Since version 2.3, Grails supports asynchronous parallel programming to support modern multiple core hardware. Therefore a new Grails command is added to generate asynchronous controllers for domain classes. The generated controller contains CRUD actions for a given domain class. In the example below, we will generate a default asynchronous implementation of a Grails controller.
First we create a domain object:
$ grails create-domain-class grails.data.Movie
Second we will generate the asynchronous controller using the new generate-async-controller command:
$ grails generate-async-controller grails.data.Movie
Grails now generates an asynchronous controller with the name MovieController. Below you can see the default implementation of the index method:
def index(Integer max) {
params.max = Math.min(max ?: 10, 100)
Movie.async.task {
[movieInstanceList: list(params), count: count() ]
}.then { result ->
respond result.movieInstanceList, model:[movieInstanceCount: result.count]
}
}The async namespace makes sure GORM methods in the task method will be performed in a different thread and therefore is asynchronous. The task method which is used, returns a Promises object which you can use to perform callback operations like onError and onComplete.
| Reference: | Grails Generate Asynchronous Controller from our JCG partner Albert van Veen at the JDriven blog. |
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Albert VeenOctober 28th, 2014Last Updated: October 27th, 2014

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Hi, How can we configure thread pool and Queue config?
Hi, How can we configure thread pool and Queue config?