commit | 62e02835a930dbcf94b01c79796c68bf91774b12 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Ting-Yuan Huang <laszio@google.com> | Fri Nov 04 11:26:25 2022 -0700 |
committer | laszio <ting-yuan@users.noreply.github.com> | Wed Nov 09 15:57:03 2022 -0800 |
tree | 076563d8ae1c037ef05de863090c99ea6766a2f4 | |
parent | cb7ca8fe8ab312d85394f1e9c3c2c4d5a741b3f6 [diff] |
Sign with in-memory pgp keys Now, instead of specifying keyring and key id in gradle.properties: $ export ORG_GRADLE_PROJECT_signingKey=$(gpg --export-secret-keys --armor) $ export ORG_GRADLE_PROJECT_signingPassword=...
Welcome to KSP!
Kotlin Symbol Processing (KSP) is an API that you can use to develop lightweight compiler plugins. KSP provides a simplified compiler plugin API that leverages the power of Kotlin while keeping the learning curve at a minimum. Compared to KAPT, annotation processors that use KSP can run up to 2x faster.
Most of the documentation of KSP can be found on kotlinlang.org. Here are some handy links:
Please let us know what you think about KSP by filing a Github issue or connecting with our team in the #ksp
channel in the Kotlin Slack workspace!
If you are interested in sending PRs, please also check out the Contributor guide.
Here are some planned features that have not yet been completely implemented: