4 Configuration - Reference Documentation
Authors: Graeme Rocher, Peter Ledbrook, Marc Palmer, Jeff Brown, Luke Daley, Burt Beckwith, Lari Hotari
Version: 3.1.4
Table of Contents
4 Configuration
It may seem odd that in a framework that embraces "convention-over-configuration" that we tackle this topic now. With Grails' default settings you can actually develop an application without doing any configuration whatsoever, as the quick start demonstrates, but it's important to learn where and how to override the conventions when you need to. Later sections of the user guide will mention what configuration settings you can use, but not how to set them. The assumption is that you have at least read the first section of this chapter!4.1 Basic Configuration
Configuration in Grails is generally split across 2 areas: build configuration and runtime configuration.Build configuration is generally done via Gradle and thebuild.gradle file. Runtime configuration is by default specified in YAML in the grails-app/conf/application.yml file.If you prefer to use Grails 2.0-style Groovy configuration then you can create an additional grails-app/conf/application.groovy file to specify configuration using Groovy's ConfigSlurper syntax.For Groovy configuration the following variables are available to the configuration script:| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| userHome | Location of the home directory for the account that is running the Grails application. |
| grailsHome | Location of the directory where you installed Grails. If the GRAILS_HOME environment variable is set, it is used. |
| appName | The application name as it appears in application.properties. |
| appVersion | The application version as it appears in application.properties. |
my.tmp.dir = "${userHome}/.grails/tmp"application.yml, use the grailsApplication object, which is available as a variable in controllers and tag libraries:class MyController {
def hello() {
def recipient = grailsApplication.config.getProperty('foo.bar.hello') render "Hello ${recipient}"
}
}config property of the grailsApplication object is an instance of the Config interface and provides a number of useful methods to read the configuration of the application.In particular, the getProperty method (seen above) is useful for efficiently retrieving configuration properties, while specifying the property type (the default type is String) and/or providing a default fallback value.class MyController { def hello(Recipient recipient) {
//Retrieve Integer property 'foo.bar.max.hellos', otherwise use value of 5
def max = grailsApplication.config.getProperty('foo.bar.max.hellos', Integer, 5) //Retrieve property 'foo.bar.greeting' without specifying type (default is String), otherwise use value "Hello"
def greeting = grailsApplication.config.getProperty('foo.bar.greeting', "Hello") def message = (recipient.receivedHelloCount >= max) ?
"Sorry, you've been greeted the max number of times" : "${greeting}, ${recipient}"
} render message
}
}Config instance is a merged configuration based on Spring's PropertySource concept and reads configuration from the environment, system properties and the local application configuration merging them into a single object.GrailsApplication can be easily injected into services and other Grails artifacts:import grails.core.*class MyService { GrailsApplication grailsApplication String greeting() { def recipient = grailsApplication.config.getProperty('foo.bar.hello') return "Hello ${recipient}" } }
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.*class MyController { @Value('${foo.bar.hello}') String recipient def hello() { render "Hello ${recipient}" } }
In Groovy code you must use single quotes around the string for the value of the Value annotation otherwise it is interpreted as a GString not a Spring expression.
As you can see, when accessing configuration settings you use the same dot notation as when you define them.
4.1.1 Options for the yml format Config
application.yml was introduced in Grails 3.0 for an alternative format for the configuration tasks.Using system properties / command line arguments
Suppose you are using theJDBC_CONNECTION_STRING command line argument and you want to access the same in the yml file then it can be done in the following manner:production:
dataSource:
url: '${JDBC_CONNECTION_STRING}'build.gradle to modify the bootRun target if grails run-app is used to start the applicationrun {
systemProperties = System.properties
}test task as followstest {
systemProperties = System.properties
}4.1.2 Built in options
Grails has a set of core settings that are worth knowing about. Their defaults are suitable for most projects, but it's important to understand what they do because you may need one or more of them later.Runtime settings
On the runtime front, i.e.grails-app/conf/application.yml, there are quite a few more core settings:
grails.enable.native2ascii- Set this to false if you do not require native2ascii conversion of Grails i18n properties files (default: true).grails.views.default.codec- Sets the default encoding regime for GSPs - can be one of 'none', 'html', or 'base64' (default: 'none'). To reduce risk of XSS attacks, set this to 'html'.grails.views.gsp.encoding- The file encoding used for GSP source files (default: 'utf-8').grails.mime.file.extensions- Whether to use the file extension to dictate the mime type in Content Negotiation (default: true).grails.mime.types- A map of supported mime types used for Content Negotiation.grails.serverURL- A string specifying the server URL portion of absolute links, including server name e.g. grails.serverURL="http://my.yourportal.com". See createLink. Also used by redirects.grails.views.gsp.sitemesh.preprocess- Determines whether SiteMesh preprocessing happens. Disabling this slows down page rendering, but if you need SiteMesh to parse the generated HTML from a GSP view then disabling it is the right option. Don't worry if you don't understand this advanced property: leave it set to true.grails.reload.excludesandgrails.reload.includes- Configuring these directives determines the reload behavior for project specific source files. Each directive takes a list of strings that are the class names for project source files that should be excluded from reloading behavior or included accordingly when running the application in development with therun-appcommand. If thegrails.reload.includesdirective is configured, then only the classes in that list will be reloaded.
4.1.3 Logging
By default logging in Grails 3.0 is handled by the Logback logging framework and can be configured with thegrails-app/conf/logback.groovy file.If you prefer XML you can replace theFor more information on configuring logging refer to the Logback documentation on the subject.logback.groovyfile with alogback.xmlfile instead.
4.1.4 GORM
Grails provides the following GORM configuration options:grails.gorm.failOnError- If set totrue, causes thesave()method on domain classes to throw agrails.validation.ValidationExceptionif validation fails during a save. This option may also be assigned a list of Strings representing package names. If the value is a list of Strings then the failOnError behavior will only be applied to domain classes in those packages (including sub-packages). See the save method docs for more information.
grails:
gorm:
failOnError: truegrails:
gorm:
failOnError:
- com.companyname.somepackage
- com.companyname.someotherpackagegrails.gorm.autoFlush- If set totrue, causes the merge, save and delete methods to flush the session, replacing the need to explicitly flush usingsave(flush: true).
4.2 The Application Class
Every new Grails application features anApplication class witin the the grails-app/init directory.The Application class subclasses the GrailsAutoConfiguration class and features a static void main method, meaning it can be run as a regular application.
4.2.1 Executing the Application Class
There are several ways to execute theApplication class, if you are using an IDE then you can simply right click on the class and run it directly from your IDE which will start your Grails application.This is also useful for debugging since you can debug directly from the IDE without having to connect a remote debugger when using the run-app --debug-jvm command from the command line.You can also package your application into a runnable WAR file, for example:$ grails package
$ java -jar build/libs/myapp-0.1.war4.2.2 Customizing the Application Class
There are several ways in which you can customize theApplication class.Customizing Scanning
By default Grails will scan all known source directories for controllers, domain class etc., however if there are packages in other JAR files you wish to scan you can do so by overriding thepackageNames() method of the Application class:class Application extends GrailsAutoConfiguration { @Override Collection<String> packageNames() { super.packageNames() + ['my.additional.package'] } … }
Registering Additional Beans
TheApplication class can also be used as a source for Spring bean definitions, simply define a method annotated with the Bean and the returned object will become a Spring bean. The name of the method is used as the bean name:class Application extends GrailsAutoConfiguration { @Bean MyType myBean() { return new MyType() } … }
4.2.3 The Application LifeCycle
TheApplication class also implements the GrailsApplicationLifeCycle interface which all plugins implement.This means that the Application class can be used to perform the same functions as a plugin. You can override the regular plugins hooks such as doWithSpring, doWithApplicationContext and so on by overriding the appropriate method:class Application extends GrailsAutoConfiguration {
@Override
Closure doWithSpring() {
{->
mySpringBean(MyType)
}
} …
}4.3 Environments
Per Environment Configuration
Grails supports the concept of per environment configuration. Theapplication.yml and application.groovy files in the grails-app/conf directory can use per-environment configuration using either YAML or the syntax provided by ConfigSlurper. As an example consider the following default application.yml definition provided by Grails:environments:
development:
dataSource:
dbCreate: create-drop
url: jdbc:h2:mem:devDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
test:
dataSource:
dbCreate: update
url: jdbc:h2:mem:testDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
production:
dataSource:
dbCreate: update
url: jdbc:h2:prodDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
properties:
jmxEnabled: true
initialSize: 5
...application.groovy as follows:dataSource {
pooled = false
driverClassName = "org.h2.Driver"
username = "sa"
password = ""
}
environments {
development {
dataSource {
dbCreate = "create-drop"
url = "jdbc:h2:mem:devDb"
}
}
test {
dataSource {
dbCreate = "update"
url = "jdbc:h2:mem:testDb"
}
}
production {
dataSource {
dbCreate = "update"
url = "jdbc:h2:prodDb"
}
}
}environments block specifies per environment settings for the dbCreate and url properties of the DataSource.Packaging and Running for Different Environments
Grails' command line has built in capabilities to execute any command within the context of a specific environment. The format is:grails [environment] [command name]
dev, prod, and test for development, production and test. For example to create a WAR for the test environment you wound run:grails test war
grails.env variable to any command:grails -Dgrails.env=UAT run-app
Programmatic Environment Detection
Within your code, such as in a Gant script or a bootstrap class you can detect the environment using the Environment class:import grails.util.Environment...switch (Environment.current) { case Environment.DEVELOPMENT: configureForDevelopment() break case Environment.PRODUCTION: configureForProduction() break }
Per Environment Bootstrapping
It's often desirable to run code when your application starts up on a per-environment basis. To do so you can use thegrails-app/init/BootStrap.groovy file's support for per-environment execution:def init = { ServletContext ctx ->
environments {
production {
ctx.setAttribute("env", "prod")
}
development {
ctx.setAttribute("env", "dev")
}
}
ctx.setAttribute("foo", "bar")
}Generic Per Environment Execution
The previousBootStrap example uses the grails.util.Environment class internally to execute. You can also use this class yourself to execute your own environment specific logic:Environment.executeForCurrentEnvironment {
production {
// do something in production
}
development {
// do something only in development
}
}4.4 The DataSource
Since Grails is built on Java technology setting up a data source requires some knowledge of JDBC (the technology that doesn't stand for Java Database Connectivity).If you use a database other than H2 you need a JDBC driver. For example for MySQL you would need Connector/J.Drivers typically come in the form of a JAR archive. It's best to use the dependency resolution to resolve the jar if it's available in a Maven repository, for example you could add a dependency for the MySQL driver like this:dependencies {
runtime 'mysql:mysql-connector-java:5.1.29'
}lib directory.Once you have the JAR resolved you need to get familiar with how Grails manages its database configuration. The configuration can be maintained in either grails-app/conf/application.groovy or grails-app/conf/application.yml. These files contain the dataSource definition which includes the following settings:
driverClassName- The class name of the JDBC driverusername- The username used to establish a JDBC connectionpassword- The password used to establish a JDBC connectionurl- The JDBC URL of the databasedbCreate- Whether to auto-generate the database from the domain model - one of 'create-drop', 'create', 'update' or 'validate'pooled- Whether to use a pool of connections (defaults to true)logSql- Enable SQL logging to stdoutformatSql- Format logged SQLdialect- A String or Class that represents the Hibernate dialect used to communicate with the database. See the org.hibernate.dialect package for available dialects.readOnly- Iftruemakes the DataSource read-only, which results in the connection pool callingsetReadOnly(true)on eachConnectiontransactional- Iffalseleaves the DataSource's transactionManager bean outside the chained BE1PC transaction manager implementation. This only applies to additional datasources.persistenceInterceptor- The default datasource is automatically wired up to the persistence interceptor, other datasources are not wired up automatically unless this is set totrueproperties- Extra properties to set on the DataSource bean. See the Tomcat Pool documentation. There is also a Javadoc format documentation of the properties.jmxExport- Iffalse, will disable registration of JMX MBeans for all DataSources. By default JMX MBeans are added for DataSources withjmxEnabled = truein properties.
application.groovy may be something like:dataSource {
pooled = true
dbCreate = "update"
url = "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/my_database"
driverClassName = "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"
dialect = org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5InnoDBDialect
username = "username"
password = "password"
properties {
jmxEnabled = true
initialSize = 5
maxActive = 50
minIdle = 5
maxIdle = 25
maxWait = 10000
maxAge = 10 * 60000
timeBetweenEvictionRunsMillis = 5000
minEvictableIdleTimeMillis = 60000
validationQuery = "SELECT 1"
validationQueryTimeout = 3
validationInterval = 15000
testOnBorrow = true
testWhileIdle = true
testOnReturn = false
jdbcInterceptors = "ConnectionState;StatementCache(max=200)"
defaultTransactionIsolation = java.sql.Connection.TRANSACTION_READ_COMMITTED
}
}When configuring the DataSource do not include the type or the def keyword before any of the configuration settings as Groovy will treat these as local variable definitions and they will not be processed. For example the following is invalid:
dataSource {
boolean pooled = true // type declaration results in ignored local variable
…
}dataSource {
pooled = true
dbCreate = "update"
url = "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/my_database"
driverClassName = "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"
dialect = org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5InnoDBDialect
username = "username"
password = "password"
properties {
// Documentation for Tomcat JDBC Pool
// http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/jdbc-pool.html#Common_Attributes
// https://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/api/org/apache/tomcat/jdbc/pool/PoolConfiguration.html
jmxEnabled = true
initialSize = 5
maxActive = 50
minIdle = 5
maxIdle = 25
maxWait = 10000
maxAge = 10 * 60000
timeBetweenEvictionRunsMillis = 5000
minEvictableIdleTimeMillis = 60000
validationQuery = "SELECT 1"
validationQueryTimeout = 3
validationInterval = 15000
testOnBorrow = true
testWhileIdle = true
testOnReturn = false
ignoreExceptionOnPreLoad = true
// http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/jdbc-pool.html#JDBC_interceptors
jdbcInterceptors = "ConnectionState;StatementCache(max=200)"
defaultTransactionIsolation = java.sql.Connection.TRANSACTION_READ_COMMITTED // safe default
// controls for leaked connections
abandonWhenPercentageFull = 100 // settings are active only when pool is full
removeAbandonedTimeout = 120
removeAbandoned = true
// use JMX console to change this setting at runtime
logAbandoned = false // causes stacktrace recording overhead, use only for debugging
// JDBC driver properties
// Mysql as example
dbProperties {
// Mysql specific driver properties
// http://dev.mysql.com/doc/connector-j/en/connector-j-reference-configuration-properties.html
// let Tomcat JDBC Pool handle reconnecting
autoReconnect=false
// truncation behaviour
jdbcCompliantTruncation=false
// mysql 0-date conversion
zeroDateTimeBehavior='convertToNull'
// Tomcat JDBC Pool's StatementCache is used instead, so disable mysql driver's cache
cachePrepStmts=false
cacheCallableStmts=false
// Tomcat JDBC Pool's StatementFinalizer keeps track
dontTrackOpenResources=true
// performance optimization: reduce number of SQLExceptions thrown in mysql driver code
holdResultsOpenOverStatementClose=true
// enable MySQL query cache - using server prep stmts will disable query caching
useServerPrepStmts=false
// metadata caching
cacheServerConfiguration=true
cacheResultSetMetadata=true
metadataCacheSize=100
// timeouts for TCP/IP
connectTimeout=15000
socketTimeout=120000
// timer tuning (disable)
maintainTimeStats=false
enableQueryTimeouts=false
// misc tuning
noDatetimeStringSync=true
}
}
}More on dbCreate
Hibernate can automatically create the database tables required for your domain model. You have some control over when and how it does this through thedbCreate property, which can take these values:
- create - Drops the existing schema and creates the schema on startup, dropping existing tables, indexes, etc. first.
- create-drop - Same as create, but also drops the tables when the application shuts down cleanly.
- update - Creates missing tables and indexes, and updates the current schema without dropping any tables or data. Note that this can't properly handle many schema changes like column renames (you're left with the old column containing the existing data).
- validate - Makes no changes to your database. Compares the configuration with the existing database schema and reports warnings.
- any other value - does nothing
dbCreate setting completely, which is recommended once your schema is relatively stable and definitely when your application and database are deployed in production. Database changes are then managed through proper migrations, either with SQL scripts or a migration tool like Liquibase (the Database Migration plugin uses Liquibase and is tightly integrated with Grails and GORM).
4.4.1 DataSources and Environments
The previous example configuration assumes you want the same config for all environments: production, test, development etc.Grails' DataSource definition is "environment aware", however, so you can do:dataSource {
pooled = true
driverClassName = "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"
dialect = org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5InnoDBDialect
// other common settings here
}environments {
production {
dataSource {
url = "jdbc:mysql://liveip.com/liveDb"
// other environment-specific settings here
}
}
}4.4.2 Automatic Database Migration
ThedbCreate property of the DataSource definition is important as it dictates what Grails should do at runtime with regards to automatically generating the database tables from GORM classes. The options are described in the DataSource section:
createcreate-dropupdatevalidate- no value
dbCreate is by default set to "create-drop", but at some point in development (and certainly once you go to production) you'll need to stop dropping and re-creating the database every time you start up your server.It's tempting to switch to update so you retain existing data and only update the schema when your code changes, but Hibernate's update support is very conservative. It won't make any changes that could result in data loss, and doesn't detect renamed columns or tables, so you'll be left with the old one and will also have the new one.Grails supports migrations with Flyway or Liquibase using the same mechanism provided by Spring Boot.
4.4.3 Transaction-aware DataSource Proxy
The actualdataSource bean is wrapped in a transaction-aware proxy so you will be given the connection that's being used by the current transaction or Hibernate Session if one is active.If this were not the case, then retrieving a connection from the dataSource would be a new connection, and you wouldn't be able to see changes that haven't been committed yet (assuming you have a sensible transaction isolation setting, e.g. READ_COMMITTED or better).The "real" unproxied dataSource is still available to you if you need access to it; its bean name is dataSourceUnproxied.You can access this bean like any other Spring bean, i.e. using dependency injection:class MyService { def dataSourceUnproxied
…
}ApplicationContext:def dataSourceUnproxied = ctx.dataSourceUnproxied
4.4.4 Database Console
The H2 database console is a convenient feature of H2 that provides a web-based interface to any database that you have a JDBC driver for, and it's very useful to view the database you're developing against. It's especially useful when running against an in-memory database.You can access the console by navigating to http://localhost:8080/dbconsole in a browser. The URI can be configured using thegrails.dbconsole.urlRoot attribute in application.groovy and defaults to '/dbconsole'.The console is enabled by default in development mode and can be disabled or enabled in other environments by using the grails.dbconsole.enabled attribute in application.groovy. For example, you could enable the console in production like this:environments {
production {
grails.serverURL = "http://www.changeme.com"
grails.dbconsole.enabled = true
grails.dbconsole.urlRoot = '/admin/dbconsole'
}
development {
grails.serverURL = "http://localhost:8080/${appName}"
}
test {
grails.serverURL = "http://localhost:8080/${appName}"
}
}If you enable the console in production be sure to guard access to it using a trusted security framework.
Configuration
By default the console is configured for an H2 database which will work with the default settings if you haven't configured an external database - you just need to change the JDBC URL tojdbc:h2:mem:devDB. If you've configured an external database (e.g. MySQL, Oracle, etc.) then you can use the Saved Settings dropdown to choose a settings template and fill in the url and username/password information from your application.groovy.
4.4.5 Multiple Datasources
By default all domain classes share a singleDataSource and a single database, but you have the option to partition your domain classes into two or more DataSources.Configuring Additional DataSources
The defaultDataSource configuration in grails-app/conf/application.yml looks something like this:---
dataSource:
pooled: true
jmxExport: true
driverClassName: org.h2.Driver
username: sa
password:environments:
development:
dataSource:
dbCreate: create-drop
url: jdbc:h2:mem:devDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
test:
dataSource:
dbCreate: update
url: jdbc:h2:mem:testDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
production:
dataSource:
dbCreate: update
url: jdbc:h2:prodDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
properties:
jmxEnabled: true
initialSize: 5DataSource with the Spring bean named dataSource. To configure extra DataSources, add a dataSources block (at the top level, in an environment block, or both, just like the standard DataSource definition) with a custom name. For example, this configuration adds a second DataSource, using MySQL in the development environment and Oracle in production:---
dataSources:
dataSource:
pooled: true
jmxExport: true
driverClassName: org.h2.Driver
username: sa
password:
lookup:
dialect: org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLInnoDBDialect
driverClassName: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
username: lookup
password: secret
url: jdbc:mysql://localhost/lookup
dbCreate: updateenvironments:
development:
dataSources:
dataSource:
dbCreate: create-drop
url: jdbc:h2:mem:devDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
test:
dataSources:
dataSource:
dbCreate: update
url: jdbc:h2:mem:testDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
production:
dataSources:
dataSource:
dbCreate: update
url: jdbc:h2:prodDb;MVCC=TRUE;LOCK_TIMEOUT=10000;DB_CLOSE_ON_EXIT=FALSE
properties:
jmxEnabled: true
initialSize: 5
…
lookup:
dialect: org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle10gDialect
driverClassName: oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
username: lookup
password: secret
url: jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:lookup
dbCreate: updateConfiguring Domain Classes
If a domain class has noDataSource configuration, it defaults to the standard 'dataSource'. Set the datasource property in the mapping block to configure a non-default DataSource. For example, if you want to use the ZipCode domain to use the 'lookup' DataSource, configure it like this:class ZipCode { String code static mapping = {
datasource 'lookup'
}
}DataSources. Use the datasources property with a list of names to configure more than one, for example:class ZipCode { String code static mapping = {
datasources(['lookup', 'auditing'])
}
}DataSource and one or more others, use the special name 'DEFAULT' to indicate the default DataSource:class ZipCode { String code static mapping = {
datasources(['lookup', 'DEFAULT'])
}
}DataSources use the special value 'ALL':class ZipCode { String code static mapping = {
datasource 'ALL'
}
}Namespaces and GORM Methods
If a domain class uses more than oneDataSource then you can use the namespace implied by each DataSource name to make GORM calls for a particular DataSource. For example, consider this class which uses two DataSources:class ZipCode { String code static mapping = {
datasources(['lookup', 'auditing'])
}
}DataSource specified is the default when not using an explicit namespace, so in this case we default to 'lookup'. But you can call GORM methods on the 'auditing' DataSource with the DataSource name, for example:def zipCode = ZipCode.auditing.get(42) … zipCode.auditing.save()
DataSource to the method call in both the static case and the instance case.Hibernate Mapped Domain Classes
You can also partition annotated Java classes into separate datasources. Classes using the default datasource are registered ingrails-app/conf/hibernate.cfg.xml. To specify that an annotated class uses a non-default datasource, create a hibernate.cfg.xml file for that datasource with the file name prefixed with the datasource name.For example if the Book class is in the default datasource, you would register that in grails-app/conf/hibernate.cfg.xml:<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?> <!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration PUBLIC '-//Hibernate/Hibernate Configuration DTD 3.0//EN' 'http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd'> <hibernate-configuration> <session-factory> <mapping class='org.example.Book'/> </session-factory> </hibernate-configuration>
Library class is in the "ds2" datasource, you would register that in grails-app/conf/ds2_hibernate.cfg.xml:<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?> <!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration PUBLIC '-//Hibernate/Hibernate Configuration DTD 3.0//EN' 'http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd'> <hibernate-configuration> <session-factory> <mapping class='org.example.Library'/> </session-factory> </hibernate-configuration>
Services
Like Domain classes, by default Services use the defaultDataSource and PlatformTransactionManager. To configure a Service to use a different DataSource, use the static datasource property, for example:class DataService { static datasource = 'lookup' void someMethod(...) {
…
}
}DataSource, so be sure to only make changes for domain classes whose DataSource is the same as the Service.Note that the datasource specified in a service has no bearing on which datasources are used for domain classes; that's determined by their declared datasources in the domain classes themselves. It's used to declare which transaction manager to use.What you'll see is that if you have a Foo domain class in dataSource1 and a Bar domain class in dataSource2, and WahooService uses dataSource1, a service method that saves a new Foo and a new Bar will only be transactional for Foo since they share the datasource. The transaction won't affect the Bar instance. If you want both to be transactional you'd need to use two services and XA datasources for two-phase commit, e.g. with the Atomikos plugin.Transactions across multiple datasources
Grails uses the Best Efforts 1PC pattern for handling transactions across multiple datasources.The Best Efforts 1PC pattern is fairly general but can fail in some circumstances that the developer must be aware of. This is a non-XA pattern that involves a synchronized single-phase commit of a number of resources. Because the 2PC is not used, it can never be as safe as an XA transaction, but is often good enough if the participants are aware of the compromises.The basic idea is to delay the commit of all resources as late as possible in a transaction so that the only thing that can go wrong is an infrastructure failure (not a business-processing error). Systems that rely on Best Efforts 1PC reason that infrastructure failures are rare enough that they can afford to take the risk in return for higher throughput. If business-processing services are also designed to be idempotent, then little can go wrong in practice.The BE1PC implementation was added in Grails 2.3.6. . Before this change additional datasources didn't take part in transactions initiated in Grails. The transactions in additional datasources were basically in auto commit mode. In some cases this might be the wanted behavior. One reason might be performance: on the start of each new transaction, the BE1PC transaction manager creates a new transaction to each datasource. It's possible to leave an additional datasource out of the BE1PC transaction manager by settingtransactional = false in the respective configuration block of the additional dataSource. Datasources with readOnly = true will also be left out of the chained transaction manager (since 2.3.7).By default, the BE1PC implementation will add all beans implementing the Spring PlatformTransactionManager interface to the chained BE1PC transaction manager. For example, a possible JMSTransactionManager bean in the Grails application context would be added to the Grails BE1PC transaction manager's chain of transaction managers.You can exclude transaction manager beans from the BE1PC implementation with the this configuration option:
grails.transaction.chainedTransactionManagerPostProcessor.blacklistPattern = '.*'
transactional = false or readOnly = true will be skipped and using this configuration option is not required in that case.XA and Two-phase Commit
When the Best Efforts 1PC pattern isn't suitable for handling transactions across multiple transactional resources (not only datasources), there are several options available for adding XA/2PC support to Grails applications.The Spring transactions documentation contains information about integrating the JTA/XA transaction manager of different application servers. In this case, you can configure a bean with the nametransactionManager manually in resources.groovy or resources.xml file.There is also Atomikos plugin available for XA support in Grails applications.
4.5 Versioning
Detecting Versions at Runtime
You can detect the application version using Grails' support for application metadata using the GrailsApplication class. For example within controllers there is an implicit grailsApplication variable that can be used:def version = grailsApplication.metadata.getApplicationVersion()
def grailsVersion = grailsApplication.metadata.getGrailsVersion()
GrailsUtil class:import grails.util.GrailsUtil
…
def grailsVersion = GrailsUtil.grailsVersion4.6 Project Documentation
Since Grails 1.2, the documentation engine that powers the creation of this documentation has been available for your own Grails projects.The documentation engine uses a variation on the Textile syntax to automatically create project documentation with smart linking, formatting etc.Creating project documentation
To use the engine you need to follow a few conventions. First, you need to create asrc/docs/guide directory where your documentation source files will go. Then, you need to create the source docs themselves. Each chapter should have its own gdoc file as should all numbered sub-sections. You will end up with something like:+ src/docs/guide/introduction.gdoc + src/docs/guide/introduction/changes.gdoc + src/docs/guide/gettingStarted.gdoc + src/docs/guide/configuration.gdoc + src/docs/guide/configuration/build.gdoc + src/docs/guide/configuration/build/controllers.gdoc
src/docs/guide/toc.yml file that contains the structure and titles for each section. This file is in YAML format and basically represents the structure of the user guide in tree form. For example, the above files could be represented as:introduction:
title: Introduction
changes: Change Log
gettingStarted: Getting Started
configuration:
title: Configuration
build:
title: Build Config
controllers: Specifying Controllerstitle: plus the title of the section as seen by the end user. Every sub-section then has its own line after the title. Leaf nodes, i.e. those without any sub-sections, declare their title on the same line as the section name but after the colon.That's it. You can easily add, remove, and move sections within the toc.yml to restructure the generated user guide. You should also make sure that all section names, i.e. the gdoc filenames, should be unique since they are used for creating internal links and for the HTML filenames. Don't worry though, the documentation engine will warn you of duplicate section names.Creating reference items
Reference items appear in the Quick Reference section of the documentation. Each reference item belongs to a category and a category is a directory located in thesrc/docs/ref directory. For example, suppose you have defined a new controller method called renderPDF. That belongs to the Controllers category so you would create a gdoc text file at the following location:+ src/docs/ref/Controllers/renderPDF.gdoc
Configuring Output Properties
There are various properties you can set within yourgrails-app/conf/application.groovy file that customize the output of the documentation such as:
- grails.doc.title - The title of the documentation
- grails.doc.subtitle - The subtitle of the documentation
- grails.doc.authors - The authors of the documentation
- grails.doc.license - The license of the software
- grails.doc.copyright - The copyright message to display
- grails.doc.footer - The footer to use
- grails.doc.css - The location of a directory containing custom CSS files (type
java.io.File) - grails.doc.js - The location of a directory containing custom JavaScript files (type
java.io.File) - grails.doc.style - The location of a directory containing custom HTML templates for the guide (type
java.io.File) - grails.doc.images - The location of a directory containing image files for use in the style templates and within the documentation pages themselves (type
java.io.File)
grails.doc.css and then put a custom.css file in the corresponding directory. Grails will automatically include this CSS file in the guide. You can also place a custom-pdf.css file in that directory. This allows you to override the styles for the PDF version of the guide.Generating Documentation
Add the plugin in yourbuild.gradle:apply plugin: "org.grails.grails-doc"gradle docs
docs/manual/index.html which can be opened in a browser to view your documentation.Documentation Syntax
As mentioned the syntax is largely similar to Textile or Confluence style wiki markup. The following sections walk you through the syntax basics.Basic Formatting
Monospace:monospace
@monospace@
_italic_
*bold*

!http://grails.org/images/new/grailslogo_topNav.png!
!someFolder/my_diagram.png!
grails.doc.images setting in application.groovy like so:grails.doc.images = new File("src/docs/images")
Linking
There are several ways to create links with the documentation generator. A basic external link can either be defined using confluence or textile style markup:[Pivotal|http://www.pivotal.io/oss]
"Pivotal":http://www.pivotal.io/ossguide: prefix with the name of the section you want to link to:[Intro|guide:introduction]
[renderPDF|controllers]
api: prefix. For example:[String|api:java.lang.String]
grails-app/conf/application.groovy. For example:grails.doc.api.org.hibernate=
"http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/stable/core/javadocs"org.hibernate package to link to the Hibernate website's API docs.Lists and Headings
Headings can be created by specifying the letter 'h' followed by a number and then a dot:h3.<space>Heading3 h4.<space>Heading4
* item 1 ** subitem 1 ** subitem 2 * item 2
# item 1
table macro:| Name | Number |
|---|---|
| Albert | 46 |
| Wilma | 1348 |
| James | 12 |
{table}
*Name* | *Number*
Albert | 46
Wilma | 1348
James | 12
{table}Code and Notes
You can define code blocks with thecode macro:class Book {
String title
}{code}
class Book {
String title
}
{code}<hello>world</hello>
{code:xml}
<hello>world</hello>
{code}This is a note!
{note}
This is a note!
{note}This is a warning!
{warning}
This is a warning!
{warning}4.7 Dependency Resolution
Dependency resolution is handled by the Gradle build tool, all dependencies are defined in thebuild.gradle file. Refer to the Gradle user guide for more information.
