Documentation

You are viewing the documentation for the 2.2.3 release in the 2.2.x series of releases. The latest stable release series is 3.0.x.

§Building Play from sources

To benefit from the latest improvements and bug fixes after the initial beta release, you may want to compile Play from sources. You’ll need a Git client to fetch the sources.

§Grab the source

From the shell, first checkout the Play sources:

$ git clone git://github.com/playframework/playframework.git

Then go to the playframework/framework directory and launch the build script to enter the sbt build console:

$ cd playframework/framework
$ ./build
> publish-local

Note that you don’t need to install sbt yourself: Play embeds its own version.

If you want to make changes to the code you can use publish-local to rebuild the framework.

§Build the documentation

Documentation is available at playframework/documentation as Markdown files. To see HTML, run the following:

$ cd playframework/documentation
$ ./build run

To see documentation at http://localhost:9000/@documentation

To build the Scaladoc and Javadoc, run doc against the source code:

$ cd playframework/framework
$ ./build doc

§Run tests

You can run basic tests from the sbt console using the test task:

> test

We are also using several Play applications to test the framework. To run this complete test suite, use the runtests script:

$ ./runtests

§Use in projects

Creating projects using the Play version you have built from source works much the same as a regular Play application.

export PATH=$PATH:/playframework

If you have an existing Play application that you are upgrading, please add

resolvers ++= Seq(
  ...
  Resolver.file("Local Repository", file("<projdir>/playframework/repository/local"))(Resolver.ivyStylePatterns),
  ...
)

addSbtPlugin("play" % "sbt-plugin" % "2.2-SNAPSHOT")

to project/plugins.sbt.

§Using Code in Eclipse

You can find at Stackoverflow some information how to setup eclipse to work on the code.