4

Please note that this question is not directly about url mappings in Grails. It is about how the way url mappings are defined.

When looking at UrlMappings.groovy we see something like this:

class UrlMappings {     
    static mappings = {         
        "/foo" (controller: "foo", action: "myaction")
        "/bar" (controller: "bar", action: "myaction")
        "404" (controller: 'error')
    }
}

The parentheses indicate that there is a function/method call. From my understanding the line

"/foo" (controller: "foo", action: "myaction")

executes the function named /foo of UrlMappings. If UrlMappings contains no function called /foo it will look at the closure delegate.

My problem is that the Strings you can use inside mappings = { .. } are not limited. You can add any kind of definition you want. For example:

"!%&/()" (controller: "foo")

So there has to be some kind of dynamic way of defining these functions. I couldn't think of a solution that defines these functions inside the UrlMappings class. So I tried to come up with a solution using the closure delegate.

With a simple groovy script I tried the following which worked fine for me:

def mappings = {
    "/foo" (controller: "foo", action: "myaction")
    "/bar" (controller: "bar", action: "myaction")
    "404" (controller: 'error')
    "!%&/()" (controller: "foo")
}

class MyMap extends LinkedHashMap {
    @Override
    public Object get(Object key) {
        if (!this.containsKey(key)) {
            this.put(key, { Map map -> println "$key called: $map" })
        }
        return super.get(key);
    }
}

mappings.delegate = new MyMap()
mappings()

So when /foo should be executed inside the mappings closure, groovy will look for a key named /foo in my delegate map. Therefore the get() method of MyMap is used. If no key with this name exists a new one will be created. The value of the key is always a closure that takes a map as parameter.

When executing the script I get:

/foo called: [controller:foo, action:myaction]
/bar called: [controller:bar, action:myaction]
404 called: [controller:error]
!%&/() called: [controller:foo]

So it worked. However I don't know if this is the way grails uses. Maybe there is a simpler solution?

So my first question is: Is there another (maybe easier) way of doing this? / How does Grails resolve these function calls?

Another question arised when I was experimenting with Maps as delegates.

Let's look at this:

def closure = {
    "foo" (arg: "foo")
}

closure.delegate = ["foo": { Map map -> println "called: $map" }]
closure() // error

I expected that this piece of code should print the string called: [arg:foo]. However I get:

groovy.lang.MissingMethodException: No signature of method: Test.foo() is applicable for argument types: (java.util.LinkedHashMap) values: [[arg:foo]]

Then I tried the following which results (as expected) in the same exception:

def delegate = new LinkedHashMap()
delegate["foo"] = { Map map -> println "called: $map" }
closure.delegate = delegate 
closure() // error

However if I do:

class MyLinkedHashMap extends LinkedHashMap { }
def delegate = new MyLinkedHashMap()
delegate["foo"] = { Map map -> println "called: $map" }
closure.delegate = delegate 
closure() // prints "called: [arg:foo]"

It works.

So my second question is: Why does this not work with a simple LinkedHashMap but works with MyLinkedHashMap (which does not modify anything) ?

1 Answer 1

2

have you read about methodMissing?

an example is here: http://groovy.codehaus.org/Using+methodMissing+and+propertyMissing

another here: http://blog.vladimirvivien.com/2008/02/25/creating-a-simple-builder-with-groovys-methodmissing/

grails does it by passing this list of closures to this builder which overrides invokeMethod to do the work, as explained here

2
  • +1 thanks for the links. I didn't know this. I will leave the question open for now because I hope someone can give me the answer to my 2nd question.
    – micha
    Dec 26, 2012 at 12:03
  • The second answer may be hard to come by. it seems like it may have to do with the fact that your new class is going to be a GroovyObject, while built-in java objects won't be. If you looks at groovy source, Closure.java's getPropertyTryThese() will be called to resolve "foo", which will call InvokerHelper's getProperty() method, which routes the call differently based on the GroovyObject-ness of the object. Beyond that lies the rest of a rabbit hole, I'd say... You can also replace usage of your class with def delegate = new Expando(). Dec 27, 2012 at 2:33

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