Routing¶
Routes map a URL and a method to a controller method. Routes are defined inside appinfo/routes.php
by returning them as an array:
<?php
return [
'routes' => [
['name' => 'page#index', 'url' => '/', 'verb' => 'GET'],
],
];
The route array contains the following parts:
- url: The URL that is matched after /index.php/apps/myapp
- name: The controller and the method to call; page#index is being mapped to PageController->index(), articles_api#drop_latest would be mapped to ArticlesApiController->dropLatest(). The controller in the example above would be stored in
lib/Controller/PageController.php
. - verb (Optional, defaults to GET): The HTTP method that should be matched, (e.g. GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS, PATCH)
- requirements (Optional): lets you match and extract URLs that have slashes in them (see Matching subURLs)
- postfix (Optional): lets you define a route id postfix. Since each route name will be transformed to a route id (page#method -> myapp.page.method) and the route id can only exist once you can use the postfix option to alter the route id creation by adding a string to the route id, e.g., ‘name’ => ‘page#method’, ‘postfix’ => ‘test’ will yield the route id myapp.page.methodtest. This makes it possible to add more than one route/URL for a controller method
- defaults (Optional): If this setting is given, a default value will be assumed for each URL parameter which is not present. The default values are passed in as a key => value par array
Extracting values from the URL¶
It is possible to extract values from the URL to allow RESTful URL design. To extract a value, you have to wrap it inside curly braces:
<?php
// Request: GET /index.php/apps/myapp/authors/3
// appinfo/routes.php
array('name' => 'author#show', 'url' => '/authors/{id}', 'verb' => 'GET'),
// controller/authorcontroller.php
class AuthorController {
public function show($id) {
// $id is '3'
}
}
The identifier used inside the route is being passed into controller method by reflecting the method parameters. So basically if you want to get the value {id} in your method, you need to add $id to your method parameters.
Matching subURLs¶
Sometimes it is needed to match more than one URL fragment. An example would be to match a request for all URLs that start with OPTIONS /index.php/apps/myapp/api. To do this, use the requirements parameter in your route which is an array containing pairs of ‘key’ => ‘regex’:
<?php
// Request: OPTIONS /index.php/apps/myapp/api/my/route
// appinfo/routes.php
array('name' => 'author_api#cors', 'url' => '/api/{path}', 'verb' => 'OPTIONS',
'requirements' => array('path' => '.+')),
// controller/authorapicontroller.php
class AuthorApiController {
public function cors($path) {
// $path will be 'my/route'
}
}
Default values for subURL¶
Apart from matching requirements, a subURL may also have a default value. Say you want to support pagination (a ‘page’ parameter) for your /posts subURL that displays posts entries list. You may set a default value for the ‘page’ parameter, that will be used if not already set in the URL. Use the defaults parameter in your route which is an array containing pairs of ‘urlparameter’ => ‘defaultvalue’:
<?php
// Request: GET /index.php/app/myapp/post
// appinfo/routes.php
array(
'name' => 'post#index',
'url' => '/post/{page}',
'verb' => 'GET',
'defaults' => array('page' => 1) // this allows same URL as /index.php/myapp/post/1
),
// controller/postcontroller.php
class PostController
{
public function index($page = 1)
{
// $page will be 1
}
}
Registering resources¶
When dealing with resources, writing routes can become quite repetitive since most of the time routes for the following tasks are needed:
- Get all entries
- Get one entry by id
- Create an entry
- Update an entry
- Delete an entry
To prevent repetition, it’s possible to define resources. The following routes:
<?php
return [
'routes' => [
['name' => 'author#index', 'url' => '/authors', 'verb' => 'GET'],
['name' => 'author#show', 'url' => '/authors/{id}', 'verb' => 'GET'],
['name' => 'author#create', 'url' => '/authors', 'verb' => 'POST'],
['name' => 'author#update', 'url' => '/authors/{id}', 'verb' => 'PUT'],
['name' => 'author#destroy', 'url' => '/authors/{id}', 'verb' => 'DELETE'],
// your other routes here
],
];
can be abbreviated by using the resources key:
<?php
return [
'resources' => [
'author' => ['url' => '/authors'],
],
'routes' => [
// your other routes here
],
];
Using the URLGenerator¶
Sometimes it is useful to turn a route into a URL to make the code independent from the URL design or to generate a URL for an image in img/. Inside the PageController the URL generator can be injected by adding it to the constructor, which will allow to use it to generate a URL for a redirect. For more details on that see the Dependency injection reference.
<?php
namespace OCA\MyApp\Controller;
use \OCP\IRequest;
use \OCP\IURLGenerator;
use \OCP\AppFramework\Controller;
use \OCP\AppFramework\Http\RedirectResponse;
class PageController extends Controller {
private $urlGenerator;
public function __construct($appName, IRequest $request,
IURLGenerator $urlGenerator) {
parent::__construct($appName, $request);
$this->urlGenerator = $urlGenerator;
}
/**
* redirect to /apps/news/myapp/authors/3
*/
public function redirect() {
// route name: author_api#do_something
// route url: /apps/news/myapp/authors/{id}
// # needs to be replaced with a . due to limitations and prefixed
// with your app id
$route = 'myapp.author_api.do_something';
$parameters = array('id' => 3);
$url = $this->urlGenerator->linkToRoute($route, $parameters);
return new RedirectResponse($url);
}
}
URLGenerator is case sensitive, so appName must match exactly the name you use in configuration. If you use a CamelCase name as myCamelCaseApp,
<?php
$route = 'myCamelCaseApp.author_api.do_something';