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Has any one done it yet? I am having class loader problems de-serializing the grails session object.

Here is the error:

WARN net.spy.memcached.transcoders.SerializingTranscoder: Caught CNFE decoding 1168 bytes of data [exec] java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.myapp.User [exec] at org.codehaus.groovy.tools.RootLoader.findClass (RootLoader.java:156) [exec] at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:319) [exec] at org.codehaus.groovy.tools.RootLoader.loadClass (RootLoader.java:128) [exec] at org.codehaus.groovy.grails.cli.support.GrailsRootLoader.loadClass (GrailsRootLoader.java:43) [exec] at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClass(ClassLoader.java:254) [exec] at java.lang.ClassLoader.loadClassInternal (ClassLoader.java:402) [exec] at java.lang.Class.forName0(Native Method) [exec] at java.lang.Class.forName(Class.java:247) [exec] at java.io.ObjectInputStream.resolveClass (ObjectInputStream.java:604) [exec] at java.io.ObjectInputStream.readNonProxyDesc (ObjectInputStream.java:1575) [exec] at java.io.ObjectInputStream.readClassDesc (ObjectInputStream.java:1496) [exec] at java.io.ObjectInputStream.readOrdinaryObject (ObjectInputStream.java:1732) [exec] at java.io.ObjectInputStream.readObject0 (ObjectInputStream.java:1329) [exec] at java.io.ObjectInputStream.readObject (ObjectInputStream.java:351) [exec] at net.spy.memcached.transcoders.BaseSerializingTranscoder.deserialize (BaseSerializingTranscoder.java:100) [exec] at net.spy.memcached.transcoders.SerializingTranscoder.decode (SerializingTranscoder.java:66)

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2 Answers

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I've only ever used sticky sessions via an apache mod_proxy setup so have never tried sharing session data across nodes. Is that an option for you?

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I am already doing the loadbalancing, but I need to go a step further now. – Erlanged Oct 29 at 22:11
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I guess there is no easy way to fix it since Grails is using a custom classloader to load the domain classes (I assume the com.myapp.User class is a domain class). As a workaround you could store just store the id of the user in the session and use a technique like I've described here to retrieve it on every request. This would also provide the benefit of reducing the size of the session that needs to be replicated.

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I think its a good idea if it was the only Groovy object in session and could be recovered from second instance of Tomcat from persistent store. But mine is a complicated app and uses a mix of Groovy and Java ,and has all sorts of objects in session (which in itself is a problem – Erlanged Oct 29 at 18:36

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