17 Plugins - Reference Documentation
Authors: Graeme Rocher, Peter Ledbrook, Marc Palmer, Jeff Brown, Luke Daley, Burt Beckwith, Lari Hotari
Version: 2.5.6
Table of Contents
17 Plugins
Grails is first and foremost a web application framework, but it is also a platform. By exposing a number of extension points that let you extend anything from the command line interface to the runtime configuration engine, Grails can be customised to suit almost any needs. To hook into this platform, all you need to do is create a plugin.Extending the platform may sound complicated, but plugins can range from trivially simple to incredibly powerful. If you know how to build a Grails application, you'll know how to create a plugin for sharing a data model or some static resources.17.1 Creating and Installing Plugins
Creating Plugins
Creating a Grails plugin is a simple matter of running the command:grails create-plugin [PLUGIN NAME]
grails create-plugin example
would create a new plugin project called example
.Make sure the plugin name does not contain more than one capital in a row, or it won't work. Camel case is fine, though.The structure of a Grails plugin is very nearly the same as a Grails application project's except that in the root of the plugin directory you will find a plugin Groovy file called the "plugin descriptor".The only plugins included in a new plugin project are Tomcat and Release. Hibernate is not included by default.Being a regular Grails project has a number of benefits in that you can immediately test your plugin by running:
grails run-app
Plugin projects don't provide an index.gsp by default since most plugins don't need it. So, if you try to view the plugin running in a browser right after creating it, you will receive a page not found error. You can easily create a grails-app/views/index.gsp
for your plugin if you'd like.
The plugin descriptor name ends with the convention GrailsPlugin
and is found in the root of the plugin project. For example:class ExampleGrailsPlugin {
def version = "0.1" …
}
title
- short one-sentence description of your pluginversion
- The version of your plugin. Valid values include example "0.1", "0.2-SNAPSHOT", "1.1.4" etc.grailsVersion
- The version of version range of Grails that the plugin supports. eg. "1.2 > *" (indicating 1.2 or higher)author
- plugin author's nameauthorEmail
- plugin author's contact e-maildescription
- full multi-line description of plugin's featuresdocumentation
- URL of the plugin's documentation
class QuartzGrailsPlugin { def version = "0.1" def grailsVersion = "1.1 > *" def author = "Sergey Nebolsin" def authorEmail = "nebolsin@gmail.com" def title = "Quartz Plugin" def description = '''\ The Quartz plugin allows your Grails application to schedule jobs\ to be executed using a specified interval or cron expression. The\ underlying system uses the Quartz Enterprise Job Scheduler configured\ via Spring, but is made simpler by the coding by convention paradigm.\ ''' def documentation = "http://grails.org/plugin/quartz" … }
Installing Local Plugins
To make your plugin available for use in a Grails application run themaven-install
command:grails maven-install
grails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
file:compile ":quartz:0.1"
Notes on excluded Artefacts
Although the create-plugin command creates certain files for you so that the plugin can be run as a Grails application, not all of these files are included when packaging a plugin. The following is a list of artefacts created, but not included by package-plugin:grails-app/conf/BootStrap.groovy
grails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
(although it is used to generatedependencies.groovy
)grails-app/conf/Config.groovy
grails-app/conf/DataSource.groovy
(and any other*DataSource.groovy
)grails-app/conf/UrlMappings.groovy
grails-app/conf/spring/resources.groovy
- Everything within
/web-app/WEB-INF
- Everything within
/web-app/plugins/**
- Everything within
/test/**
- SCM management files within
**/.svn/**
and**/CVS/**
WEB-INF
it is recommended you use the _Install.groovy
script (covered later), which is executed when a plugin is installed, to provide such artefacts. In addition, although UrlMappings.groovy
is excluded you are allowed to include a UrlMappings
definition with a different name, such as MyPluginUrlMappings.groovy
.Customizing the plugin contents
You can specify what to exclude in addition to the default excludes by adding elements to thepluginExcludes
descriptor property (described below). In addition, there are two ways to configure the contents of the plugin ZIP or JAR file.One is to create an event handler for the CreatePluginArchiveStart
event, which is fired after all of the plugin files have been copied to the staging directory. By adding an event handler you can add, modify, or delete files as needed. Add the handler to _Events.groovy
in the scripts
directory, for exampleeventCreatePluginArchiveStart = { stagingDir -> // update staging directory contents here }
grails.project.plugin.staging.dir
attribute in BuildConfig.groovy
or as as system property.Note that there is also a CreatePluginArchiveEnd
event which is fired after the ZIP or JAR is packaged.You can also do this work in a Closure in BuildConfig.groovy
with the property grails.plugin.resources
which is analogous to the grails.war.resources
property, e.g.grails.plugin.resources = { stagingDir -> // update staging directory contents here }
Specifying Plugin Locations
An application can load plugins from anywhere on the file system, even if they have not been installed. Specify the location of the (unpacked) plugin in the application'sgrails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
file:// Useful to test plugins you are developing. grails.plugin.location.shiro = "/home/dilbert/dev/plugins/grails-shiro"// Useful for modular applications where all plugins and // applications are in the same directory. grails.plugin.location.'grails-ui' = "../grails-grails-ui"
- You are developing a plugin and want to test it in a real application without packaging and installing it first.
- You have split an application into a set of plugins and an application, all in the same "super-project" directory.
The Artifactory repository for Grails now includes all the dependencies for published plugins. So, if you are using inline plugins that have dependencies, it is necessary to do a secondary resolve because these dependencies might not be in the repository. Therefore, you should setlegacyResolve
totrue
in yourBuildConfig.groovy
if you are using inline plugins with dependencies.
17.2 Plugin Repositories
Distributing Plugins in the Grails Central Plugin Repository
The preferred way to distribute plugin is to publish to the official Grails Central Plugin Repository. This will make your plugin visible to the list-plugins command:grails list-plugins
grails plugin-info [plugin-name]
If you have created a Grails plugin and want it to be hosted in the central repository, you'll find instructions for getting an account on this wiki page.When you have access to the Grails Plugin repository, install the Release Plugin by declaring it as a 'build' scoped dependency in
grails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
file:grails.project.dependency.resolution = { … plugins { build ':release:3.0.0' } }
publish-plugin
command to release your plugin:grails publish-plugin
Configuring Additional Repositories
The process for configuring repositories in Grails differs between versions. For version of Grails 1.2 and earlier please refer to the Grails 1.2 documentation on the subject. The following sections cover Grails 1.3 and above.Grails 1.3 and above use Ivy under the hood to resolve plugin dependencies. The mechanism for defining additional plugin repositories is largely the same as defining repositories for JAR dependencies. For example you can define a remote Maven repository that contains Grails plugins using the following syntax ingrails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
:repositories { mavenRepo "http://repository.codehaus.org" // ...or with a name mavenRepo name: "myRepo", root: "http://myserver:8081/artifactory/plugins-snapshots-local" }
grailsRepo
method:repositories { grailsRepo "http://myserver/mygrailsrepo" // ...or with a name grailsRepo "http://myserver/svn/grails-plugins", "mySvnRepo" }
repositories { grailsCentral() }
repositories {
grailsRepo "http://myserver/mygrailsrepo"
grailsCentral()
}
Publishing to Maven Compatible Repositories
In general it is recommended for Grails 1.3 and above to use standard Maven-style repositories to self host plugins. The benefits of doing so include the ability for existing tooling and repository managers to interpret the structure of a Maven repository.You use the Release plugin to publish a plugin to a Maven repository. Please refer to the section of the Maven deployment user guide on the subject.17.3 Understanding a Plugin's Structure
As as mentioned previously, a plugin is basically a regular Grails application with a plugin descriptor. However when installed, the structure of a plugin differs slightly. For example, take a look at this plugin directory structure:+ grails-app + controllers + domain + taglib etc. + lib + src + java + groovy + web-app + js + css
grails-app
directory will go into a directory such as plugins/example-1.0/grails-app
. They will not be copied into the main source tree. A plugin never interferes with a project's primary source tree.Dealing with static resources is slightly different. When developing a plugin, just like an application, all static resources go in the web-app
directory. You can then link to static resources just like in an application. This example links to a JavaScript source:<g:resource dir="js" file="mycode.js" />
/js/mycode.js
. However, when the plugin is installed into an application the path will automatically change to something like /plugin/example-0.1/js/mycode.js
and Grails will deal with making sure the resources are in the right place.There is a special pluginContextPath
variable that can be used whilst both developing the plugin and when in the plugin is installed into the application to find out what the correct path to the plugin is.At runtime the pluginContextPath
variable will either evaluate to an empty string or /plugins/example
depending on whether the plugin is running standalone or has been installed in an applicationJava and Groovy code that the plugin provides within the lib and src/java
and src/groovy
directories will be compiled into the main project's web-app/WEB-INF/classes
directory so that they are made available at runtime.
17.4 Providing Basic Artefacts
Adding a new Script
A plugin can add a new script simply by providing the relevant Gant script in its scripts directory:+ MyPlugin.groovy + scripts <-- additional scripts here + grails-app + controllers + services + etc. + lib
Adding a new grails-app artifact (Controller, Tag Library, Service, etc.)
A plugin can add new artifacts by creating the relevant file within thegrails-app
tree. Note that the plugin is loaded from where it is installed and not copied into the main application tree.+ ExamplePlugin.groovy + scripts + grails-app + controllers <-- additional controllers here + services <-- additional services here + etc. <-- additional XXX here + lib
Providing Views, Templates and View resolution
When a plugin provides a controller it may also provide default views to be rendered. This is an excellent way to modularize your application through plugins. Grails' view resolution mechanism will first look for the view in the application it is installed into and if that fails will attempt to look for the view within the plugin. This means that you can override views provided by a plugin by creating corresponding GSPs in the application'sgrails-app/views
directory.For example, consider a controller called BookController
that's provided by an 'amazon' plugin. If the action being executed is list
, Grails will first look for a view called grails-app/views/book/list.gsp
then if that fails it will look for the same view relative to the plugin.However if the view uses templates that are also provided by the plugin then the following syntax may be necessary:<g:render template="fooTemplate" plugin="amazon"/>
plugin
attribute, which contains the name of the plugin where the template resides. If this is not specified then Grails will look for the template relative to the application.Excluded Artefacts
By default Grails excludes the following files during the packaging process:grails-app/conf/BootStrap.groovy
grails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
(although it is used to generatedependencies.groovy
)grails-app/conf/Config.groovy
grails-app/conf/DataSource.groovy
(and any other*DataSource.groovy
)grails-app/conf/UrlMappings.groovy
grails-app/conf/spring/resources.groovy
- Everything within
/web-app/WEB-INF
- Everything within
/web-app/plugins/**
- Everything within
/test/**
- SCM management files within
**/.svn/**
and**/CVS/**
web-app/WEB-INF
directory it is recommended that you modify the plugin's scripts/_Install.groovy
Gant script to install these artefacts into the target project's directory tree.In addition, the default UrlMappings.groovy
file is excluded to avoid naming conflicts, however you are free to add a UrlMappings definition under a different name which will be included. For example a file called grails-app/conf/BlogUrlMappings.groovy
is fine.The list of excludes is extensible with the pluginExcludes
property:// resources that are excluded from plugin packaging
def pluginExcludes = [
"grails-app/views/error.gsp"
]
17.5 Evaluating Conventions
Before looking at providing runtime configuration based on conventions you first need to understand how to evaluate those conventions from a plugin. Every plugin has an implicitapplication
variable which is an instance of the GrailsApplication interface.The GrailsApplication
interface provides methods to evaluate the conventions within the project and internally stores references to all artifact classes within your application.Artifacts implement the GrailsClass interface, which represents a Grails resource such as a controller or a tag library. For example to get all GrailsClass
instances you can do:for (grailsClass in application.allClasses) {
println grailsClass.name
}
GrailsApplication
has a few "magic" properties to narrow the type of artefact you are interested in. For example to access controllers you can use:for (controllerClass in application.controllerClasses) {
println controllerClass.name
}
*Classes
- Retrieves all the classes for a particular artefact name. For exampleapplication.controllerClasses
.get*Class
- Retrieves a named class for a particular artefact. For exampleapplication.getControllerClass("PersonController")
is*Class
- Returnstrue
if the given class is of the given artefact type. For exampleapplication.isControllerClass(PersonController)
GrailsClass
interface has a number of useful methods that let you further evaluate and work with the conventions. These include:
getPropertyValue
- Gets the initial value of the given property on the classhasProperty
- Returnstrue
if the class has the specified propertynewInstance
- Creates a new instance of this class.getName
- Returns the logical name of the class in the application without the trailing convention part if applicablegetShortName
- Returns the short name of the class without package prefixgetFullName
- Returns the full name of the class in the application with the trailing convention part and with the package namegetPropertyName
- Returns the name of the class as a property namegetLogicalPropertyName
- Returns the logical property name of the class in the application without the trailing convention part if applicablegetNaturalName
- Returns the name of the property in natural terms (e.g. 'lastName' becomes 'Last Name')getPackageName
- Returns the package name
17.6 Hooking into Build Events
Post-Install Configuration and Participating in Upgrades
Grails plugins can do post-install configuration. This is achieved using a specially named script under thescripts
directory of the plugin - _Install.groovy
._Install.groovy
is executed after the plugin has been installed.This scripts is a Gant script, so you can use the full power of Gant. An addition to the standard Gant variables there is also a pluginBasedir
variable which points at the plugin installation basedir.As an example this _Install.groovy
script will create a new directory type under the grails-app
directory and install a configuration template:ant.mkdir(dir: "${basedir}/grails-app/jobs")ant.copy(file: "${pluginBasedir}/src/samples/SamplePluginConfig.groovy", todir: "${basedir}/grails-app/conf")
pluginBasedir
variable is not available in custom scripts, but you can use fooPluginDir
, where foo
is the name of your plugin.Scripting events
It is also possible to hook into command line scripting events. These are events triggered during execution of Grails target and plugin scripts.For example, you can hook into status update output (i.e. "Tests passed", "Server running") and the creation of files or artefacts.A plugin just has to provide an_Events.groovy
script to listen to the required events. Refer the documentation on Hooking into Events for further information.
17.7 Hooking into Runtime Configuration
Grails provides a number of hooks to leverage the different parts of the system and perform runtime configuration by convention.Hooking into the Grails Spring configuration
First, you can hook in Grails runtime configuration by providing a property calleddoWithSpring
which is assigned a block of code. For example the following snippet is from one of the core Grails plugins that provides i18n support:import org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver import org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor import org.springframework.context.support.ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSourceclass I18nGrailsPlugin { def version = "0.1" def doWithSpring = { messageSource(ReloadableResourceBundleMessageSource) { basename = "WEB-INF/grails-app/i18n/messages" } localeChangeInterceptor(LocaleChangeInterceptor) { paramName = "lang" } localeResolver(CookieLocaleResolver) } }
messageSource
bean and a couple of other beans to manage Locale resolution and switching. It using the Spring Bean Builder syntax to do so.Participating in web.xml Generation
Grails generates theWEB-INF/web.xml
file at load time, and although plugins cannot change this file directly, they can participate in the generation of the file. A plugin can provide a doWithWebDescriptor
property that is assigned a block of code that gets passed the web.xml
as an XmlSlurper
GPathResult
.Add servlet
and servlet-mapping
Consider this example from the ControllersPlugin
:def doWithWebDescriptor = { webXml -> def mappingElement = webXml.'servlet-mapping' def lastMapping = mappingElement[mappingElement.size() - 1] lastMapping + { 'servlet-mapping' { 'servlet-name'("grails") 'url-pattern'("*.dispatch") } } }
<servlet-mapping>
element and appends Grails' servlet after it using XmlSlurper's ability to programmatically modify XML using closures and blocks.Add filter
and filter-mapping
Adding a filter with its mapping works a little differently. The location of the <filter>
element doesn't matter since order is not important, so it's simplest to insert your custom filter definition immediately after the last <context-param>
element. Order is important for mappings, but the usual approach is to add it immediately after the last <filter>
element like so:def doWithWebDescriptor = { webXml -> def contextParam = webXml.'context-param' contextParam[contextParam.size() - 1] + { 'filter' { 'filter-name'('springSecurityFilterChain') 'filter-class'(DelegatingFilterProxy.name) } } def filter = webXml.'filter' filter[filter.size() - 1] + { 'filter-mapping'{ 'filter-name'('springSecurityFilterChain') 'url-pattern'('/*') } } }
def doWithWebDescriptor = { webXml ->
... // Insert the Spring Security filter after the Spring
// character encoding filter.
def filter = webXml.'filter-mapping'.find {
it.'filter-name'.text() == "charEncodingFilter"
} filter + {
'filter-mapping'{
'filter-name'('springSecurityFilterChain')
'url-pattern'('/*')
}
}
}
Doing Post Initialisation Configuration
Sometimes it is useful to be able do some runtime configuration after the Spring ApplicationContext has been built. In this case you can define adoWithApplicationContext
closure property.class SimplePlugin { def name = "simple" def version = "1.1" def doWithApplicationContext = { appCtx -> def sessionFactory = appCtx.sessionFactory // do something here with session factory } }
17.8 Adding Dynamic Methods at Runtime
The Basics
Grails plugins let you register dynamic methods with any Grails-managed or other class at runtime. This work is done in adoWithDynamicMethods
closure.For Grails-managed classes like controllers, tag libraries and so forth you can add methods, constructors etc. using the ExpandoMetaClass mechanism by accessing each controller's MetaClass:class ExamplePlugin { def doWithDynamicMethods = { applicationContext -> for (controllerClass in application.controllerClasses) { controllerClass.metaClass.myNewMethod = {-> println "hello world" } } } }
myNewMethod
to each controller. If you know beforehand the class you wish the add a method to you can simply reference its metaClass
property.For example we can add a new method swapCase
to java.lang.String
:class ExamplePlugin { def doWithDynamicMethods = { applicationContext -> String.metaClass.swapCase = {-> def sb = new StringBuilder() delegate.each { sb << (Character.isUpperCase(it as char) ? Character.toLowerCase(it as char) : Character.toUpperCase(it as char)) } sb.toString() } assert "UpAndDown" == "uPaNDdOWN".swapCase() } }
Interacting with the ApplicationContext
ThedoWithDynamicMethods
closure gets passed the Spring ApplicationContext
instance. This is useful as it lets you interact with objects within it. For example if you were implementing a method to interact with Hibernate you could use the SessionFactory
instance in combination with a HibernateTemplate
:import org.springframework.orm.hibernate3.HibernateTemplateclass ExampleHibernatePlugin { def doWithDynamicMethods = { applicationContext -> for (domainClass in application.domainClasses) { domainClass.metaClass.static.load = { Long id-> def sf = applicationContext.sessionFactory def template = new HibernateTemplate(sf) template.load(delegate, id) } } } }
class MyConstructorPlugin { def doWithDynamicMethods = { applicationContext -> for (domainClass in application.domainClasses) { domainClass.metaClass.constructor = {-> return applicationContext.getBean(domainClass.name) } } } }
17.9 Participating in Auto Reload Events
Monitoring Resources for Changes
Often it is valuable to monitor resources for changes and perform some action when they occur. This is how Grails implements advanced reloading of application state at runtime. For example, consider this simplified snippet from the GrailsServicesPlugin
:class ServicesGrailsPlugin { … def watchedResources = "file:./grails-app/services/*Service.groovy" … def onChange = { event -> if (event.source) { def serviceClass = application.addServiceClass(event.source) def serviceName = "${serviceClass.propertyName}" def beans = beans { "$serviceName"(serviceClass.getClazz()) { bean -> bean.autowire = true } } if (event.ctx) { event.ctx.registerBeanDefinition( serviceName, beans.getBeanDefinition(serviceName)) } } } }
watchedResources
as either a String or a List of strings that contain either the references or patterns of the resources to watch. If the watched resources specify a Groovy file, when it is changed it will automatically be reloaded and passed into the onChange
closure in the event
object.The event
object defines a number of useful properties:
event.source
- The source of the event, either the reloadedClass
or a SpringResource
event.ctx
- The SpringApplicationContext
instanceevent.plugin
- The plugin object that manages the resource (usuallythis
)event.application
- TheGrailsApplication
instanceevent.manager
- TheGrailsPluginManager
instance
ApplicationContext
when one of the service classes changes.Influencing Other Plugins
In addition to reacting to changes, sometimes a plugin needs to "influence" another.Take for example the Services and Controllers plugins. When a service is reloaded, unless you reload the controllers too, problems will occur when you try to auto-wire the reloaded service into an older controller Class.To get around this, you can specify which plugins another plugin "influences". This means that when one plugin detects a change, it will reload itself and then reload its influenced plugins. For example consider this snippet from theServicesGrailsPlugin
:def influences = ['controllers']
Observing other plugins
If there is a particular plugin that you would like to observe for changes but not necessary watch the resources that it monitors you can use the "observe" property:def observe = ["controllers"]
def observe = ["*"]
log
property back to any artefact that changes while the application is running.
17.10 Understanding Plugin Load Order
Controlling Plugin Dependencies
Plugins often depend on the presence of other plugins and can adapt depending on the presence of others. This is implemented with two properties. The first is calleddependsOn
. For example, take a look at this snippet from the Hibernate plugin:class HibernateGrailsPlugin { def version = "1.0" def dependsOn = [dataSource: "1.0", domainClass: "1.0", i18n: "1.0", core: "1.0"] }
dataSource
, domainClass
, i18n
and core
plugins.The dependencies will be loaded before the Hibernate plugin and if all dependencies do not load, then the plugin will not load.The dependsOn
property also supports a mini expression language for specifying version ranges. A few examples of the syntax can be seen below:def dependsOn = [foo: "* > 1.0"] def dependsOn = [foo: "1.0 > 1.1"] def dependsOn = [foo: "1.0 > *"]
- 1.1
- 1.0
- 1.0.1
- 1.0.3-SNAPSHOT
- 1.1-BETA2
Controlling Load Order
UsingdependsOn
establishes a "hard" dependency in that if the dependency is not resolved, the plugin will give up and won't load. It is possible though to have a weaker dependency using the loadAfter
and loadBefore
properties:def loadAfter = ['controllers']
controllers
plugin if it exists, otherwise it will just be loaded. The plugin can then adapt to the presence of the other plugin, for example the Hibernate plugin has this code in its doWithSpring
closure:if (manager?.hasGrailsPlugin("controllers")) { openSessionInViewInterceptor(OpenSessionInViewInterceptor) { flushMode = HibernateAccessor.FLUSH_MANUAL sessionFactory = sessionFactory } grailsUrlHandlerMapping.interceptors << openSessionInViewInterceptor }
OpenSessionInViewInterceptor
if the controllers
plugin has been loaded. The manager
variable is an instance of the GrailsPluginManager interface and it provides methods to interact with other plugins.You can also use the loadBefore
property to specify one or more plugins that your plugin should load before:def loadBefore = ['rabbitmq']
Scopes and Environments
It's not only plugin load order that you can control. You can also specify which environments your plugin should be loaded in and which scopes (stages of a build). Simply declare one or both of these properties in your plugin descriptor:def environments = ['development', 'test', 'myCustomEnv'] def scopes = [excludes:'war']
development-only
plugins to not be packaged for production use.The full list of available scopes are defined by the enum BuildScope, but here's a summary:
test
- when running testsfunctional-test
- when running functional testsrun
- for run-app and run-warwar
- when packaging the application as a WAR fileall
- plugin applies to all scopes (default)
- a string - a sole inclusion
- a list - a list of environments or scopes to include
- a map - for full control, with 'includes' and/or 'excludes' keys that can have string or list values
def environments = "test"
def environments = ["development", "test"]
def environments = [includes: ["development", "test"]]
17.11 The Artefact API
You should by now understand that Grails has the concept of artefacts: special types of classes that it knows about and can treat differently from normal Groovy and Java classes, for example by enhancing them with extra properties and methods. Examples of artefacts include domain classes and controllers. What you may not be aware of is that Grails allows application and plugin developers access to the underlying infrastructure for artefacts, which means you can find out what artefacts are available and even enhance them yourself. You can even provide your own custom artefact types.17.11.1 Asking About Available Artefacts
As a plugin developer, it can be important for you to find out about what domain classes, controllers, or other types of artefact are available in an application. For example, the Searchable plugin needs to know what domain classes exist so it can check them for anysearchable
properties and index the appropriate ones. So how does it do it? The answer lies with the grailsApplication
object, and instance of GrailsApplication that's available automatically in controllers and GSPs and can be injected everywhere else.The grailsApplication
object has several important properties and methods for querying artefacts. Probably the most common is the one that gives you all the classes of a particular artefact type:for (cls in grailsApplication.<artefactType>Classes) {
…
}
artefactType
is the property name form of the artefact type. With core Grails you have:
- domain
- controller
- tagLib
- service
- codec
- bootstrap
- urlMappings
for (cls in grailsApplication.domainClasses) {
…
}
for (cls in grailsApplication.urlMappingsClasses) {
…
}
Class
:
shortName
- the class name of the artefact without the package (equivalent ofClass.simpleName
).logicalPropertyName
- the artefact name in property form without the 'type' suffix. SoMyGreatController
becomes 'myGreat'.isAbstract()
- a boolean indicating whether the artefact class is abstract or not.getPropertyValue(name)
- returns the value of the given property, whether it's a static or an instance one. This works best if the property is initialised on declaration, e.g.static transactional = true
.
- get<type>Class(String name)
- is<type>Class(Class clazz)
GrailsClass
instance for the given name, e.g. 'MyGreatController'. The second will check whether a class is a particular type of artefact. For example, you can use grailsApplication.isControllerClass(org.example.MyGreatController)
to check whether MyGreatController
is in fact a controller.
17.11.2 Adding Your Own Artefact Types
Plugins can easily provide their own artefacts so that they can easily find out what implementations are available and take part in reloading. All you need to do is create anArtefactHandler
implementation and register it in your main plugin class:class MyGrailsPlugin { def artefacts = [ org.somewhere.MyArtefactHandler ] … }
artefacts
list can contain either handler classes (as above) or instances of handlers.So, what does an artefact handler look like? Well, put simply it is an implementation of the ArtefactHandler interface. To make life a bit easier, there is a skeleton implementation that can readily be extended: ArtefactHandlerAdapter.In addition to the handler itself, every new artefact needs a corresponding wrapper class that implements GrailsClass. Again, skeleton implementations are available such as AbstractInjectableGrailsClass, which is particularly useful as it turns your artefact into a Spring bean that is auto-wired, just like controllers and services.The best way to understand how both the handler and wrapper classes work is to look at the Quartz plugin:
Another example is the Shiro plugin which adds a realm artefact.
17.12 Binary Plugins
Regular Grails plugins are packaged as zip files containing the full source of the plugin. This has some advantages in terms of being an open distribution system (anyone can see the source), in addition to avoiding problems with the source compatibility level used for compilation.As of Grails 2.0 you can pre-compile Grails plugins into regular JAR files known as "binary plugins". This has several advantages (and some disadvantages as discussed in the advantages of source plugins above) including:- Binary plugins can be published as standard JAR files to a Maven repository
- Binary plugins can be declared like any other JAR dependency
- Commercial plugins are more viable since the source isn't published
- IDEs have a better understanding since binary plugins are regular JAR files containing classes
Packaging
To package a plugin in binary form you can use the package-plugin command and the--binary
flag:grails package-plugin --binary
- Grails artifact classes such as controllers, domain classes and so on
- I18n Message bundles
- GSP Views, layouts and templates
def packaging = "binary"
Using Binary Plugins
The packaging process creates a JAR file in thetarget
directory of the plugin, for example target/foo-plugin-0.1.jar
. There are two ways to incorporate a binary plugin into an application.One is simply placing the plugin JAR file in your application's lib
directory. The other is to publish the plugin JAR to a compatible Maven repository and declare it as a dependency in grails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy
:dependencies {
compile "mycompany:myplugin:0.1"
}
Since binary plugins are packaged as JAR files, they are declared as dependencies in thedependencies
block, not in theplugins
block as you may be naturally inclined to do. Theplugins
block is used for declaring traditional source plugins packaged as zip files