This plugin for Gradle allows you to build Grails projects. To use it, simply include the required JARs via buildscript {} and 'apply' the plugin:
buildscript {
  repositories {
    jcenter()
  }
  dependencies {
    classpath "org.grails:grails-gradle-plugin:2.0.0"
  }
}
version "0.1"
group "example"
apply plugin: "grails"
repositories {
  grails.central() //creates a maven repo for the Grails Central repository (Core libraries and plugins)
}
grails {
  grailsVersion = '2.3.5'
  groovyVersion = '2.1.9'
  springLoadedVersion '1.1.3'
}
dependencies {
  bootstrap "org.grails.plugins:tomcat:7.0.50" // No container is deployed by default, so add this
  compile 'org.grails.plugins:resources:1.2' // Just an example of adding a Grails plugin
}You must specify the grails.grailsVersion property before executing any Grails commands.
The 'grails.groovyVersion' property is a convenience for Grails 2.3.0, it may not work correctly in earlier
versions, so it's best to not use it with version pre-2.3.0. Declaring grails.groovyVersion will configure a Gradle ResolutionStrategy to modify all requests for groovy-all to be
for the version specified. Additionally, the ResolutionStrategy will change all requests for groovy to be groovy-all
The grails-gradle-plugin will populate the bootstrap, compile, and test classpaths with a base set of dependencies for Grails. You need to provide a container plugin such as 'tomcat' to the bootstrap classpath to enable the run-app command.
Warning If you're using a pre-1.3.5 or pre-1.2.4 version of Grails, you'll need to add this runtime dependency to your project's build file:
runtime org.aspectj:aspectjrt:1.6.8Once you have this build file, you can create a Grails application with the 'init' task:
gradle initInitialize a new Grails plugin project by running:
gradle init-pluginThe plugin creates standard tasks that mimic the Java lifecycle:
- clean
- test
- check
- build
- assemble
These tasks are wrapper tasks that declare a dependsOn to Grails specific tasks. This will allow for further build customization.
- clean [grails-clean]
- test [grails-test]
- assemble [grails-war or grails-package-plugin]
You can also access any Grails command by prefixing it with grails-. For example, to run the application:
gradle grails-run-appIf you want to pass in some arguments, you can do so via the grailsArgs project property:
gradle -PgrailsArgs='--inplace solr' grails-create-pluginYou can also change the environment via the env project property:
gradle -PgrailsEnv=prod grails-run-appYou can execute multiple Grails commands in a single step, but bear in mind that if you are passing grailsEnv or grailsArgs then each of the
commands will execute with the same values.
- 
Caused by: org.apache.tools.ant.BuildException: java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: org/apache/commons/cli/OptionsThis happens if your project depends on the groovyJAR rather thangroovy-all. Change your dependency to the latter and all will be well.
- 
Classloading issues, casting proxy instances to their corresponding interface This can be a sign of a corrupted Spring-Loaded cache directory. The plugin has spring-loaded cache in $HOME/.grails/.slcache- try cleaning that directory