I want to use a 'Util' groovy script inside another groovy script. I don't want to load 'Util' class inside my 'main' groovy script every time. So using evaluate or GroovyShell don't fit my case.
My java application fetches the 'main' groovy script body from a database, parse it and call test() method from 'main' script every time.
java code :
GroovyShell groovyShell = new GroovyShell();
Script parsedScript = groovyShell.parse(scriptBody);
ResultPojo result = (ResultPojo) parsedScript.invokeMethod("test", null);
'main' script
public int test(){
// this will not work at the moment
int result = GroovyUtils.sum();
return result;
}
A 'Util' class will be located in the database too. 'Util' classes will be somehow loaded on application startup and they will be reloaded every X minutes.
class GroovyUtils{
static int sum() {
return 2+1;
}
}
Like i said i don't want to 'parse' the GroovyUtils class inside 'main' script because this is time costly.
Ideally i want to import GroovyUtils script when i need it.
import groovy.GroovyUtils;
public int test(){
int result = GroovyUtils.sum();
return result;
}
But in order to import the script, the script need to be saved in the same folder that the java application runs. The java application is deployed on a remote application server in .war format.
Can i somehow load GroovyUtils dynamically to CLASSPATH without saving it, so i can import it from my 'main' script?
Any suggestions? My main concerns is speed and reloadability.
import ...
or you have to export all those classes from DB into a classpath of GroovyEngine, or create own classloader that could be able to read directly from db, etc... in any case you could create a daemon that will pre-compile modified sources or will clean the compiled cache on modification.groovyShell.getClassLoader().addClasspath( "./path/to/local/classes" )
to add folder with classes to a main groovy shell. to force reload class you could try to callgroovyShell.getClassLoader().removeClassCacheEntry("MyClassName")
groovyShell.getClassLoader().removeClassCacheEntry
how this forcesparse(scriptBody)
to be called? By the way if i add a classpath can i still use the one i am using now? Because i am using some custom Exception classes from the classpath Java application runs and they import fine in my 'main' scripts.parse(mainBody)
only for your main script and all imports will be resolved through classloader automatically. by callingremoveClassCacheEntry
you are removing loaded class from classloader.