SBT Tricks Friday, 31 May 2019 3 mins

I was recently upgrading a library at work from using Scala 2.11 to 2.12. Here are some sbt tricks that I picked up while trying to perform the migration.

Build with different library versions for different Scala versions

I followed steps 1 and 2 here, but it’s quite an old post.

Basically you can define a function that takes the Scala version string and return the right version of the library for that Scala version. This is useful especially for protobuf libraries compiled with scalapb since we had a version compiled with scalapb 0.4.9 for 2.11 and a version compiled with scalapb 0.6.0 for 2.12.

For SBT 0.13.17, this is an example of what I used:

specifiying versions:

crossScalaVersions := Seq ( "2.11.8" , "2.12.8" )

configure libraries:

val lib_2_11 = "com.example" %% "protobuf" % "0.1.0-scalapb-0.4.9" val lib = "com.example" %% "protobuf" % "0.1.0-scalapb-0.6.0" def protobufs ( scalaVersion : String ) = { scalaVersion match { case "2.11.8" => lib_2_11 case _ => lib } } libraryDependencies ++= scalaVersion ( version => protobufs ( version )). value

Conflicting cross-version suffixes

If you fix the version of your library to a certain Scala version like so:

val myDependency = "org.scala-lang.modules" % "scala-xml_2.11" % "0.1.0"

then shame on you!

This will make upgrading Scala versions difficult in the future. Instead, you should let sbt resolve the version suffix of the library like so:

val myDependency = "org.scala-lang.modules" %% "scala-xml" % "0.1.0"

This is even worse when the import is inside a dependency of a dependency, so that it doesn’t appear in the build.sbt of the original project! I used the sbt-dependency-graph plugin to look for places where the conflicting version was being brought in (for e.g scala-xml_2.11) and then went to those projects to publish new versions without the forced suffixes.

Change Scala version to new version to get IDE hints

After solving some of the dependency resolution issues, I was able to get the compilation started. However, it was failing for the new Scala version because of some field changes in the protobufs. That required me to write different versions of some classes and tests for the different Scala versions.

Compile some classes differently between Scala versions

Since sbt 0.13.8, you can just put your version specific code in version specific directories (for e.g. src/main/scala-2.12 will only be compiled when the current Scala version is 2.12).

Exclude libraries properly

exclude() and excludeAll() do not understand Scala versions; you have to specify the Scala version suffix i.e. exclude("com.example", "my_library_2.12")

The reason, as noted here, is that the underlying Ivy dependency resolution doesn’t understand sbt conventions (for e.g. the version suffix in the library name).

Versioning in a multi-module build

If you have a version.sbt file in the root of your repository, to apply the version to all modules, use the following:

version in ThisBuild := "x.y.z" //or for sbt >= 1.1.0, ThisBuild / version := "x.y.z"

If you only specify

version := "x.y.z"

the version will only apply to the root project.