Mill is your shiny new Scala build tool! Confused by SBT? Frustrated by Maven? Perplexed by Gradle? Give Mill a try! Mill is a general purpose build-tool. It has built in support for the [Scala](https://www.scala-lang.org/) programming language, and can serve as a replacement for [SBT](http://www.scala-sbt.org/), but can also be extended to support any other language or platform via modules (written in Java or Scala) or through external subprocesses. Mill aims for simplicity by re-using concepts you are already familiar with to let you define your project's build. Mill's `build.sc` files are Scala scripts. To get started, download Mill and install it into your system via the following `curl`/`chmod` command: ```bash sudo curl -L -o /usr/local/bin/mill https://github.com/lihaoyi/mill/releases/download/0.0.7/0.0.7 && sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/mill ``` The simplest Mill build for a Scala project looks as follows: ```scala import mill._ import mill.scalalib._ object foo extends ScalaModule { def scalaVersion = "2.12.4" } ``` This would build a project laid out as follows: ``` build.sc foo/ src/ Main.scala resources/ ... out/ foo/ ... ``` The source code for this module would live in the `foo/src/` folder, matching the name you assigned to the module. Output for this module (compiled files, resolved dependency lists, ...) would live in `out/foo/`. This can be run from the Bash shell via: ```bash $ mill foo.compile # compile sources into classfiles $ mill foo.run # run the main method, if any $ mill foo.jar # bundle the classfiles into a jar $ mill foo.assembly # bundle the classfiles and all dependencies into a jar ``` The most common **tasks** that Mill can run are cached **targets**, such as `compile`, and un-cached **commands** such as `foo.run`. Targets do not re-evaluate unless one of their inputs changes, where-as commands re-run every time. ## Multiple Modules ```scala import mill._ import mill.scalalib._ object foo extends ScalaModule { def scalaVersion = "2.12.4" } object bar extends ScalaModule { def moduleDeps = Seq(foo) def scalaVersion = "2.12.4" } ``` You can define multiple modules the same way you define a single module, using `def moduleDeps` to define the relationship between them. The above build expects the following project layout: ``` build.sc foo/ src/ Main.scala resources/ ... bar/ src/ Main2.scala resources/ ... out/ foo/ ... bar/ ... ``` And can be built/run using: ```bash $ mill foo.compile $ mill bar.compile $ mill foo.run $ mill bar.run $ mill foo.jar $ mill bar.jar $ mill foo.assembly $ mill bar.assembly ``` Mill's evaluator will ensure that the modules are compiled in the right order, and re-compiled as necessary when source code in each module changes. Modules can also be nested: ```scala import mill._ import mill.scalalib._ object foo extends ScalaModule { def scalaVersion = "2.12.4" object bar extends ScalaModule { def moduleDeps = Seq(foo) def scalaVersion = "2.12.4" } } ``` Which would result in a similarly nested project layout: ``` build.sc foo/ src/ Main.scala resources/ ... bar/ src/ Main2.scala resources/ ... out/ foo/ ... bar/ ... ``` Where the nested modules can be run via: ```bash $ mill foo.compile $ mill foo.bar.compile $ mill foo.run $ mill foo.bar.run $ mill foo.jar $ mill foo.bar.jar $ mill foo.assembly $ mill foo.bar.assembly ``` ## Watch and Re-evaluate You can use the `--watch` flag to make Mill watch a task's inputs, re-evaluating the task as necessary when the inputs change: ```bash $ mill --watch foo.compile $ mill --watch foo.run ``` ## Command-line Tools Mill comes built in with a small number of useful command-line utilities: ### all ```bash mill all foo.{compile,run} mill all "foo.{compile,run}" mill all foo.compile foo.run mill all _.compile # run compile for every top-level module mill all __.compile # run compile for every module ``` `all` runs multiple tasks in a single command ### resolve ```bash mill resolve foo.{compile,run} mill resolve "foo.{compile,run}" mill resolve foo.compile foo.run mill resolve _.compile # list the compile tasks for every top-level module mill resolve __.compile # list the compile tasks for every module mill resolve _ # list every top level module or task mill resolve foo._ # list every task directly within the foo module mill resolve __ # list every module or task recursively mill resolve foo._ # list every task recursively within the foo module ``` `resolve` lists the tasks that match a particular query, without running them. This is useful for "dry running" an `mill all` command to see what would be run before you run them, or to explore what modules or tasks are available from the command line using `resolve _`, `resolve foo._`, etc. ### describe ```bash $ mill describe core.run core.run(ScalaModule.scala:211) Inputs: core.mainClass core.runClasspath core.forkArgs core.forkEnv ``` `describe` is a more verbose version of [resolve](#resolve). In addition to printing out the name of one-or-more tasks, it also display's it's source location and a list of input tasks. This is very useful for debugging and interactively exploring the structure of your build from the command line. `describe` also works with the same `_`/`__` wildcard/query syntaxes that [all](#all)/[resolve](#resolve) do: ```bash mill describe foo.compile mill describe foo.{compile,run} mill describe "foo.{compile,run}" mill describe foo.compile foo.run mill describe _.compile mill describe __.compile mill describe _ mill describe foo._ mill describe __ mill describe foo._ ``` ### show By default, Mill does not print out the metadata from evaluating a task. Most people would not be interested in e.g. viewing the metadata related to incremental compilation: they just want to compile their code! However, if you want to inspect the build to debug problems, you can make Mill show you the metadata output for a task using the `show` flag: You can also ask Mill to display the metadata output of a task using `show`: ```bash $ mill show foo.compile { "analysisFile": "/Users/lihaoyi/Dropbox/Github/test/out/foo/compile/dest/zinc", "classes": { "path": "/Users/lihaoyi/Dropbox/Github/test/out/foo/compile/dest/classes" } } ``` This also applies to tasks which hold simple configurable values: ```bash $ mill show foo.sources [ {"path": "/Users/lihaoyi/Dropbox/Github/test/foo/src"} ] $ mill show foo.compileDepClasspath [ {"path": ".../org/scala-lang/scala-compiler/2.12.4/scala-compiler-2.12.4.jar"}, {"path": ".../org/scala-lang/scala-library/2.12.4/scala-library-2.12.4.jar"}, {"path": ".../org/scala-lang/scala-reflect/2.12.4/scala-reflect-2.12.4.jar"}, {"path": ".../org/scala-lang/modules/scala-xml_2.12/1.0.6/scala-xml_2.12-1.0.6.jar"} ] ``` `show` is also useful for interacting with Mill from external tools, since the JSON it outputs is structured and easily parsed & manipulated. ## IntelliJ Support Mill supports IntelliJ by default. Use `mill mill.scalalib.GenIdea/idea` to generate an IntelliJ project config for your build. This also configures IntelliJ to allow easy navigate & code-completion within your build file itself. Any flags passed *before* the name of the task (e.g. `foo.compile`) are given to Mill, while any arguments passed *after* the task are given to the task itself. For example: ## The Build Repl ```bash $ mill Loading... @ foo res1: foo.type = ammonite.predef.build#foo:2 Commands: .runLocal(args: String*)() .run(args: String*)() .runMainLocal(mainClass: String, args: String*)() .runMain(mainClass: String, args: String*)() .console()() Targets: .allSources() .artifactId() .artifactName() ... @ foo.compile res3: mill.package.T[mill.scalalib.CompilationResult] = mill.scalalib.ScalaModule#compile:152 Inputs: foo.scalaVersion foo.allSources foo.compileDepClasspath ... @ foo.compile() res2: mill.scalalib.CompilationResult = CompilationResult( root/'Users/'lihaoyi/'Dropbox/'Github/'test/'out/'foo/'compile/'dest/'zinc, PathRef(root/'Users/'lihaoyi/'Dropbox/'Github/'test/'out/'foo/'compile/'dest/'classes, false) ) ``` You can run `mill` alone to open a build REPL; this is a Scala console with your `build.sc` loaded, which lets you run tasks interactively. The task-running syntax is slightly different from the command-line, but more in-line with how you would depend on tasks from within your build file. You can use this REPL to run build commands quicker, due to keeping the JVM warm between runs, or to interactively explore your build to see what is available.