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Grails Persistence with GORM and GSQL [Paperback]

Robert Fischer

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Book Description

April 28 2009 1430219262 978-1430219262 1

Unique to the popular Grails web framework is its architecture. While other frameworks are built from the ground up, Grails leverages existing and proven technologies that already have advanced functionality built in. One of the key technologies in this architecture is Hibernate, on top of which Grails builds its GORM (Grails Object Relational Mapping) model layer. This provides Grails a persistence solution.

Published with the developer in mind, firstPress technical briefs explore emerging technologies that have the potential to be critical for tomorrow’s industry. Apress keeps developers one step ahead by presenting key information as early as possible in a PDF of 150 pages or less. Explore the future through Apress with Grails Persistence with GORM and GSQL

This firstPress book covers Grails persistence with GORM, from defining your first model to the nature of transactions and advanced Hibernate querying. Other APIs and tools such as GSQL (Groovy SQL) are covered as well, as needed, to empower your Grails persistence efforts.


What you’ll learn

  • Extend the Grails web framework into a broader, semi–enterprise framework by including and integrating Hibernate–based Java persistence, known as GORM.
  • Use mappings to customize default behaviors and work with legacy schemas.
  • Use constraints to define your object once and have those constraints enforced both in code and at the database level.
  • Use advanced features of GORM and Hibernate Query Language (HQL) to simplify database querying and report generation.
  • Debug and tune trips for GORM and Hibernate.
  • Fill in the gaps with GSQL.

Who is this book for

This title is for those who have committed to dedicating some time to mastering Grails and are looking to move beyond the basics, and are especially interested in Grails and Groovy persistence for some limited transaction handling and/or accessing databases.


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 125 pages
  • Publisher: Apress; 1 edition (April 28 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1430219262
  • ISBN-13: 978-1430219262
  • Product Dimensions: 19.1 x 0.8 x 23.5 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 295 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #783,344 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

About the Author

Robert Fischer is an independent contractor specializing in web application development and technical leadership. He is a regular presenter at conferences on the topic of Groovy and Grails, development best practices, and functional programming. He also is a regular contributor to open source in many languages, with his key contributions being the JConch library for Java concurrency, a plug–in for Grails for background thread processing, and a plug–in for Grails for automatic database updating. He resides in Durham, North Carolina, with his wife.


Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: 3.5 out of 5 stars  14 reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Guys. It's a FirstPress intro book. Seriously. July 3 2009
By John Stoneham - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The other reviewers are complaining there's not much here. I admit I picked it up in eBook format hoping to get a detailed, deep dive into the very bowels of Grails persistence. This isn't that book.

What I did find is that it's ideal for someone new to Grails, to understand all of the options available to you for persistence-level work. Everything from the basics of domain classes through Hibernate-land all the way down to raw SQL. It's a short survey work - which I should have expected given that it's by FirstPress. Give it to the new Grails developers on your project - this is stuff they NEED to know and they can read it in a couple of hours.

I got a second copy for our DBA. This is her first foray above the database level into helping with the application programming level. It's helping her understand where we developers are coming from, and to give us better advice.

Recommended as a starter work to understand your options. But to go deeper into Grails or Hibernate, you'll want an additional book. I recommend Grails in Action and Java Persistence with Hibernate.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Good reference for Grails persistence May 6 2009
By Trevor Burnham - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a good, quick guide to persistence in Grails. It follows a good pattern: Here's some short code, here's an explanation, and here's an integration test to cover the details. At times, this style is too quick, sketching over details and leaving me without a complete understanding.

The book doesn't talk about setting up your Grails environment. It's clearly aimed at people who already know how to use Grails but want a more thorough understanding of how to use their domain objects. All of this information is online, of course, but as the author points out a couple of times, the official documentation has always contained some inaccuracies. So this book is a good supplement. Is it a good read? Not really. It doesn't use an example project. It doesn't tell you how to built a better database. It assumes you know what you want to do and tells you how to do it. I mean that in the best possible way: Despite the popularity of Grails, info on best practices remains hard to find, and the source code in this book is very sleek, well-tested and Grails-y.

Whereas every Grails developer absolutely must have The Definitive Guide to Grails, Second Edition, which covers GORM pretty well, this book is good for reference. Not, however, in its slim, oversized-text print edition, which, as a FirstPress book, doesn't even have an index. I'd recommend it as an eBook only.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Handy Reference for GORM May 7 2009
By G. Dickens - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
At first I was surprised that it was a total of 156 pages (I was pleased that I didn't have to work my way through yet another 700 page book).

As the title indicates this is focused on one of the greatest assets of Grails, GORM. When working with GORM, you really need examples and options to help you with common data query and dataset organization tasks, this book provides that.

In a nutshell, if you are working on a Grails project, this book will provide you with a concise reference with great code examples of valuable GORM features that you will refer back to.

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