...
grailsVersion=3.3.8
...
3 Upgrading from Grails 3.3.x
Version: 4.1.0
3 Upgrading from Grails 3.3.x
Bump up Grails Version
You will need to upgrade your Grails version defined in gradle.properties
.
Grails 3 app’s gradle.properties
Grails 4 app’s gradle.properties
...
grailsVersion=4.0.0
...
Bump up GORM Version
If you were using GORM, you will need to update the version defined in gradle.properties
.
Grails 3 app’s gradle.properties
...
gormVersion=6.1.10.RELEASE
...
Grails 4 app’s gradle.properties
...
gormVersion=7.0.2
...
Move GORM DSL Entries to runtime.groovy
GORM DSL entries should be move to runtime.groovy
. For instance, using following GORM configuration in the application.groovy
is not supported and will break the application:
grails.gorm.default.mapping = {
id generator: 'identity'
}
Spring 5 and Spring Boot 2.1
Grails 4.0 is built on Spring 5 and Spring Boot 2.1. See the migration guide and release notes if you are using Spring specific features.
Hibernate 5.4 and GORM 7.x
Grails 4.x supports a minimum version of Hibernate 5.4 and GORM 7.x. Several changes have been made to GORM to support the newer version of Hibernate and simplify GORM itself.
The details of these changes are covered in the GORM upgrade documentation.
Spring Boot 2.1 Actuator
Please check the Spring Boot Actuator documentation since it has changed substantially from Spring Boot 1.5 the version Grails 3.x used.
If you had configuration such as:
endpoints:
enabled: false
jmx:
enabled: true
unique-names: true
replace it with:
spring:
jmx:
unique-names: true
management:
endpoints:
enabled-by-default: false
Spring Boot Developer Tools and Spring Loaded
Previous versions of Grails used a reloading agent called Spring Loaded. Since this library is no longer maintained and does not support Java 11 support for Spring Loaded has been removed.
As a replacement, Grails 4 applications include Spring Boot Developer Tools dependencies in the build.gradle
build script. If you are migrating a Grails 3.x app, please include the following set of dependencies:
.
..
...
configurations {
developmentOnly
runtimeClasspath {
extendsFrom developmentOnly
}
}
dependencies {
developmentOnly("org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-devtools")
...
..
}
...
..
.
Also you should configure the necessary excludes for Spring Developer Tools in application.yml
:
spring:
devtools:
restart:
exclude:
- grails-app/views/**
- grails-app/i18n/**
- grails-app/conf/**
The above configuration prevents the server from restarting when views or message bundles are changed.
You can use Spring Developer Tools in combination with a browser extension such as the Chrome LiveReload extension to get automatic browser refresh when you change anything in your Grails application. |
Spring Boot Gradle Plugin Changes
Grails 4 is built on top of Spring Boot 2.1. Grails 3 apps were built on top of Spring Boot 1.x.
Your Grails 3 app’s build.gradle
may have such configuration:
bootRun {
addResources = true
...
}
Grails 4 apps are built on top of Spring Boot 2.1. Starting from Spring Boot 2.0, the addResources
property no longer exists. Instead, you need to set the sourceResources property to the source set that you want to use. Typically, that’s sourceSets.main
. This is described in the Spring Boot Gradle plugin’s documentation.
Your Grails 4 app’s build.gradle
can be configured:
bootRun {
sourceResources sourceSets.main
...
}
Building executable jars for Grails Plugins
The bootRepackage task has been replaced with bootJar and bootWar tasks for building executable jars and wars respectively. Both tasks extend their equivalent standard Gradle jar or war task, giving you access to all of the usual configuration options and behaviour.
If you had configuration such as:
// enable if you wish to package this plugin as a standalone application
bootRepackage.enabled = false
replace it with:
// enable if you wish to package this plugin as a standalone application
bootJar.enabled = false
Upgrading to Gradle 5
Grails 3 apps by default used Gradle 3.5. Grails 4 apps use Gradle 5.
To upgrade to Gradle 5, first do it in gradle.properties
gradleWrapperVersion=3.5
replace it with:
gradleWrapperVersion=5.0
Then execute:
./gradlew wrapper --gradle-version 5.0
Due to changes in Gradle 5, transitive dependencies are no longer resolved for plugins. If your project makes use of a plugin that has transitive dependencies, you will need to add those explicitly to your build.gradle
file.
If you customized your app’s build, other migrations may be necessary. Please check Gradle Upgrading your build documentation.
H2 Web Console
Spring Boot 2.1 includes native support for the H2 database web console. Since this is already included in Spring Boot the equivalent feature has been removed from Grails. The H2 console is therefore now available at /h2-console
instead of the previous URI of /dbconsole
. See Using H2’s Web Console in the Spring Boot documentation for more information.
Upgrade Hibernate
If you were using GORM for Hibernate implementation in your Grails 3 app, you will need to upgrade to Hibernate 5.4.
A Grails 3 build.gradle
such as:
dependencies {
...
compile "org.grails.plugins:hibernate5"
compile "org.hibernate:hibernate-core:5.1.5.Final"
}
will be in Grails 4:
dependencies {
...
compile "org.grails.plugins:hibernate5"
compile "org.hibernate:hibernate-core:5.4.0.Final"
}
Migrating to Geb 2.3
Geb 1.1.x (a JDK 1.7 compatible version) was the version shipped by default with Grails 3. Grails 4 is no longer compatible with Java 1.7. You should migrate to Geb 2.3.
In Grails 3, if your build.gradle looks like:
dependencies {
testCompile "org.grails.plugins:geb:1.1.2"
testRuntime "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-htmlunit-driver:2.47.1"
testRuntime "net.sourceforge.htmlunit:htmlunit:2.18"
}
In Grails 4, you should replace it with:
buildscript {
repositories {
...
}
dependencies {
...
classpath "gradle.plugin.com.energizedwork.webdriver-binaries:webdriver-binaries-gradle-plugin:$webdriverBinariesVersion" (1)
}
}
...
..
repositories {
...
}
apply plugin:"idea"
...
...
apply plugin:"com.energizedwork.webdriver-binaries" (1)
dependencies {
...
testCompile "org.grails.plugins:geb" (4)
testRuntime "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-chrome-driver:$seleniumVersion" (5)
testRuntime "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-firefox-driver:$seleniumVersion" (5)
testRuntime "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-safari-driver:$seleniumSafariDriverVersion" (5)
testCompile "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-remote-driver:$seleniumVersion" (5)
testCompile "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-api:$seleniumVersion" (5)
testCompile "org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-support:$seleniumVersion" (5)
}
webdriverBinaries {
chromedriver "$chromeDriverVersion" (2)
geckodriver "$geckodriverVersion" (3)
}
tasks.withType(Test) {
systemProperty "geb.env", System.getProperty('geb.env')
systemProperty "geb.build.reportsDir", reporting.file("geb/integrationTest")
systemProperty "webdriver.chrome.driver", System.getProperty('webdriver.chrome.driver')
systemProperty "webdriver.gecko.driver", System.getProperty('webdriver.gecko.driver')
}
gebVersion=2.3
seleniumVersion=3.12.0
webdriverBinariesVersion=1.4
hibernateCoreVersion=5.1.5.Final
chromeDriverVersion=2.44 (2)
geckodriverVersion=0.23.0 (3)
seleniumSafariDriverVersion=3.14.0
1 | Includes Webdriver binaries Gradle plugin. |
2 | Set the appropriate Webdriver for Chrome version. |
3 | Set the appropriate Webdriver for Firefox version. |
4 | Includes the Grails Geb Plugin dependency which has a transitive dependency to geb-spock . This is the dependency necessary to work with Geb and Spock. |
5 | Selenium and different driver dependencies. |
Create also a Geb Configuration file at src/integration-test/resources/GebConfig.groovy
.
import org.openqa.selenium.chrome.ChromeDriver
import org.openqa.selenium.chrome.ChromeOptions
import org.openqa.selenium.firefox.FirefoxDriver
import org.openqa.selenium.firefox.FirefoxOptions
import org.openqa.selenium.safari.SafariDriver
environments {
// You need to configure in Safari -> Develop -> Allowed Remote Automation
safari {
driver = { new SafariDriver() }
}
// run via “./gradlew -Dgeb.env=chrome iT”
chrome {
driver = { new ChromeDriver() }
}
// run via “./gradlew -Dgeb.env=chromeHeadless iT”
chromeHeadless {
driver = {
ChromeOptions o = new ChromeOptions()
o.addArguments('headless')
new ChromeDriver(o)
}
}
// run via “./gradlew -Dgeb.env=firefoxHeadless iT”
firefoxHeadless {
driver = {
FirefoxOptions o = new FirefoxOptions()
o.addArguments('-headless')
new FirefoxDriver(o)
}
}
// run via “./gradlew -Dgeb.env=firefox iT”
firefox {
driver = { new FirefoxDriver() }
}
}
Deprecated classes
The following classes, which were deprecated in Grails 3.x, have been removed in Grails 4. Please, check the list below to find a suitable replacement:
Removed Class |
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Grails-Java8
For those who have added a dependency on the grails-java8
plugin, all you should need to do is simply remove the dependency. All of the classes in the plugin have been moved out to their respective projects.
Profiles Deprecation
A few of the profiles supported in Grails 3.x will no longer be maintained going forward and as a result it is no longer possible to create applications when them in the shorthand form. When upgrading existing projects, it will be necessary to supply the version for these profiles.
-
org.grails.profiles:angularjs
→org.grails.profiles:angularjs:1.1.2
-
org.grails.profiles:webpack
→org.grails.profiles:webpack:1.1.6
-
org.grails.profiles:react-webpack
→org.grails.profiles:react-webpack:1.0.8
Scheduled Methods
In Grails 3 no configuration or additional changes were necessary to use the Spring @Scheduled
annotation. In Grails 4 you must apply the @EnableScheduling
annotation to your application class in order for scheduling to work.