Book Image

Grails 1.1 Web Application Development

By : Jon Dickinson
Book Image

Grails 1.1 Web Application Development

By: Jon Dickinson

Overview of this book

Web development is trickyóeven a simple web application has a number of context changes ready to trip up the unwary. Grails takes the everyday pain out of web application development, allowing us to focus on delivering real application logic and create seamless experiences that will address the needs of our users. This book will take the pain out of Grails by showing you exactly how to build a web application with a minimum of fuss. With this book, even if you are new to Grails, you will be up and running before you know it. You will be able to code faster and your code will be better. This clear and concise book is packed with examples and clear instructions to help you build your first Grails application and gives you the skills to speed up your application development by adding a different angle for learning about the topic. After a brief introduction to the dynamic JVM-based Groovy programming language, which teaches you enough about Groovy to understand the relationship between Grails and the Groovy scripting language, it shows how to use Grails and a number of key plug-ins to deliver valuable web applications. It also takes you through creating, developing, testing, and deploying an example team collaboration application in Grails. Using an incremental and iterative approach you will learn how to build a basic web application with secure authentication and different levels of authorization. You will learn how to handle file upload allowing users to share files. Some advanced features of object-oriented persistence will be introduced through adding tags for messages and files to giving users a robust categorization system. You will then build on the basic application to enhance the user experience through AJAX and the RichUI plug-in. You will take a further step into the world of Web 2.0 by adding an RSS feed and a REST service to the application. Once the entire application is up and running, you will learn how to create your own plug-in for tagging. Finally, you will learn how to deploy this application to a production environment.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Grails 1.1 Web Application Development
Credits
About the author
Acknowledgement
About the reviewers
Preface

Bootstrapping demo data


You saw earlier that Grails comes pre-configured with an in-memory HSQLDB database. The benefit of this is that you don't need to configure a database server to get started. The problem is that whenever you restart Grails, all your data is lost. Grails provides a handy notion of Bootstrapping data, so a set of demo data can be loaded into your application during startup. At the very least, you will want to add the User and Administrator roles to this bootstrap to save you re-creating them each time.

The BootStrap class can be found under the grails-app/conf folder. Update the init code block to create and save the two new roles:

import app.Role

class BootStrap {
def init = { servletContext ->
def user = new Role(name: 'User').save()
def admin = new Role(name: 'Administrator').save()

}
def destroy = {
}
}

The BootStrap class is able to interact with the ServletContext of the application as it is passed as an argument to the init closure.

Now that the roles have...