Grails dependencies between custom plugin and war file - grails

I've created a custom Grails plugin, and this plugin needs two other war files to work fine. Can someone tell me how to make that plugin depends on those war files ?
What should I put in the BuildConfig.groovy ?
Thanx all.

If i get you question, what you need is something to build the app, the plugins and war all together. You could use Maven, Gradle or Gant.
Here is a similar question: How to set up a multiproject Grails using Gradle?

Related

How to exclude grails plugin jar from war file

Grails 3.2.5. Build.gradle has mail plugin:
compile "org.grails.plugins:mail:2.0.0.RC6"
In deploying a war to production I need to remove javax.mail-1.5.6.jar from WEB-INF/lib since that jar must be in the Tomcat lib when using a JNDI mail resource. So how do I keep the mail plugin but remove the offending jar file from the war? I knew how to do this in Grails 2.x. Via the gradle war task in build.gradle I have tried to exclude the file (doesn't work - the jar drifts in from a plugin somehow), and have tried to filter the file out. When I build the war I get two files - "app-0.1.war" and "app-0.1.war.original". The "original" file has the WEB-INF/lib/javax.mail jar filtered out, but the real, complete war still has it.
So how do I prevent that plugin jar from getting into the war file? Thanks.
One way to do it is with something like this:
war {
rootSpec.exclude '**/javax.mail*.jar'
}
(you may need to adjust depending on whether or not you want to also exclude the javax.mail-api jar file along with the javax.mail jar)
See https://github.com/jeffbrown/excludejar/blob/67734ac0c65cdbead468f1e65bcfc29041cd2279/build.gradle#L70-L72

Grails 3 Application or Plugin

If I'm looking at project source code (in Intellij) how can I tell whether the Grails source code I'm looking at is an Application or a Plugin?
I get it that the output of a Grails Application build is a WAR, and a JAR for a Plugin but I can't figure out how to tell the difference by looking at the source code.
Bonus question: If it is a multi-module project, how do I tell which module is the Application and which modules are the Plugins? Or am I missing some important concept here?
Plugins can be run as applications as well and will often have an Application.groovy file. Plugins will have a <pluginname>GrailsPlugin.groovy file which sets up the plugin. In grails 3, this is in /src/main/groovy file structure.

Adding in-place plugin to grails 3 project

In grails 2.x, we were allowed to add an in place plugin by adding following in BuildConfig.groovy
grails.plugin.location."my-plugin" = "../my-plugin"
My question is, can we add our local plugins similarly in-place in grails3.0 as well or there is some other way to do this in grails.
Actual purpose is to test the plugin whether it's working properly or not before pushing it to bintray.
Yes, there is. Grails 3 is based on Gradle so multi-project gradle builds solve your issue.
Basically you add dependency as:
compile project(':../my-custom-plugin')
and has to modify settings.gradle to include plugin:
include '../my-custom-plugin'
Check Grails documentation on Plugins and Multi-Project Builds in http://grails.github.io/grails-doc/latest/guide/plugins.html
Other way is to install plugin in local maven repository using gradle publishToMavenLocal command and resolve if from there, before publishing to Bintray or other dependency repository.
Additionally since Grails 3.1.1, reloading is now supported for 'inline' plugins. Check https://github.com/grails/grails-core/releases/tag/v3.1.1 and http://grails.io/post/138665751278/grails-3-gradle-multi-project-builds
It is done using grails { plugins { syntax. Copied from docs:
grails {
plugins {
compile ":hibernate"
compile project(':myplugin')
}
}
This multi-project thing is a bit too big to answer in a short post. I just recently started with it, but, thankfully, I now have the hang of it. There's a tutorial on my site with a plugin handling the domain classes and services and all other sub-projects (just one, a web application in this example) using the plugin. The code is also downloadable. Here's the link: http://www.databaseapplications.com.au/grails-multi-app.jsp Make no mistake, there are a few things to watch out for.

How to run a local plugin in Grails 2.0?

In Grails, there is a variant how to include local plugin from sources. According to docs, one may type in BuildConfig.groovy:
// 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"
The problem is that it doesn't work in Grails 2.0.RC1. I've tried to do grails clean, to install plugin with grails install-plugin and to place it to BuildConfig.groovy. Still unable to resolve.
This works for me
grails.plugin.location.shiro = "/home/dilbert/dev/plugins/grails-shiro"
Where shiro is the name of the plugin (not the name of the directory it's in). Make sure the path to the plugin is either an absolute path or the relative path to the plugin from the application.
I've found that this sometimes doesn't work if the plugin is listed in application.properties or BuildConfig.groovy, so if it is, remove it, then execute grails clean and restart the app.
You can also install the plugin into your local maven cache.
The documentation speaks about this:
3.7.10 Deploying to a Maven Repository
maven-install
The maven-install command will install the Grails project or plugin artifact into your local Maven cache:
grails maven-install
This has the advantage of allowing you to include the plugin in your parent application using the more common ":plugin-name:version" syntax
Which allows your application to determine the best place to retrieve the plugin when in production. From an internal maven-repo or equivalent.
With Grails 3.x there is another way to do this. Suppose you've a grails app and plugin (source code) inside the same project directory:
/my-project
---/my-app
---/grails-shiro
To run your local plugin, you must create a settings.gradle file in the my-projectdirectory specifying the location of your application and plugin:
include 'my-app', 'grails-shiro'
Then add the dependency in your application's build.gradle:
compile project(':grails-shiro')
You've done.
Look at the plugins documentation for more information.
Surround the plugin name with quotes in case it contains dashes:
grails.plugin.location.'plugin-name-with-dashes' = "<path>"
You can add the .zip file for the plugin in your /lib and it will be installed.
Example:
compile ":myPlugin:1.0"
File:
/lib/myPlugin-1.0.zip
Note: You have to zip the content of the plugin folder.
Source: http://grails.1312388.n4.nabble.com/Insert-own-local-plugin-into-build-config-td4646704.html

Grails Plugin Maven Integration

I'm trying to create Mavenized Grails application. Everything works fine but as I understood all the dependencies (all .jars like mysql-connector and also all grails (public) plugins like spring-security-core plugin) should be listed in pom.xml.
The thing is that I don't know how to include public grails plugins (is there any Maven repository for that, or should I include used plugins into my local repo?). Or is the proper way how to handle grails plugin to list them in "application.properties" and let the grails to manage these plugins?
Thank you for any comment.:-)
Mateo
You can specify your plugin dependencies in grails-app/conf/BuildConfig.groovy, for example:
grails.project.dependency.resolution = {
plugins {
runtime ':hibernate:1.2.1'
}
}
Update
In response to your comments below, a plugin dependency specified in BuildConfig.groovy (or application.properties) will still be resolved by Grails rather than Maven. I don't think there's any way that you can get Maven to resolve a Grails plugin dependency, because Maven can only work with JAR dependencies in Maven repositories. Remember, Grails plugins are not (typically) available from Maven repositories.
If you want to hand as much control as possible over to Maven, you can try excluding the JARs from your plugin dependencies, e.g.
plugins {
runtime( "org.grails.plugins:hibernate:1.2.1" ) {
excludes "javassist"
}
}
and add them to your pom.xml instead. Here be dragons (see below).
Editorializing
FWIW, unless you really have to build your Grails project with Maven (e.g. because another Maven project depends on it), my advice would be don't. I say this because Maven is very much a second-class citizen in the world of Grails build tools. The usual way to build a Grails app is using the built-in GAnt commands. Future versions of Grails will move towards Gradle as the default build tool, so it seems that Maven will be an afterthought for the forseeable future
By default, Grails plugins are included at the source level. A plugin zip is expanded, and the plugin source is compiled as part of the grails build process.
Since 2.0, grails can use binary plugins. You can depend on plain old JARS if those jars represent binary grails plugins.
Binary grails plugins can be referenced by normal maven coordinates.
Your project's BuildConfig.groovy is where you specify maven repositories and binary plugins.

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