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207 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
207 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
title: Routing
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summary: A more in depth look at how to map requests to particular controllers and actions.
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# Routing
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Routing is the process of mapping URL's to [api:Controllers] and actions. In the introduction we defined a new custom route
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for our `TeamsController` mapping any `teams` URL to our `TeamsController`
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<div class="info" markdown="1">
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If you're using the `cms` module with and dealing with `Page` objects then for your custom `Page Type` controllers you
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would extend `ContentController` or `Page_Controller`. You don't need to define the routes value as the `cms` handles
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routing.
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</div>
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These routes by standard, go into a `routes.yml` file in your applications `_config` folder alongside your other
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[Configuration](../configuration) information.
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**mysite/_config/routes.yml**
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:::yml
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---
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Name: mysiteroutes
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After: framework/routes#coreroutes
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---
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Director:
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rules:
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'teams//$Action/$ID/$Name': 'TeamController'
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'player/': 'PlayerController'
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'': 'HomeController'
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<div class="notice" markdown="1">
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To understand the syntax for the `routes.yml` file better, read the [Configuration](../configuration) documentation.
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</div>
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## Parameters
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:::yml
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'teams//$Action/$ID/$Name': 'TeamController'
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This route has defined that any URL beginning with `team` should create, and be handled by a `TeamController` instance.
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It also contains 3 `parameters` or `params` for short. `$Action`, `$ID` and `$Name`. These variables are placeholders
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which will be filled when the user makes their request. Request parameters are available on the `SS_HTTPRequest` object
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and able to be pulled out from a controller using `$this->getRequest()->param($name)`.
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<div class="info" markdown="1">
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All Controllers have access to `$this->getRequest()` for the request object and `$this->getResponse()` for the response.
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</div>
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Here is what those parameters would look like for certain requests
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:::php
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// GET /teams/
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print_r($this->getRequest()->params());
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// Array
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// (
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// [Action] => null
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// [ID] => null
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// [Name] => null
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// )
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// GET /teams/players/
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print_r($this->getRequest()->params());
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// Array
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// (
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// [Action] => 'players'
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// [ID] => null
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// [Name] => null
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// )
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// GET /teams/players/1
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print_r($this->getRequest()->params());
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// Array
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// (
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// [Action] => 'players'
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// [ID] => 1
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// [Name] => null
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// )
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You can also fetch one parameter at a time.
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:::php
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// GET /teams/players/1/
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echo $this->getRequest()->param('ID');
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// returns '1'
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## URL Patterns
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The `[api:RequestHandler]` class will parse all rules you specify against the following patterns. The most specific rule
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will be the one followed for the response.
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<div class="alert">
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A rule must always start with alphabetical ([A-Za-z]) characters or a $Variable declaration
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</div>
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| Pattern | Description |
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| ----------- | --------------- |
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| `$` | **Param Variable** - Starts the name of a paramater variable, it is optional to match this unless ! is used |
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| `!` | **Require Variable** - Placing this after a parameter variable requires data to be present for the rule to match |
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| `//` | **Shift Point** - Declares that only variables denoted with a $ are parsed into the $params AFTER this point in the regex |
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:::yml
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'teams/$Action/$ID/$OtherID': 'TeamController'
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# /teams/
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# /teams/players/
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# /teams/
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Standard URL handler syntax. For any URL that contains 'team' this rule will match and hand over execution to the
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matching controller. The `TeamsController` is passed an optional action, id and other id parameters to do any more
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decision making.
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:::yml
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'teams/$Action!/$ID!/': 'TeamController'
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This does the same matching as the previous example, any URL starting with `teams` will look at this rule **but** both
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`$Action` and `$ID` are required. Any requests to `team/` will result in a `404` error rather than being handed off to
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the `TeamController`.
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:::yml
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`admin/help//$Action/$ID`: 'AdminHelp'
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Match an url starting with `/admin/help/`, but don't include `/help/` as part of the action (the shift point is set to
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start parsing variables and the appropriate controller action AFTER the `//`).
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## URL Handlers
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<div class="alert" markdown="1">
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You **must** use the **$url_handlers** static array described here if your URL
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pattern does not use the Controller class's default pattern of
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`$Action//$ID/$OtherID`. If you fail to do so, and your pattern has more than
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2 parameters, your controller will throw the error "I can't handle sub-URLs of
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a *class name* object" with HTTP status 404.
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</div>
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In the above example the URLs were configured using the [api:Director] rules in the **routes.yml** file. Alternatively
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you can specify these in your Controller class via the **$url_handlers** static array. This array is processed by the
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[api:RequestHandler] at runtime once the `Controller` has been matched.
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This is useful when you want to provide custom actions for the mapping of `teams/*`. Say for instance we want to respond
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`coaches`, and `staff` to the one controller action `payroll`.
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**mysite/code/controllers/TeamController.php**
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:::php
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<?php
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class TeamController extends Controller {
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private static $allowed_actions = array(
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'payroll'
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);
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private static $url_handlers = array(
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'staff/$ID/$Name' => 'payroll',
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'coach/$ID/$Name' => 'payroll'
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);
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The syntax for the `$url_handlers` array users the same pattern matches as the `YAML` configuration rules.
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Now let’s consider a more complex example from a real project, where using
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**$url_handlers** is mandatory. In this example, the URLs are of the form
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`http://example.org/feed/go/`, followed by 5 parameters. The PHP controller
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class specifies the URL pattern in `$url_handlers`. Notice that it defines 5
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parameters.
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:::php
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class FeedController extends ContentController {
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private static $allowed_actions = array('go');
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private static $url_handlers = array(
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'go/$UserName/$AuthToken/$Timestamp/$OutputType/$DeleteMode' => 'go'
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);
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public function go() {
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$this->validateUser(
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$this->getRequest()->param('UserName'),
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$this->getRequest()->param('AuthToken')
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);
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/* more processing goes here */
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}
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The YAML rule, in contrast, is simple. It needs to provide only enough
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information for the framework to choose the desired controller.
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:::yaml
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Director:
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rules:
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'feed': 'FeedController'
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## Links
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* [api:Controller] API documentation
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* [api:Director] API documentation
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* [Example routes: framework](https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-framework/blob/master/_config/routes.yml)
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* [Example routes: cms](https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-cms/blob/master/_config/routes.yml)
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