Integration Guide
This section is PlayRythm specific content, pure Rythm user should skip this section
Migrate your current project from Groovy template engine to Rythm
PlayRythm is designed to support smooth migrating from Groovy template engine.
PlayRythm hijack the template rendering process if it found the corresponding template exists in the app/rythm folder. Otherwise it quit silently and leave groovy engine to handle it. So what you need to do is just create an new template file using Rythm syntax and put it into the app/rythm folder. Before your new rythm template available your existing groovy template works like a charm, and after the rythm template created, Rythm will take over
Tip: enclose all your rythm template with . This is not true. The groovy template engine will still parse the expressions. See Resolve groovy compilation error for workarounds.#{verbatim} and #{/verbatim} can help you avoid groovy compile exception and does not impact your rythm template
Configuration
PlayMorphia provides default value for all configuration items, thus enable it to be used with zero configuration.
| name | description | default value |
rythm.cache.prodOnly | Set if cache service enabled only on prod mode. If true then cache service is disabled on dev mode | true |
rythm.cache.defaultTTL | Set default timeout duration in seconds | 3600 seconds |
rythm.gae | Set this to true if running in GAE. This will disable bytecode cache in Rythm | false |
rythm.noFileWrite | Same effect as rythm.gae | false |
Resolve groovy compilation error
Because groovy template engine does not provide a way to skip parsing any part of the template file, the rythm template file might cause compilation error during precompile process, where rythm has no way to identify some files been a rythm template or groovy template, e.g. some json generation template.
Start from version 0.9.5 it’s suggest to move all rythm templates or at least those compilation error causing templates to app/rythm folder from app/views folder.
Start from version 1.0.0 app/views folder as template root as no longer supported, please move all rythm view files into app/rythm folder. And there will be no groovy compilation error any more caused by rythm template
More about tags
So far you can keep rythm tags file under app/views/tags/rythm folder. However it is recommened not to use tags folder at all since every rythm template is a tag and can be called from any other rythm templates.
Start from v1.0.0, app/views/tags/rythm folder as tag root are no longer supported. Please just use app/rythm folder as template root and also the tag root.
E.g. suppose you have a template file app/views/Order/list.html, while you can use it as an ordinary template file, you also free to call it as a tag from other rythm template like: @Order.list(myOrders)
Invoking controller actions
PlayRythm 0.9.7 version released with this new feature which is first introduced in Japid template engine and people seems like it a lot. Basically you can invoke a controller action method directly from within the template and fill the place with the render result content. As with any function/tag/template invocation, action method invoke is very straghtforward. Excamples:
@controllers.Applicaiton.index().cache("1h");
@controllers.MyPortal.newsPanel(user);
Things you need to take care of:
You must use full qualified method name (including package name, class name) when you invoke controller action methodNo longer required since v1.0.0- You must pass exactly the parameters that matches what is defined in the controller action method signature. The parameter must be passed in by position
- The invocation is directly and will not go through the whole stack of Play’s action invocation process. Meaning the
@Before,@Afterand@Finallogic will NOT be executed, the same thing happens to all plugin’sbeforeActionInvocation(),onActionInvocationResult()andafterActionInvocation()hooks. - Start form v1.0 controller invocation is eligible to the following tag invocation extensions:
- Cache:
@controllers.Application.index().cache(“1h”) - Invoke with relative path/import path:
@import controllers.*; @Application.index() - Assign action result to a variable:
@controllers.Application.index().cache(“1h”).assign(“indexPage”). And you can use it as a normal template variable later on:@indexPage.raw() - Escape/un-escape render result:
@controllers.Application.index().raw()
- Cache:
New Cache4 annotation for caching action invocation
Though not so relevant to a template engine, Rythm still provides an new annotation com.greenlaw110.rythm.play.Cache4 for controller action (GET and HEAD) result caching. It improves the Play’s built-in play.cache.CacheFor in the following way:
- It will check
rythm.cache.prodOnlyconfiguration. If it’s true (default value), then cache get disabled on dev mode, which is a desired behavior - You can specify time by configuration name like
cron.xx.yy, and Rythm will goPlay.configurationto find out the cache time duration. Meaning the cache duration is configurable now. Thus mechanism (by app developer) is well decoupled from policy (by app deployer). Note time duration configuration name must start with "cron" - You can specify or configure a special time
foreverand the cache will never expire - An additional
useSessionDataattribute allow cache key generation to check the session data, which create a per-user-cache mechanism. This adds an new granularity to the cache system - It does not cache a
Redirectthat is not permanent, which enable some modules like secure that might trigger a temporary redirect to pass through cache mechanism - It does not cache
ErrorandNotFoundwhich enable the system to recover from external problems like database error or a network fault.
Sample:
@Cache4("cron.top10.cache")
public static void displayTop10() {
...
}
In your conf/application.conf:
cron.top10.cache=5mn
You can set useSessionData attribute to true to create a per-user-cache mechanism:
@Cache4(useSessionData = true, value="1h")
public static void showMyInterests() {
...
}
Cache4 side effects
Cache4 logic is implemented in RythmPlugin.beforeActionInvocation() and RythmPlugin.onActionInvocationResult() hooks. This indicates the following side effects of Cache4:
- if the
Resultget from cache, the all the following logic will get bypassed:- The
beforeActionInvocation()hooks of other plugins (with plugin id > 55) - All application defined
@Beforeand@Afterfilters
- The
- if the
Resultis missed in the cache, the all the following logic will get bypassed:- The
onActionInvocationResult()andafterActionInvocation()hook of other plugins (with plugin id > 55)
- The
So you should NOT use Cache4 annotation in the following cases:
- Your app or dependent modules have defined controller action filters which will change system state on each request (e.g. system access log)
- Your dependent modules implemented
beforeActionInvocation(),afterActionInvocation()andonActionInvocationResult()plugin hooks which might change system state on each request - If you don’t know what I am talking about here
For module or application defined filters that will throw out non-permanent Redirect result, for example, secure module will cause redirect if user has not logged in, in which case you are still safe to use Cache4 with useSessionData enabled. See above example.
@Cache4 does not require you to use Rythm template, it works with any controller action methods