![]() ![]() Don't worry if you're not clear on the distinction: the guide will tell you which file to put a particular setting in. This means that oovy is packaged with your application, but oovy is not. The second file, oovy, is for settings that are used when your application is running. The first, oovy, is for settings that are used when running Grails commands, such as compile, doc, etc. The assumption is that you have at least read the first section of this chapter!įor general configuration Grails provides two files:īoth of them use Groovy's ConfigSlurper syntax. Later sections of the user guide will mention what configuration settings you can use, but not how to set them. With Grails' default settings you can actually develop an application without doing any configuration whatsoever, as the quick start demonstrates, but it's important to learn where and how to override the conventions when you need to. ![]() It may seem odd that in a framework that embraces "convention-over-configuration" that we tackle this topic now. 5.7.12 Caching of Dependency Resolution Results 5 Configuration
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