This is an automated email from the ASF dual-hosted git repository.
asf-ci-deploy pushed a commit to branch asf-site-production
in repository https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/grails-website.git
The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/asf-site-production by this
push:
new 0e170c6ac74 Updating apache/grails-website asf-site-production branch
for Github Actions run:20235139195
0e170c6ac74 is described below
commit 0e170c6ac74d7470337794a65b02368489d85890
Author: jamesfredley <[email protected]>
AuthorDate: Mon Dec 15 14:16:01 2025 +0000
Updating apache/grails-website asf-site-production branch for Github
Actions run:20235139195
---
blog/index.html | 16 ++++++++--------
blog/tag/quickcast.html | 16 ++++++++--------
foundation/minutes.xml | 2 +-
rss.xml | 32 ++++++++++++++++----------------
4 files changed, 33 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-)
diff --git a/blog/index.html b/blog/index.html
index 6fe3d53883d..61a4a0d2ed9 100644
--- a/blog/index.html
+++ b/blog/index.html
@@ -702,15 +702,15 @@
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-1.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-3.html'>
<h3>January 20, 2017</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #3: Multi-Project Builds</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #5: Retrieving Runtime Config Value...</h2>
</a>
</article></div></div><div class="threecolumns">
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-3.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-1.html'>
<h3>January 20, 2017</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #5: Retrieving Runtime Config Value...</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #3: Multi-Project Builds</h2>
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/2016-12-14.jpg)'>
@@ -834,15 +834,15 @@
</a>
</article></div></div><div class="threecolumns">
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-2.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-1.html'>
<h3>April 1, 2016</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #2: JSON Views</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #1: Grails® Interceptors</h2>
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-1.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-2.html'>
<h3>April 1, 2016</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #1: Grails® Interceptors</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #2: JSON Views</h2>
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/2015-03-01.jpg)'>
diff --git a/blog/tag/quickcast.html b/blog/tag/quickcast.html
index bacbe07bb54..0d86b174ee4 100644
--- a/blog/tag/quickcast.html
+++ b/blog/tag/quickcast.html
@@ -161,27 +161,27 @@
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-1.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-3.html'>
<h3>January 20, 2017</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #3: Multi-Project Builds</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #5: Retrieving Runtime Config Value...</h2>
</a>
</article></div></div><div class="threecolumns">
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-3.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-1.html'>
<h3>January 20, 2017</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #5: Retrieving Runtime Config Value...</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #3: Multi-Project Builds</h2>
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-2.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-1.html'>
<h3>April 1, 2016</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #2: JSON Views</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #1: Grails® Interceptors</h2>
</a>
</article></div>
<div class='column'><article class='blogcard' style='background-image:
url(https://grails.apache.org/images/quickcast.jpg)'>
- <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-1.html'>
+ <a href='https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-2.html'>
<h3>April 1, 2016</h3>
- <h2>Quickcast #1: Grails® Interceptors</h2>
+ <h2>Quickcast #2: JSON Views</h2>
</a>
</article></div></div>
</div>
diff --git a/foundation/minutes.xml b/foundation/minutes.xml
index 4f1380ed07f..f4936428ebb 100644
--- a/foundation/minutes.xml
+++ b/foundation/minutes.xml
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss
xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
version="2.0"><channel><title>Foundation | Grails
Framework</title><link>https://grails.apache.org</link><description>A powerful
Groovy-based web application framework for the JVM built on top of Spring
Boot</description><pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 12:15:44
GMT</pubDate><item><title>Technology Advisory Board
Meeting</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/foundation/minutes/20221128-tab.html<
[...]
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss
xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
version="2.0"><channel><title>Foundation | Grails
Framework</title><link>https://grails.apache.org</link><description>A powerful
Groovy-based web application framework for the JVM built on top of Spring
Boot</description><pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 14:10:33
GMT</pubDate><item><title>Technology Advisory Board
Meeting</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/foundation/minutes/20221128-tab.html<
[...]
<h3>Meeting Attendance:</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>Puneet Behl</strong> - Grails Product Development Lead at Object
Computing</li>
diff --git a/rss.xml b/rss.xml
index e39879eeada..96e8e9f04f6 100644
--- a/rss.xml
+++ b/rss.xml
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss
xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
version="2.0"><channel><title>Blog | Grails
Framework</title><link>https://grails.apache.org</link><description>A powerful
Groovy-based web application framework for the JVM built on top of Spring
Boot</description><pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 12:15:46
GMT</pubDate><item><title>Apache Grails [%version] - Release
Announcement</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2025-10-18-introducing-g
[...]
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss
xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
version="2.0"><channel><title>Blog | Grails
Framework</title><link>https://grails.apache.org</link><description>A powerful
Groovy-based web application framework for the JVM built on top of Spring
Boot</description><pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 14:10:36
GMT</pubDate><item><title>Apache Grails [%version] - Release
Announcement</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2025-10-18-introducing-g
[...]
<p>The Apache Grails community is excited to announce the 7.0.0 release of the
Apache Grails Framework!</p>
<p>This achievement reflects the dedication of our community and underscores
the strength of the ASF's open source ecosystems.</p>
<p>Thousands, upon thousands, of hours have gone into this release, and we are
incredibly grateful to everyone who contributed their time and expertise to
make it happen.</p>
@@ -5195,18 +5195,18 @@ info.app.grailsVersion=3.2.5
<p>IntelliJ IDEA is a high-productivity Integrated Development Environment
(IDE) for building a variety of application types. IDEA has always had great
support for building Grails applications and, in particular, has the best
support of any IDE for developing with Grails 3.</p>
<p>In this 20-minute video, Grails framework co-founder, <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/products/2gm-team#brown">Jeff Scott
Brown</a>, introduces several tips and tricks related to building Grails 3
applications in IDEA.</p>
<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
-<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/XsCCsTRdezw"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2017-01-20-4</guid><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #3: Multi-Project
Builds</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-1.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
-<p>Tags: <a href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/quickcast.html"><span
class="hashtag">#quickcast</span></a></p>
-<p>In this video, Grails<sup>®</sup> framework co-founder Graeme Rocher walks
you through multi-project builds in Grails apps.</p>
-<p>The Grails framework does a few handy things with multi-project builds and
plugins, not the least of which being that Grails compiles your plugins first
and puts the class and resources of those plugins directly in the classpath.
This lets you make changes to your plugins and instantly see those changes in
your build.</p>
-<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
-<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/yNA0ce5fG9s"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Graeme
Rocher</author><guid>2017-01-20-1</guid><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #5: Retrieving Runtime Config Values
in Grails®
3</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-3.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
+<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/XsCCsTRdezw"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2017-01-20-4</guid><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #5: Retrieving Runtime Config Values
in Grails®
3</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-3.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
<p>Tags: <a href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/quickcast.html"><span
class="hashtag">#quickcast</span></a></p>
<p>In this short video tutorial, Grails<sup>®</sup> framework co-founder, <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/products/2gm-team#brown">Jeff Scott
Brown</a>, highlights some of the great features of the Grails framework.</p>
<p>In fewer than 18 minutes, Jeff describes several techniques for retrieving
configuration values at runtime and discusses the pros and cons of each. Visit
<a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/news/2016/08/31/retrieving-config-values-grails-3">this
Grails blog post</a> for an accompanying article.</p>
<p>For this Quickcast, you’ll need no more than a basic understanding of the
Grails framework.</p>
<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
-<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/Qw5hjwT9EOc"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2017-01-20-3</guid><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>G3 Summit 2016
Wrap-up!</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-12-14.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
+<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/Qw5hjwT9EOc"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2017-01-20-3</guid><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #3: Multi-Project
Builds</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2017-01-20-1.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
+<p>Tags: <a href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/quickcast.html"><span
class="hashtag">#quickcast</span></a></p>
+<p>In this video, Grails<sup>®</sup> framework co-founder Graeme Rocher walks
you through multi-project builds in Grails apps.</p>
+<p>The Grails framework does a few handy things with multi-project builds and
plugins, not the least of which being that Grails compiles your plugins first
and puts the class and resources of those plugins directly in the classpath.
This lets you make changes to your plugins and instantly see those changes in
your build.</p>
+<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
+<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/yNA0ce5fG9s"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Graeme
Rocher</author><guid>2017-01-20-1</guid><pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>G3 Summit 2016
Wrap-up!</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-12-14.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
<p><img src="2016-12-14-img01.jpg" alt="The OCI Grails team at G3 Summit 2016"
/></p>
<p>Last month, nearly the entire <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/products/2gm-team">2GM (Groovy,
Grails<sup>®</sup> framework, and Micronaut) team</a> from [Object Computing,
Inc.] (https://objectcomputing.com/) (OCI) converged on Fort Lauderdale for the
inaugural edition of the G3 Summit, the conference for the Apache Groovy,
Grails framework, and Gradle Community. The event is organized by <a
href="https://www.nofluffjuststuff.com/home/main">No Fluff Just Stuff</a> and
is a fantas [...]
<p>OCI team members presented over 30 workshops and breakout sessions during
the event, in addition to socializing with attendees between sessions and after
hours. We’ve asked a few team members to share their experiences at the
conference. We hope you will join us next year!</p>
@@ -7458,7 +7458,13 @@ json {
<li>view_name.gson (Example: show.gson)</li>
</ul>
<p>The content type (defined by either the <code>ACCEPT</code> header or file
extension in the URI) is taken into account to allow different formats for the
same view.</p>
-<p>For more detail, see <a
href="https://grails.github.io/grails-views/latest/">the official
documentation</a>.</p>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2016-04-13</guid><pubDate>Wed, 13 Apr 2016 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #2: JSON
Views</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-2.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
+<p>For more detail, see <a
href="https://grails.github.io/grails-views/latest/">the official
documentation</a>.</p>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2016-04-13</guid><pubDate>Wed, 13 Apr 2016 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #1: Grails®
Interceptors</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-1.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
+<p>Tags: <a href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/quickcast.html"><span
class="hashtag">#quickcast</span></a></p>
+<p>In this 17-minute video, the Grails<sup>®</sup> framework co-founder, <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/products/2gm-team#brown">Jeff Scott
Brown</a>, talks Grails <a
href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interceptor_pattern">interceptors</a>.</p>
+<p>(Yes, <code>create-interceptor</code> actually creates an interceptor.
Mind. Blown.)</p>
+<p>This tutorial assumes only basic familiarity with Groovy (which is pretty
darned expressive anyway) and the MVC concept (which you already know). It also
serves as an excellent introduction to the interceptor pattern in any language,
because Grails' behind-the-scenes legwork lets you focus on the logic of the
pattern.</p>
+<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
+<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/XnRNfDGkBVg"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2016-04-01-1</guid><pubDate>Fri, 01 Apr 2016 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #2: JSON
Views</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-2.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
<p>Tags: <a href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/quickcast.html"><span
class="hashtag">#quickcast</span></a> <a
href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/json.html"><span
class="hashtag">#json</span></a></p>
<p>In a delightful and informative 15 minutes, the Grails<sup>®</sup>
framework co-founder, <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/products/2gm-team#brown">Jeff Scott
Brown</a>, probes JSON views.</p>
<p>Beginning with a Grails 3.1.1 application created with a standard web
profile, Jeff demonstrates how to add a few custom domain classes.</p>
@@ -7467,13 +7473,7 @@ json {
<p>While the app is running in development mode, the JSON files can be
altered, and the effects of those changes can be seen real-time in the
application.</p>
<p>This Quickcast assumes basic knowledge of Grails, JSON, and REST APIs.</p>
<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
-<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/XnRNfDGkBVg"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2016-04-01-2</guid><pubDate>Fri, 01 Apr 2016 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Quickcast #1: Grails®
Interceptors</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2016-04-01-1.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
-<p>Tags: <a href="https://grails.apache.org/blog/tag/quickcast.html"><span
class="hashtag">#quickcast</span></a></p>
-<p>In this 17-minute video, the Grails<sup>®</sup> framework co-founder, <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/products/2gm-team#brown">Jeff Scott
Brown</a>, talks Grails <a
href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interceptor_pattern">interceptors</a>.</p>
-<p>(Yes, <code>create-interceptor</code> actually creates an interceptor.
Mind. Blown.)</p>
-<p>This tutorial assumes only basic familiarity with Groovy (which is pretty
darned expressive anyway) and the MVC concept (which you already know). It also
serves as an excellent introduction to the interceptor pattern in any language,
because Grails' behind-the-scenes legwork lets you focus on the logic of the
pattern.</p>
-<p>Grails Quickcasts, brought to you through a partnership between <a
href="https://objectcomputing.com/">Object Computing, Inc.</a> (OCI) and <a
href="https://dzone.com/">DZone</a>, provide bite-sized tutorials to help you
maximize your productivity with the Framework.</p>
-<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/XnRNfDGkBVg"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2016-04-01-1</guid><pubDate>Fri, 01 Apr 2016 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Grails® 3
Interceptors</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2015-03-01.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
+<iframe width="100%" height="560"
src="https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/XnRNfDGkBVg"
frameborder="0"></iframe>]]></description><author>Jeff Scott
Brown</author><guid>2016-04-01-2</guid><pubDate>Fri, 01 Apr 2016 00:00:00
GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Grails® 3
Interceptors</title><link>https://grails.apache.org/blog/2015-03-01.html</link><description><![CDATA[</p>
<h2>Introduction</h2>
<p>Grails<sup>®</sup> 3 is a major step forward in the evolution of the
framework and re-evaluates many aspects of the framework that have evolved over
the years. One area of the framework that was re-evaluated is that related to
Grails filters.</p>
<p>Grails filters are a lot like servlet filters but are more simple and are
better integrated into the Grails runtime and its conventions. Grails filters
were a way to implement logic that might relate to any number of controllers
and were a powerful and flexible way to address many of those concerns. Grails
3 introduces the notion of interceptors as a better way to address many of the
types of concerns that previously would have been addressed with filters.</p>