Has anyone used the grails timeZoneSelect tag on GAE/J ? I've come across the error below on app engine. I know reflection is not allowed, but the line in error seems to be calling a straightforward public function (inDaylightTime)? Does anyone know how to workaround this (short of a hardcoded list of time zones)?
thanks
Uncaught exception from servlet org.codehaus.groovy.grails.web.pages.exceptions.GroovyPagesException: Error processing GroovyPageView: Error executing tag : org.codehaus.groovy.grails.web.taglib.exceptions.GrailsTagException: Error executing tag : java.lang.IllegalAccessException: Reflection is not allowed on public boolean sun.util.calendar.ZoneInfo.inDaylightTime(java.util.Date) at com.google.apphosting.utils.servlet.ParseBlobUploadFilter.doFilter(ParseBlobUploadFilter.java:97) at com.google.apphosting.runtime.jetty.SaveSessionFilter.doFilter(SaveSessionFilter.java:35) at com.google.ap开发者_运维百科phosting.utils.servlet.TransactionCleanupFilter.doFilter(TransactionCleanupFilter.java:43) at com.google.apphosting.runtime.jetty.AppVersionHandlerMap.handle(AppVersionHandlerMap.java:238) at com.google.apphosting.runtime.jetty.RpcRequestParser.parseAvailable(RpcRequestParser.java:76) at com.google.apphosting.runtime.jetty.JettyServletEngineAdapter.serviceRequest(JettyServletEngineAdapter.java:135) at com.google.apphosting.runtime.JavaRuntime.handleRequest(JavaRuntime.java:235) at com.google.apphosting.base.RuntimePb$EvaluationRuntime$6.handleBlockingRequest(RuntimePb.java:5235) at com.google.apphosting.base.RuntimePb$EvaluationRuntime$6.handleBlockingRequest(RuntimePb.java:5233) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.BlockingApplicationHandler.handleRequest(BlockingApplicationHandler.java:24) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.RpcUtil.runRpcInApplication(RpcUtil.java:363) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.Server$2.run(Server.java:838) at com.google.tracing.LocalTraceSpanRunnable.run(LocalTraceSpanRunnable.java:56) at com.google.tracing.LocalTraceSpanBuilder.internalContinueSpan(LocalTraceSpanBuilder.java:536) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.Server.startRpc(Server.java:793) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.Server.processRequest(Server.java:368) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.ServerConnection.messageReceived(ServerConnection.java:448) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.RpcConnection.parseMessages(RpcConnection.java:319) at com.google.net.rpc.impl.RpcConnection.dataReceived(RpcConnection.java:290) at com.google.net.async.Connection.handleReadEvent(Connection.java:466) at com.google.net.async.EventDispatcher.processNetworkEvents(EventDispatcher.java:759) at com.google.net.async.EventDispatcher.internalLoop(EventDispatcher.java:205) at com.google.net.async.EventDispatcher.loop(EventDispatcher.java:101) at com.google.net.rpc.RpcService.runUntilServerShutdown(RpcService.java:251) at com.google.apphosting.runtime.JavaRuntime$RpcRunnable.run(JavaRuntime.java:394) at java.lang.Thread.run(Unknown Source) Caused by: org.codehaus.groovy.grails.web.taglib.exceptions.GrailsTagException: Error executing tag : org.codehaus.groovy.grails.web.taglib.exceptions.GrailsTagException: Error executing tag : java.lang.IllegalAccessException: Reflection is not allowed on public boolean sun.util.calendar.ZoneInfo.inDaylightTime(java.util.Date)
I had a similar problem when I tried to call TimeZone.getTimeZone() to get a TimeZone and worked around this one by using a different library, Joda Time.
http://joda-time.sourceforge.net/index.html
There are equivalent time/date methods in this package that work better than those in the underlying JDK.
This is specific to dynamic languages which use reflection to invoke methods on the sun.* objects returned by java.util.TimeZone factory methods; I worked around a similar limitation in the TimeZone stuff by writing a wrapper method in Java and then calling that method, so that the invocations on the sun.* objects wouldn't be via reflection.
the below works for me
public Date getDateWithTimeZone(Date date, String timeZone){
def tz = TimeZone.getTimeZone(timeZone);
def cal = Calendar.getInstance()
cal.setTimeInMillis( date.getTime() )
cal.setTimeZone( tz )
def offset = cal.get(Calendar.ZONE_OFFSET)
date.setTime( date.getTime()+offset )
return date;
}
Here's the Java half of what I did:
package inonit.google.appengine.runtime; import java.util.*; public class Methods { public int getTimezoneOffset(String timezone, long time) { return TimeZone.getTimeZone(timezone).getOffset(time); } }
My application isn't Grails, and I don't know enough about Grails to know whether the abstractions defined by Grails would make it easy to call into a class like this one or not. But in my app I just went on to instantiate a local helper copy of this object and call into it when I needed to calculate timezone offsets.
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