§Application global settings
§The Global object
Defining a Global
object in your project allows you to handle global settings for your application. This object must be defined in the default (empty) package.
import play.api._
object Global extends GlobalSettings {
}
Tip: You can also specify a custom
GlobalSettings
implementation class name using theapplication.global
configuration key.
§Hooking into application start and stop events
You can override the onStart
and onStop
methods to be notified of the events in the application life-cycle:
import play.api._
object Global extends GlobalSettings {
override def onStart(app: Application) {
Logger.info("Application has started")
}
override def onStop(app: Application) {
Logger.info("Application shutdown...")
}
}
§Providing an application error page
When an exception occurs in your application, the onError
operation will be called. The default is to use the internal framework error page:
import play.api._
import play.api.mvc._
import play.api.mvc.Results._
object Global extends GlobalSettings {
override def onError(request: RequestHeader, ex: Throwable) = {
InternalServerError(
views.html.errorPage(ex)
)
}
}
§Handling missing actions and binding errors
If the framework doesn’t find an Action
for a request, the onHandlerNotFound
operation will be called:
import play.api._
import play.api.mvc._
import play.api.mvc.Results._
object Global extends GlobalSettings {
override def onHandlerNotFound(request: RequestHeader): Result = {
NotFound(
views.html.notFoundPage(request.path)
)
}
}
The onBadRequest
operation will be called if a route was found, but it was not possible to bind the request parameters:
import play.api._
import play.api.mvc._
import play.api.mvc.Results._
object Global extends GlobalSettings {
override def onBadRequest(request: RequestHeader, error: String) = {
BadRequest("Bad Request: " + error)
}
}
Next: Intercepting requests