We used checkpoint files from BitcoinJ 0.14.4 and those caused a very
slow initial download. I tested with the WalletAppKit and different
release version sof BitcoinJ and could reproduce the behaviour there.
WIth v0.14.5 it was much better. But also that caused slow startup in
Bisq. After creating a current checkpoint file and using that the
download is now very fast.
Also added logging for versions of BitcoinJ and libDohJ so that we have
better control which version is used.
This performs the same function that the maven-enforcer-plugin did in
the pom removed by the previous commit, and also includes a more
comprehensive / up-to-date set of dependencies.
Note that the gradle-witness jar checked in here is one built from the
pull request in signalapp/gradle-witness#26.
This commit makes the following improvements upon the stock
javafx.gradle file introduced in the previous commit:
- Swap Maven Central for JCenter
- Remove mavenLocal entirely
- Update naming for clarity
See #66
The plugin's jfx* tasks tie into the normal Gradle build lifecycle, such
that `gradle build` will now generate executables and installers
according to the OS on which the build is being run. These files are
output to the `build/distributions` directory.
Installers work as expected OS X and Linux at this point.
Windows installers do build, but a very particular configuration is
necessary on the Windows machine doing the building (this configuration
is to be documented in #109). However, even when the configuration is in
place and the MSI installer is successfully built, there is still a
fatal error at installer execution time relating to a missing
msvp100.dll file. See details at
https://bitbucket.org/shemnon/javafx-gradle/issue/43. An issue has been
created to track this from the Bitsquare side as well--see #108.
The changes made in this commit are based on on the samples at
http://bitbucket.org/shemnon/javafx-gradle and the article at
http://jaxenter.com/tutorial-a-guide-to-the-gradle-javafx-plugin-46270.html
The gradle/javafx.gradle file is copied directly from the sources in the
bitbucket repository above, as is apparently the convention (not sure
why this isn't part of the plugin itself, but that's a question to be
addressed later).
Resolves#66, #100
See #108, #109
Commit 4d4787d updated the Gradle wrapper config from 2.0 => 2.1, but
did not actually update the wrapper properties file (forgot to run
`gradle wrapper`). This commit finishes what was started there.