Installing Gradle
You can install the Gradle build tool on Linux, macOS, or Windows. This document covers installing using a package manager like SDKMAN! or Homebrew, as well as manual installation.
Use of the Gradle Wrapper is the recommended way to upgrade Gradle.
You can find all releases and their checksums on the releases page.
Prerequisites
Gradle runs on all major operating systems and requires only a Java Development Kit version 8 or higher to run. To check, run java -version
. You should see something like this:
❯ java -version java version "1.8.0_151" Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_151-b12) Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.151-b12, mixed mode)
Gradle ships with its own Groovy library, therefore Groovy does not need to be installed. Any existing Groovy installation is ignored by Gradle.
Gradle uses whatever JDK it finds in your path. Alternatively, you can set the JAVA_HOME
environment variable to point to the installation directory of the desired JDK.
Installing with a package manager
SDKMAN! is a tool for managing parallel versions of multiple Software Development Kits on most Unix-like systems (macOS, Linux, Cygwin, Solaris and FreeBSD). We deploy and maintain the versions available from SDKMAN!.
❯ sdk install gradle
Homebrew is "the missing package manager for macOS".
❯ brew install gradle
Other package managers are available, but the version of Gradle distributed by them is not controlled by Gradle, Inc. Linux package managers may distribute a modified version of Gradle that is incompatible or incomplete when compared to the official version (available from SDKMAN! or below).
Installing manually
Step 1. Download the latest Gradle distribution
The distribution ZIP file comes in two flavors:
-
Binary-only (bin)
-
Complete (all) with docs and sources
Need to work with an older version? See the releases page.
Step 2. Unpack the distribution
Linux & MacOS users
Unzip the distribution zip file in the directory of your choosing, e.g.:
❯ mkdir /opt/gradle ❯ unzip -d /opt/gradle gradle-5.4.1-bin.zip ❯ ls /opt/gradle/gradle-5.4.1 LICENSE NOTICE bin getting-started.html init.d lib media
Microsoft Windows users
Create a new directory C:\Gradle
with File Explorer.
Open a second File Explorer window and go to the directory where the Gradle distribution was downloaded. Double-click the ZIP archive to expose the content. Drag the content folder gradle-5.4.1
to your newly created C:\Gradle
folder.
Alternatively you can unpack the Gradle distribution ZIP into C:\Gradle
using an archiver tool of your choice.
Step 3. Configure your system environment
For running Gradle, firstly add the environment variable GRADLE_HOME
. This should point to the unpacked files from the Gradle website. Next add GRADLE_HOME/bin
to your PATH
environment variable. Usually, this is sufficient to run Gradle.
Linux & MacOS users
Configure your PATH
environment variable to include the bin
directory of the unzipped distribution, e.g.:
❯ export PATH=$PATH:/opt/gradle/gradle-5.4.1/bin
Microsoft Windows users
In File Explorer right-click on the This PC
(or Computer
) icon, then click Properties
→ Advanced System Settings
→ Environmental Variables
.
Under System Variables
select Path
, then click Edit
. Add an entry for C:\Gradle\gradle-5.4.1\bin
. Click OK to save.
Verifying installation
Open a console (or a Windows command prompt) and run gradle -v
to run gradle and display the version, e.g.:
❯ gradle -v ------------------------------------------------------------ Gradle 5.4.1 ------------------------------------------------------------ (environment specific information)
If you run into any trouble, see the section on troubleshooting installation.
You can verify the integrity of the Gradle distribution by downloading the SHA-256 file (available from the releases page) and following these verification instructions.
Next steps
Now that you have Gradle installed, use these resources for getting started:
-
Create your first Gradle project by following the Creating New Gradle Builds tutorial.
-
Sign up for a live introductory Gradle training with a core engineer.
-
Learn how to achieve common tasks through the command-line interface.
-
Configure Gradle execution, such as use of an HTTP proxy for downloading dependencies.
-
Subscribe to the Gradle Newsletter for monthly release and community updates.