Fixed
Status Update
Comments
yb...@google.com <yb...@google.com> #2
That seems quite bad :/ weird.
We have fairly large test projects which do not take anywhere close to it, maybe your code is triggering some bad code path.
Can you provide a sample or share your project with us? It is impossible to do something here unless we have a reproduction case. Might also possibly be related to your machine configuration.
We have fairly large test projects which do not take anywhere close to it, maybe your code is triggering some bad code path.
Can you provide a sample or share your project with us? It is impossible to do something here unless we have a reproduction case. Might also possibly be related to your machine configuration.
yb...@google.com <yb...@google.com> #3
Let me see what I can do on the reproduction as I am anyways blocked on this. I will try to extract out the DB module in a new project and see if it reproduces the issue.
za...@gmail.com <za...@gmail.com> #4
Attaching the sample project. When I run the project through the android studio or even command line, I see the described issue.
Try uncommenting room-compiler dependency from app's build.gradle, it does not have the issue because room compiler is not at work.
Try uncommenting room-compiler dependency from app's build.gradle, it does not have the issue because room compiler is not at work.
za...@gmail.com <za...@gmail.com> #5
Did you get a chance to look at it?
yb...@google.com <yb...@google.com>
da...@google.com <da...@google.com> #6
FYI. I see that if I comment out applying google-services plugin (at the end of the app's build.gradle file), that fixes the issue too. Hence, you may need to apply a google-services plugin with a json file to reproduce the issue.
Not sure what is going on but certainly, somethings are not playing well together.
Not sure what is going on but certainly, somethings are not playing well together.
Description
Version used: 1.1.0-present
Theme used: NA
Devices/Android versions reproduced on: NA build-time
- Relevant code to trigger the issue: Any kotlin data class in an external module. Building the following project can reproduce it:
In Kotlin, data classes will have a primary constructor and sometimes generated synthetic constructors. ROOM's processor will complain about the presence of the synthetic ones (which are usually visible when reading the class file from an external library), but since it's reading metadata it could use it to find the "primary" constructor to know for sure.
Example:
The solution would be to find that constructor, then match it to the corresponding constructor as seen in the elements API