I'm about to backup my (Linux) home directory, and in the process of culling some of the larger files/subdirectories whose contents I dont need (e.g. .cache
, .ccache
etc.) - I noticed I have a pretty sizable .gradle
subdirectory.
I very rarely use the gradle build tool, but I must have used it for something a couple of years back. My question: Is there important information/settings in a user's .gradle
folder, or is it basically just cached dependencies / gradle's own auto-downloaded data?
CodePudding user response:
From the docs:
https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/directory_layout.html#dir:gradle_user_home
The Gradle user home directory (
$USER_HOME/.gradle
by default) is used to store global configuration properties and initialization scripts as well as caches and log files.
Generally, locally it does not matter. However, more advanced use cases (CI/CD) allow you to share or even relocate certain caches: https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/build_cache.html
The only notable item of importance is a global gradle.properties
file you may have created. If you did, it would be located at $GRADLE_USER_HOME/gradle.properties
where GRADLE_USER_HOME
by default is $USER_HOME/.gradle
. If there any credentials in there you do not have saved else where, considering backing those up.
Otherwise, it is safe to delete. Granted you do not mind having to redownload dependencies etc. again.