Module: ActionDispatch::Routing::Mapper::Base
- Included in:
- ActionDispatch::Routing::Mapper
- Defined in:
- lib/action_dispatch/routing/mapper.rb
Instance Method Summary collapse
- #default_url_options=(options) ⇒ Object (also: #default_url_options)
-
#has_named_route?(name) ⇒ Boolean
Query if the following named route was already defined.
-
#match(path, options = nil) ⇒ Object
Matches a URL pattern to one or more routes.
-
#mount(app, options = nil) ⇒ Object
Mount a Rack-based application to be used within the application.
- #with_default_scope(scope, &block) ⇒ Object
Instance Method Details
#default_url_options=(options) ⇒ Object Also known as: default_url_options
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# File 'lib/action_dispatch/routing/mapper.rb', line 657 def () @set. = end |
#has_named_route?(name) ⇒ Boolean
Query if the following named route was already defined.
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# File 'lib/action_dispatch/routing/mapper.rb', line 669 def has_named_route?(name) @set.named_routes.key?(name) end |
#match(path, options = nil) ⇒ Object
Matches a URL pattern to one or more routes.
You should not use the ‘match` method in your router without specifying an HTTP method.
If you want to expose your action to both GET and POST, use:
# sets :controller, :action, and :id in params
match ':controller/:action/:id', via: [:get, :post]
Note that ‘:controller`, `:action`, and `:id` are interpreted as URL query parameters and thus available through `params` in an action.
If you want to expose your action to GET, use ‘get` in the router:
Instead of:
match ":controller/:action/:id"
Do:
get ":controller/:action/:id"
Two of these symbols are special, ‘:controller` maps to the controller and `:action` to the controller’s action. A pattern can also map wildcard segments (globs) to params:
get 'songs/*category/:title', to: 'songs#show'
# 'songs/rock/classic/stairway-to-heaven' sets
# params[:category] = 'rock/classic'
# params[:title] = 'stairway-to-heaven'
To match a wildcard parameter, it must have a name assigned to it. Without a variable name to attach the glob parameter to, the route can’t be parsed.
When a pattern points to an internal route, the route’s ‘:action` and `:controller` should be set in options or hash shorthand. Examples:
match 'photos/:id', to: 'photos#show', via: :get
match 'photos/:id', controller: 'photos', action: 'show', via: :get
A pattern can also point to a ‘Rack` endpoint i.e. anything that responds to `call`:
match 'photos/:id', to: -> (hash) { [200, {}, ["Coming soon"]] }, via: :get
match 'photos/:id', to: PhotoRackApp, via: :get
# Yes, controller actions are just rack endpoints
match 'photos/:id', to: PhotosController.action(:show), via: :get
Because requesting various HTTP verbs with a single action has security implications, you must either specify the actions in the via options or use one of the [HttpHelpers](HttpHelpers) instead ‘match`
### Options
Any options not seen here are passed on as params with the URL.
:controller : The route’s controller.
:action : The route’s action.
:param : Overrides the default resource identifier ‘:id` (name of the dynamic
segment used to generate the routes). You can access that segment from
your controller using `params[<:param>]`. In your router:
resources :users, param: :name
The `users` resource here will have the following routes generated for it:
GET /users(.:format)
POST /users(.:format)
GET /users/new(.:format)
GET /users/:name/edit(.:format)
GET /users/:name(.:format)
PATCH/PUT /users/:name(.:format)
DELETE /users/:name(.:format)
You can override `ActiveRecord::Base#to_param` of a related model to
construct a URL:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
def to_param
name
end
end
user = User.find_by(name: 'Phusion')
user_path(user) # => "/users/Phusion"
:path : The path prefix for the routes.
:module : The namespace for :controller.
match 'path', to: 'c#a', module: 'sekret', controller: 'posts', via: :get
# => Sekret::PostsController
See `Scoping#namespace` for its scope equivalent.
:as : The name used to generate routing helpers.
:via : Allowed HTTP verb(s) for route.
match 'path', to: 'c#a', via: :get
match 'path', to: 'c#a', via: [:get, :post]
match 'path', to: 'c#a', via: :all
:to : Points to a ‘Rack` endpoint. Can be an object that responds to `call` or a
string representing a controller's action.
match 'path', to: 'controller#action', via: :get
match 'path', to: -> (env) { [200, {}, ["Success!"]] }, via: :get
match 'path', to: RackApp, via: :get
:on : Shorthand for wrapping routes in a specific RESTful context. Valid values
are `:member`, `:collection`, and `:new`. Only use within `resource(s)`
block. For example:
resource :bar do
match 'foo', to: 'c#a', on: :member, via: [:get, :post]
end
Is equivalent to:
resource :bar do
member do
match 'foo', to: 'c#a', via: [:get, :post]
end
end
:constraints : Constrains parameters with a hash of regular expressions or an object that
responds to `matches?`. In addition, constraints other than path can also
be specified with any object that responds to `===` (e.g. String, Array,
Range, etc.).
match 'path/:id', constraints: { id: /[A-Z]\d{5}/ }, via: :get
match 'json_only', constraints: { format: 'json' }, via: :get
class PermitList
def matches?(request) request.remote_ip == '1.2.3.4' end
end
match 'path', to: 'c#a', constraints: PermitList.new, via: :get
See `Scoping#constraints` for more examples with its scope equivalent.
:defaults : Sets defaults for parameters
# Sets params[:format] to 'jpg' by default
match 'path', to: 'c#a', defaults: { format: 'jpg' }, via: :get
See `Scoping#defaults` for its scope equivalent.
:anchor : Boolean to anchor a ‘match` pattern. Default is true. When set to false,
the pattern matches any request prefixed with the given path.
# Matches any request starting with 'path'
match 'path', to: 'c#a', anchor: false, via: :get
:format : Allows you to specify the default value for optional ‘format` segment or
disable it by supplying `false`.
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# File 'lib/action_dispatch/routing/mapper.rb', line 609 def match(path, = nil) end |
#mount(app, options = nil) ⇒ Object
Mount a Rack-based application to be used within the application.
mount SomeRackApp, at: "some_route"
For options, see ‘match`, as `mount` uses it internally.
All mounted applications come with routing helpers to access them. These are named after the class specified, so for the above example the helper is either ‘some_rack_app_path` or `some_rack_app_url`. To customize this helper’s name, use the ‘:as` option:
mount(SomeRackApp, at: "some_route", as: "exciting")
This will generate the ‘exciting_path` and `exciting_url` helpers which can be used to navigate to this mounted app.
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# File 'lib/action_dispatch/routing/mapper.rb', line 627 def mount(app, = nil) if path = .delete(:at) elsif Hash === app = app app, path = .find { |k, _| k.respond_to?(:call) } .delete(app) if app end raise ArgumentError, "A rack application must be specified" unless app.respond_to?(:call) raise ArgumentError, <<~MSG unless path Must be called with mount point mount SomeRackApp, at: "some_route" or mount(SomeRackApp => "some_route") MSG rails_app = rails_app? app [:as] ||= app_name(app, rails_app) target_as = name_for_action([:as], path) [:via] ||= :all match(path, { to: app, anchor: false, format: false }.merge()) define_generate_prefix(app, target_as) if rails_app self end |
#with_default_scope(scope, &block) ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/action_dispatch/routing/mapper.rb', line 662 def with_default_scope(scope, &block) scope(scope) do instance_exec(&block) end end |