how can I call a method residing in an existing Java class from Grails app ? Is it necessary/recommended to wrap that up in a service?
5 Answers
Put your source in src/java. Then in conf/spring/resources.groovy, you can do, for example:
// Place your Spring DSL code here
beans = {
myJavaFunction(com.my.javafunction)
}
Then you can inject it into your controllers or services with:
def myJavaFunction
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Thanks for your reply. One more thing: I have an apache logger in this class and the compiler obviously doesn't find the logger jar. Do I just add the jar to the lib folder or get some special instance from the environment ?– xainJan 19, 2010 at 11:18
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You might want to post that as separate question. I think we ran into that, but it wasn't worth spending time on at the moment. Grails has logging built in, so I guess there's some conflict. Jan 19, 2010 at 16:04
is the class in a JAR file in your lib/ folder or in a .java file your src/ folder?
Either way, there's no need to wrap it in a service. You can construct instances of the class and call methods on it from anywhere.
If you need to wrap the method calls in a transaction then I'd put it in a service. Otherwise just call it directly. The only other reason to put it in a service is to use the scoping functionality (i.e. if you wanted a new instance of the class created for each request)
cheers
Lee
I thought I should send an update on the how to on grails 2.2, since I did a lot of looking around and found a lot of irrelevant stuff that did not appear to work, ended up making it work this way:
Project name: gp22
Grails Domain Example name: DemoGrailsDomain
JavaClass:src/java/vv/Baggie.java
Controller: DemoGrailsDomainController
1: src/java/vv/Baggie.java
package vv;
import gp22.DemoGrailsDomain;
public class Baggie {
public int myresult(int value1) {
int resultset=10+value1;
return resultset;
}
public int getResult(int value1) {
int aa=myresult(value1);
return aa;
//You can call your domain classes directly
// Once called do a control shift o to pull in the above import example
//DemoGrailsDomain getdomain = new DemoGrailsDomain();
}
}
DemoGrailsDomainController:
def list(Integer max) {
//def myJavaFunction
Baggie a=new Baggie()
int passit=5
def bb=a.getResult(passit);
println "--"+bb
Do a control shift o on your contoller now, and it will import the vv.Baggie
Now when I hit the list on the browser the println shows:
| Server running. Browse to localhost:8080/gp22 --15 on my console
There you have a value being passed from Grails controller to a Java class processed and returned, the Java class can also call the Groovy Domains and retrieve information
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>Do a control shift I assume you're talking about in some IDE? Which one? Aug 1, 2013 at 21:52
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Ctrl shift o on ggts available on sts download page. Although I thought it was the standard on all ide's. At least eclipse is the same behaviour for jee– V HAug 2, 2013 at 8:30
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For example plugins/projects using this method refer to: github.com/vahidhedayati/latlongcalc or github.com/vahidhedayati/RemoteSSH - the remoteSSH makes Java & Groovy calls to carry out identical requests– V HSep 18, 2013 at 14:49
If you have them packed in a .jar file then just drop the jar file into your-project/lib
there is no need to wrap as service. if you are using spring,just add the bean into resource.groovy