graph production is a side-effect rather than the primary purpose of a workflow.
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If instead you have a workflow that has a primary purpose to generate and submit a dependency graph, then it makes sense for this workflow to fail if the dependency
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graph cannot be generated or submitted. You can enable this behaviour with the `dependency-graph-continue-on-failure` parameter, which defaults to `true`.
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```yaml
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# Ensure that the workflow Job will fail if the dependency graph cannot be submitted
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- uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v3
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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dependency-graph-continue-on-failure: false
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```
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### Using a custom plugin repository
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By default, the action downloads the `github-dependency-graph-gradle-plugin` from the Gradle Plugin Portal (https://plugins.gradle.org). If your GitHub Actions environment does not have access to this URL, you can specify a custom plugin repository to use.
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Do so by setting the `GRADLE_PLUGIN_REPOSITORY_URL` environment variable with your Gradle invocation.
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```yaml
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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- name: Run a build, resolving the 'dependency-graph' plugin from the plugin portal proxy
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run: ./gradlew build
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env:
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GRADLE_PLUGIN_REPOSITORY_URL: "https://gradle-plugins-proxy.mycorp.com"
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```
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### Integrating the `dependency-review-action`
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The GitHub [dependency-review-action](https://github.com/actions/dependency-review-action) helps you
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understand dependency changes (and the security impact of these changes) for a pull request.
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For the `dependency-review-action` to succeed, it must run _after_ the dependency graph has been submitted for a PR.
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When using `generate-and-submit`, dependency graph files are submitted at the end of the job, after all steps have been
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executed. For this reason, the `dependency-review-action` must be executed in a dependent job,
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and not as a subsequent step in the job that generates the dependency graph.
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Example of a pull request workflow that executes a build for a pull request and runs the `dependency-review-action`:
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```yaml
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name: PR check
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on:
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pull_request:
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permissions:
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contents: write
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# Note that this permission will not be available if the PR is from a forked repository
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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- name: Run a build and generate the dependency graph which will be submitted post-job
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run: ./gradlew build
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dependency-review:
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needs: build
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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- name: Perform dependency review
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uses: actions/dependency-review-action@v4
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```
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See [Dependency Graphs for pull request workflows](#dependency-graphs-for-pull-request-workflows) for a more complex
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(and less functional) example that will work for pull requests submitted from forked repositories.
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## Limiting the scope of the dependency graph
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At times it is helpful to limit the dependencies reported to GitHub, in order to security alerts for dependencies that don't form a critical part of your product.
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For example, a vulnerability in the tool you use to generate documentation is unlikely to be as important as a vulnerability in one of your runtime dependencies.
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There are a number of techniques you can employ to limit the scope of the generated dependency graph:
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- [Don't generate a dependency graph for all Gradle executions](#choosing-which-gradle-invocations-will-generate-a-dependency-graph)
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- [For a Gradle execution, filter which Gradle projects and configurations will contribute dependencies](#filtering-which-gradle-configurations-contribute-to-the-dependency-graph)
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- [Use a separate workflow that only resolves the required dependencies](#use-a-dedicated-workflow-for-dependency-graph-generation)
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> [!NOTE]
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> Ideally, all dependencies involved in building and testing a project will be extracted and reported in a dependency graph.
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> These dependencies would be assigned to different scopes (eg development, runtime, testing) and the GitHub UI would make it easy to opt-in to security alerts for different dependency scopes.
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> However, this functionality does not yet exist.
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### Choosing which Gradle invocations will generate a dependency graph
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Once you enable the dependency graph support for a workflow job (via the `dependency-graph` parameter), dependencies will be collected and reported for all subsequent Gradle invocations.
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If you have a Gradle build step that you want to exclude from dependency graph generation, you can set the `GITHUB_DEPENDENCY_GRAPH_ENABLED` environment variable to `false`.
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```yaml
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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- name: Build the app, generating a graph of dependencies required
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run: ./gradlew :my-app:assemble
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- name: Run all checks, disabling dependency graph generation
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run: ./gradlew check
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env:
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GITHUB_DEPENDENCY_GRAPH_ENABLED: false
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```
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### Filtering which Gradle Configurations contribute to the dependency graph
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If you do not want the dependency graph to include every dependency configuration in every project in your build, you can limit the
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dependency extraction to a subset of these.
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To restrict which Gradle subprojects contribute to the report, specify which projects to include via a regular expression.
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You can provide this value via the `DEPENDENCY_GRAPH_INCLUDE_PROJECTS` environment variable or system property.
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To restrict which Gradle configurations contribute to the report, you can filter configurations by name using a regular expression.
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You can provide this value via the `DEPENDENCY_GRAPH_INCLUDE_CONFIGURATIONS` environment variable or system property.
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For example, if you want to exclude dependencies in the `buildSrc` project, and only report on dependencies from the `runtimeClasspath` configuration,
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you would use the following configuration:
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```yaml
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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- name: Run a build, generating the dependency graph from any resolved 'runtimeClasspath' configurations
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run: ./gradlew build
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env:
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DEPENDENCY_GRAPH_INCLUDE_PROJECTS: "^:(?!buildSrc).*"
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DEPENDENCY_GRAPH_INCLUDE_CONFIGURATIONS: runtimeClasspath
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```
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### Use a dedicated workflow for dependency graph generation
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Instead of generating a dependency graph from your existing CI workflow, it's possible to create a separate dedicated workflow (or Job) that is intended for generating a dependency graph.
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Such a workflow will still need to execute Gradle, but can do so in a way that is targeted at resolving the specific dependencies required.
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For example, the following workflow will report those dependencies that are resolved in order to build the `distributionZip` for the `my-app` project. Test dependencies and other dependencies not required by the `distributionZip` will not be included.
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```yaml
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-submit
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- name: Build the distribution Zip for `my-app`
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run: ./gradlew :my-app:distributionZip
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```
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Note that the above example will also include any `buildSrc` dependencies, dependencies resolved when configuring your Gradle build or dependencies resolved while applying plugin. All of these dependencies are resolved in the process of running the `distributionZip` task, and thus will form part of the generated dependency graph.
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If this isn't desirable, you will still need to use the filtering mechanism described above.
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## Dependency Graphs for pull request workflows
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This `contents: write` permission is not available for any workflow that is triggered by a pull request submitted from a forked repository, since it would permit a malicious pull request to make repository changes.
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Because of this restriction, it is not possible to `generate-and-submit` a dependency graph generated for a pull-request that comes from a repository fork. In order to do so, 2 workflows will be required:
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1. The first workflow runs directly against the pull request sources and will generate the dependency graph snapshot.
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2. The second workflow is triggered on `workflow_run` of the first workflow, and will submit the previously saved dependency snapshots.
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Note: when `download-and-submit` is used in a workflow triggered via [workflow_run](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/using-workflows/events-that-trigger-workflows#workflow_run), the action will download snapshots saved in the triggering workflow.
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***Main workflow file***
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```yaml
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name: run-build-and-generate-dependency-snapshot
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on:
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pull_request:
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permissions:
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contents: read
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jobs:
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build:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- uses: actions/checkout@v4
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- name: Setup Gradle to generate and submit dependency graphs
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate-and-upload # Generate graphs and save as workflow artifacts
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- name: Run a build, generating the dependency graph snapshot which will be submitted
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run: ./gradlew build
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```
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***Dependent workflow file***
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```yaml
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name: submit-dependency-snapshot
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on:
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workflow_run:
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workflows: ['run-build-and-generate-dependency-snapshot']
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types: [completed]
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permissions:
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contents: write
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jobs:
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submit-dependency-graph:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- name: Retrieve dependency graph artifact and submit
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: download-and-submit # Download saved workflow artifacts and submit
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```
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### Integrating `dependency-review-action` for pull request workflows
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The GitHub [dependency-review-action](https://github.com/actions/dependency-review-action) helps you
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understand dependency changes (and the security impact of these changes) for a pull request.
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To integrate the `dependency-review-action` into the pull request workflows above, a separate workflow should be added.
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This workflow will be triggered directly on `pull_request`, but will need to wait until the dependency graph results are
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submitted before the dependency review can complete. How long to wait is controlled by the `retry-on-snapshot-warnings` input parameters.
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Here's an example of a separate "Dependency Review" workflow that will wait for 10 minutes for the PR check workflow to complete.
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```yaml
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name: dependency-review
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on:
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pull_request:
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permissions:
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contents: read
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pull-requests: write
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jobs:
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dependency-review:
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runs-on: ubuntu-latest
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steps:
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- name: 'Dependency Review'
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uses: actions/dependency-review-action@v4
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with:
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retry-on-snapshot-warnings: true
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retry-on-snapshot-warnings-timeout: 600
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```
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The `retry-on-snapshot-warnings-timeout` (in seconds) needs to be long enough to allow the entire `run-build-and-generate-dependency-snapshot` and `submit-dependency-snapshot` workflows (above) to complete.
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## Gradle version compatibility
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The GitHub Dependency Graph plugin should be compatible with all versions of Gradle >= 5.0, and has been tested against
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Gradle versions "5.6.4", "6.9.4", "7.0.2", "7.6.2", "8.0.2" and the current Gradle release.
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The plugin is compatible with running Gradle with the configuration-cache enabled. However, this support is
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limited to Gradle "8.1.0" and later:
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- With Gradle "8.0", the build should run successfully, but an empty dependency graph will be generated.
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- With Gradle <= "7.6.4", the plugin will cause the build to fail with configuration-cache enabled.
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To use this plugin with versions of Gradle older than "8.1.0", you'll need to invoke Gradle with the
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configuration-cache disabled.
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## Reducing storage costs for saved dependency graph artifacts
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When `generate` or `generate-and-submit` is used with the action, the dependency graph that is generated is stored as a workflow artifact.
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By default, these artifacts are retained for a period of 30 days (or as configured for the repository).
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To reduce storage costs for these artifacts, you can set the `artifact-retention-days` value to a lower number.
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```yaml
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steps:
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- name: Generate dependency graph, but only retain artifact for one day
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uses: gradle/gradle-build-action@v2
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with:
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dependency-graph: generate
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artifact-retention-days: 1
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```
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> The simplest (and recommended) way to generate a dependency graph is via a separate workflow
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> using `gradle/actions/dependency-submission`. This action will attempt to detect all dependencies used by your build
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> without building and testing the project itself.
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>
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> See the [dependency-submission documentation](https://github.com/gradle/actions/blob/main/dependency-submission/README.md) for up-to-date documentation.
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For documentation on directly generating a dependency graph from a Gradle execution, see the
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[setup-gradle docs](https://github.com/gradle/actions/blob/main/setup-gradle/README.md#github-dependency-graph-support) on this topic.
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# Develocity plugin injection
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