Manage multiple Java SDKs with asdf with ease
asdf
is a helpful command-line tool that allows you to manage and switch between different versions of programming language runtimes including Java
, Kotlin
, Node.js
, Python
and their associated packages and libraries including Gradle
, Maven
, Yarn
, Spring Boot CLI
.
asdf
is supported for all major operating systems including Windows via Windows Subsystem for Linux 2 (WSL2).
Depending on your setup (OS, shell and installation method) you need to perform several steps in order to make sure asdf
works correctly. Consult the documentation for more details: https://asdf-vm.com/guide/getting-started.html.
I work on macOS with Iterm2
and oh-my-zsh
, so the setup was to install asdf
with Homebrew
(brew install asdf
) and then to install asdf
for oh-my-zsh
(https://github.com/ohmyzsh/ohmyzsh/tree/master/plugins/asdf)
Install and manage Java versions
Once you have asdf
installed, you can use the following steps to install and manage Java
versions:
- Add the
Java
plugin toasdf
by running:asdf plugin add java
. - List all available
Java
versions by running:asdf list all java
. Tip: Pipe the command withgrep
if you are looking for specific runtime. - Use the
asdf install
command to install a specificJava
version. For example, to installGraalVM
withJava 19
support, you would runasdf install java graalvm-22.3.0+java19
:
➜ ~ asdf install java graalvm-22.3.0+java19 ###################### 100.0% graalvm-ce-java19-darwin-amd64-22.3.0.tar.gz graalvm-ce-java19-darwin-amd64-22.3.0.tar.gz: OK
- Use the
asdf global
command to set the default version ofJava
to use on your machine. For example, to set previously installed version as the default version, you would runasdf global graalvm-22.3.0+java19
:
➜ ~ asdf global java graalvm-22.3.0+java19 ➜ ~ java -version openjdk version "19.0.1" 2022-10-18 OpenJDK Runtime Environment GraalVM CE 22.3.0 (build 19.0.1+10-jvmci-22.3-b08) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM GraalVM CE 22.3.0 (build 19.0.1+10-jvmci-22.3-b08, mixed mode, sharing)
Global defaults are managed in $HOME/.tool-versions
file:
➜ ~ tail $HOME/.tool-versions java graalvm-22.3.0+java19
In contrary, when you want to use version specific to a directory you would use asdf local
command which creates $PWD/.tool-versions
file. Now, each you navigate to that directory, asdf
picks the versions and set them properly for this directory only.
Install other tools
There are many language runtimes and tools you can manage with asdf
. The process is as follows:
- You look for the plugin (e.g.
asdf plugin list all | grep gradle
) - You add the plugin (e.g.
asdf plugin add gradle
) - You find the version you want to manage (e.g.
asdf list all gradle
) - You install the selected version of langugate runtime or tool (e.g.
asdf install gradle 7.6
)
Alternative: SDKMAN!
Before I discovered asdf
, I used SDKMAN!
. SDKMAN!
is a tool for managing parallel versions of multiple SDKs and once installed, it provides a convenient sdk
command for installing, switching, removing and listing installed SDKs. Learn more about it from my blog post: Manage multiple Java SDKs with SDKMAN! with ease
Published on Java Code Geeks with permission by Rafal Borowiec, partner at our JCG program. See the original article here: Manage multiple Java SDKs with asdf with ease Opinions expressed by Java Code Geeks contributors are their own. |