Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Contrasting Grails SpringBuilder vs JRuby Spring DSL vs Guice
An interesting post by Craig Walls that I hadn't noticed before shows how you can create Spring configs with a little JRuby DSL:
The Groovy version with Grails' SpringBuilder would look like:
Another important difference between the two is that Springy, the JRuby version, serializes the JRuby code into XML and then reads the beans from that. We used to do this in Grails, but it had serious performance implications for load time, Grails' BeanBuilder constructs the ApplicationContext programmatically on the fly.
Bob Lee also offered his alternative using Guice:
Since Groovy does annotations it is possible to make this code even Groovier:
DAOS = [ :ZoneDAO, :EmailDomainDAO, :DayDAO, :PreferenceDAO,
:WhatEverDao... ]
DAOS.each do |dao|
bean(dao, "daos.hibernate.#{dao}Hibernate")
{|b| b.new("sonarSession")}
end
The Groovy version with Grails' SpringBuilder would look like:
def DAOS = [ZoneDAO, EmailDomainDAO, DayDAO, PreferenceDAO, WhateverDAO]
DAOs.each { dao ->
"${dao}"("daos.hibernate.${dao.simpleName}Hibernate") {
sessionFactory = ref("sonarSession")
}
}
Another important difference between the two is that Springy, the JRuby version, serializes the JRuby code into XML and then reads the beans from that. We used to do this in Grails, but it had serious performance implications for load time, Grails' BeanBuilder constructs the ApplicationContext programmatically on the fly.
Bob Lee also offered his alternative using Guice:
Class[] daos = { ZoneDao.class, EmailDomainDao.class, PreferenceDao.class... };
for (Class dao : daos)
bind(dao).to(Class.forName("daos.hibernate.Hibernate" + dao.getSimpleName()));
Since Groovy does annotations it is possible to make this code even Groovier:
def daos = [ZoneDao, EmailDomainDao, PreferenceDao...]
daos.each { bind(it).to(Class.forName("daos.hibernate.Hibernate${it.simpleName}") }
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2 comments:
Graeme,
should it be daos.each { bind(it).to(Class.forName("daos.hibernate.Hibernate${it.simpleName}") }
or
daos.each {dao-> bind(dao).to(Class.forName("daos.hibernate.Hibernate${dao.simpleName}") }
Regards,
Dmitriy.
Thanks for the correction Dmitriy. Updated.
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