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Vaadin 14 Groovy Builder Example App / Archetype
This project can be used as a starting point to create your own Vaadin 14+ application. It has the necessary dependencies and files to get you started. Just clone this repo and start experimenting! Import it to the IDE of your choice as a Gradle project.
Uses Vaadin Groovy Builder Groovy bindings to the Vaadin framework. Uses Vaadin-Boot.
Preparing Environment
The Vaadin 14 build requires node.js and npm. Vaadin Gradle plugin will install it for you automatically (handy for the CI); alternatively you can install it to your OS:
- Windows: node.js Download site - use the .msi 64-bit installer
- Linux:
sudo apt install npm
Also make sure that you have Java 11 JDK installed.
Getting Started
To quickly start the app, just type this into your terminal:
git clone https://github.com/mvysny/vaadin-groovy-builder-example
cd vaadin-groovy-builder-example
./gradlew run
Gradle will automatically download all dependencies and will run your app. Your app will be running on http://localhost:8080.
We suggest you use Intellij IDEA
to develop the project further; the Community edition is enough for all development purposes.
From your IDE, simply run the Main.main()
function.
This is a port of Skeleton Starter Flow to Groovy+Gradle.
Supported Modes
Runs in Vaadin 14 npm mode, using the Vaadin Gradle Plugin.
Both the development and production modes are supported. To prepare for development mode, just run:
./gradlew clean vaadinPrepareFrontend
To build in production mode, just run:
./gradlew clean build -Pvaadin.productionMode
If you don't have node installed in your CI environment, Vaadin Gradle plugin will install it for you automatically:
./gradlew clean build -Pvaadin.productionMode
Workflow
To compile the entire project in production mode, run ./gradlew -Pvaadin.productionMode
.
To run the application in development mode, run ./gradlew clean build example:run
and open http://localhost:8080/.
To produce a runnable production-mode app:
- run
./gradlew -Pvaadin.productionMode
- You will find the app zip file in the
example/build/distributions/
folder. - To revert your environment back to development mode, just run
./gradlew
or./gradlew vaadinPrepareFrontend
(omit the-Pvaadin.productionMode
) switch.
This will allow you to quickly start the example app and allow you to do some basic modifications.
Note that the app doesn't build to WAR, but builds into a self-contained runnable app instead.
Dissection of project files
Let's look at all files that this project is composed of, and what are the points where you'll add functionality:
Files | Meaning |
---|---|
build.gradle.kts | Gradle build tool configuration files. Gradle is used to compile your app, download all dependency jars and build a standalone zip file |
gradlew, gradlew.bat, gradle/ | Gradle runtime files, so that you can build your app from command-line simply by running ./gradlew , without having to download and install Gradle distribution yourself. |
.github | Configuration file for the GitHub Workflows which tells GitHub how to build the app. GitHub Workflows automatically builds your app and runs all the tests after every commit. |
.gitignore | Tells Git to ignore files that can be produced from your app's sources - be it files produced by Gradle, Intellij project files etc. |
src/main/resources/ | A bunch of static files not compiled by Groovy in any way; see below for explanation. |
simplelogger.properties | We're using Slf4j for logging and this is the configuration file for Slf4j Simple Logger. |
webapp/ | static files provided as-is to the browser. |
src/main/groovy/ | The main Groovy sources of your web app. You'll be mostly editing files located in this folder. |
MainView.groovy | When Servlet Container (such as Tomcat) starts your app, it will show the components attached to the main route, in this case, the MainView class. |
MainViewTest.groovy | Automatically run by Gradle to test your UI; see Karibu Testing for more information. |
More Resources
- The DSL technique is used to allow you to nest your components in a structured code. This is provided by the Vaadin Groovy Builder library; please visit the Vaadin Groovy Builder home page for more information.
- The browserless testing is demonstrated in the MainViewTest.groovy file. Please read Browserless Web Testing for more information.