Sample-groovy-in-Z2 » History » Version 18
Henning Blohm, 19.09.2015 17:30
1 | 2 | Udo Offermann | h1. Sample Groovy in Z2 |
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2 | 3 | Udo Offermann | |
3 | 13 | Henning Blohm | This sample shows how to use the Groovy support, as implemented by the [[Groovy Add-on]]. |
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5 | 3 | Udo Offermann | h2. Prerequisites |
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7 | 12 | Henning Blohm | All you need is a JDK 6 or JDK 7 distribution as described in [[Step_2_-_Install_and_run_in_5_minutes]]. |
8 | 3 | Udo Offermann | |
9 | 17 | Henning Blohm | *NOTE:* All versions less than 3 will not run with Java 8. You need to use Java 7 instead! |
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11 | 3 | Udo Offermann | h2. Setting up the sample |
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13 | 15 | Henning Blohm | There is no further pre-requisite to running this sample, and you may proceed as described in [[How to run a sample]] (in particular, if you want to use Subversion). Here's the really fast version: |
14 | 3 | Udo Offermann | |
15 | <pre><code class="ruby"> |
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16 | mkdir install |
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17 | cd install |
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18 | git clone -b master http://git.z2-environment.net/z2-base.core |
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19 | git clone -b master http://git.z2-environment.net/z2-samples.groovy |
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20 | |||
21 | # on Linux / Mac OS: |
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22 | cd z2-base.core/run/bin |
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23 | ./gui.sh |
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24 | |||
25 | # on Windows: |
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26 | cd z2-base.core\run\bin |
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27 | gui.bat |
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28 | </code></pre> |
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29 | 4 | Udo Offermann | |
30 | 14 | Henning Blohm | The first time you launch the sample, it will take a while to download all required resources. |
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32 | This sample highlights three things |
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34 | h2. Using Groovy or Java or any mix of the two |
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36 | 16 | Henning Blohm | When declaring to use the groovy compiler as in "/com.zfabrik.samples.groovy_and_java.web/java/z.properties":https://redmine.z2-environment.net/projects/z2-samples/repository/z2-samples-groovy/revisions/master/entry/com.zfabrik.samples.groovy_and_java.web/java/z.properties you can mix Java and Groovy as you like. The Groovy compiler support will figure out whether a Java component (which may then be not Java only anymore - strictly speaking) contains only Java sources, only Groovy sources, or a mix of both. |
37 | 14 | Henning Blohm | |
38 | 1 | Udo Offermann | <pre> |
39 | 14 | Henning Blohm | com.zfabrik.component.type=com.zfabrik.java |
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41 | java.privateReferences=\ |
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42 | com.zfabrik.servletjsp,\ |
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43 | com.zfabrik.groovy |
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44 | |||
45 | java.compile.order = groovy |
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46 | 1 | Udo Offermann | </pre> |
47 | 14 | Henning Blohm | As in the sample, it is mandatory to reference *com.zfabrik.groovy* (a module providing groovy-all and some more) for any part that contains groovy sources. |
48 | 1 | Udo Offermann | |
49 | 14 | Henning Blohm | The sample apps just print the HTTP request header - the "http://localhost:8080/plain-groovy-sample":http://localhost:8080/plain-groovy-sample is using plain Groovy (see project @com.zfabrik.samples.groovy.web@) and the "http://localhost:8080/groovy-java-sample/":http://localhost:8080/groovy-java-sample/ is using a mixture of Groovy and Java sources (see project @com.zfabrik.samples.groovy_and_java.web@). Note that while the former project is compiled using the plain Groovy compiler the latter is compiled using the Joint Groovy/Java Compiler. |
50 | 1 | Udo Offermann | |
51 | 14 | Henning Blohm | If you want to inspect the code using Eclipse, please create a workspace in install (i.e. @install/workspace@) and import the Git repositories and the following projects into your workspace: _core_ from z2-base.core, _environment_ and _com.zfabrik.samples.groovy.web_ from z2-samples.groovy (see also [[Step_3_-_First_steps_with_Z2_on_Git|First steps]]). |
52 | 1 | Udo Offermann | |
53 | 18 | Henning Blohm | Make sure to have "Groovy support":https://github.com/groovy/groovy-eclipse/wiki installed with Eclipse (otherwise you will not have much fun with Groovy sources)! |
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55 | 14 | Henning Blohm | h2. Using Groovlets and Groovy Template Pages |
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57 | Generally, the mere fact that groovy-all is available implies that generally speaking all features described in |
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59 | * "http://groovy.codehaus.org/Groovlets":http://groovy.codehaus.org/Groovlets and |
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60 | * "http://groovy.codehaus.org/Groovy+Templates":http://groovy.codehaus.org/Groovy+Templates |
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62 | work. Groovlets are groovy scripts that are turned into Servlets on the fly. The same header list as above is created by the "headers.groovy":https://redmine.z2-environment.net/projects/z2-samples/repository/z2-samples-groovy/revisions/master/entry/com.zfabrik.samples.groovy.web/web/WebContent/headers.groovy script. Go to "http://localhost:8080/plain-groovy-sample/headers.groovy":http://localhost:8080/plain-groovy-sample/headers.groovy to see it running. |
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64 | Similarly, the Groovy equivalent of Java server pages, Groovy Template Pages are supported. The author has not looked deeply into this. But check out "index.gsp":https://redmine.z2-environment.net/projects/z2-samples/repository/z2-samples-groovy/revisions/master/entry/com.zfabrik.samples.groovy.web/web/WebContent/index.gsp for a trivial sample. Go "http://localhost:8080/plain-groovy-sample/index.gsp":http://localhost:8080/plain-groovy-sample/index.gsp to see it running. |
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66 | To turn on support for Groovlets and GSPs, corresponding servlets and resource mappings have to be defined in the web app's "web.xml:https://redmine.z2-environment.net/projects/z2-samples/repository/z2-samples-groovy/revisions/master/entry/com.zfabrik.samples.groovy.web/web/WebContent/WEB-INF/web.xml : |
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67 | |||
68 | <pre class="xml"> |
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69 | <servlet> |
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70 | <servlet-name>Groovy</servlet-name> |
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71 | <servlet-class>com.zfabrik.groovy.servlet.ContextAwareGroovyServlet</servlet-class> |
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72 | </servlet> |
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73 | <servlet> |
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74 | <servlet-name>GroovyTemplate</servlet-name> |
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75 | <servlet-class>groovy.servlet.TemplateServlet</servlet-class> |
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76 | </servlet> |
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77 | <servlet-mapping> |
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78 | <servlet-name>Groovy</servlet-name> |
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79 | <url-pattern>*.groovy</url-pattern> |
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80 | </servlet-mapping> |
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81 | <servlet-mapping> |
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82 | <servlet-name>GroovyTemplate</servlet-name> |
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83 | <url-pattern>*.gsp</url-pattern> |
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84 | </servlet-mapping> |
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85 | </pre> |
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87 | *Note:* Instead of using the standard Groovy Servlet (implementing Groovlets support), we use a specialized version that is part of the @com.zfabrik.groovy@ module. This is so that application types will be found correctly. Inquiry with the Groovy community in under way (see also #1042) |
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89 | h2. Using Spock Tests |
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91 | The "Spock Test Specification framework":http://code.google.com/p/spock/ provides an elegant way to specify and implement test cases over - in the end - the JUnit framework that is well integrated in virtually any Java capable development environment. Z2 integrates with JUnit via z2Unit (see [[How to z2Unit]]) to allow server-side unit tests. |
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93 | Quite elegantly, the only declaration that differentiates a Spock test from any old JUnit test is the mentioning of Spock's JUnit runner called Sputnik. When you write a local Spock tests, this is implicitly applied via the Spock test super class @Specification@. Now z2Unit uses a JUnit runner itself to shift test execution from the invoking VM to the Z2 VM. The solution to that seeming conflict is indeed straight-forward: Declare the z2Unit test runner to have execution handed over, and tell z2Unit to use Sputnik when executing a test class within Z2. |
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95 | The sample module @com.zfabrik.samples.spock@ contains a test class "HelloSpockZ2":https://redmine.z2-environment.net/projects/z2-samples/repository/z2-samples-groovy/revisions/master/entry/com.zfabrik.samples.spock/java/src.test/com/zfabrik/samples/spock/tests/HelloSpockZ2.groovy that illustrates this combination: |
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97 | <pre class="groovy"> |
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98 | @RunWith(Z2UnitTestRunner.class) |
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99 | @Z2UnitTest(componentName="com.zfabrik.samples.spock", runWith=Sputnik.class) |
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100 | class HelloSpockZ2 extends Specification { |
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102 | def "A first test that should pass"() { |
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103 | setup: |
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104 | def x = new ArrayList<String>(); |
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105 | when: |
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106 | x.add("Hello") |
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107 | then: |
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108 | x.size() == 1 |
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109 | } |
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112 | def "a second test that should fail"() { |
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113 | setup: |
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114 | def x = new ArrayList<String>(); |
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115 | when: |
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116 | x.add("Hello") |
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117 | then: |
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118 | x.size() == 2 |
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119 | } |
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120 | } |
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121 | </pre> |
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123 | If you have an Eclipse setup for this sample, as outlined above, you can run these tests directly from your IDE. |
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124 | </pre> |