I have two issues with user-friendly URLs.
I have a router set up as follows:
The actual URL is http://www.example.com/course/view-batch/course_id/19
I want a friendlier URL http://www.example.com/java-training/19
I have setup the following route in application.ini:
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.route = "/:title/:course_id/"
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.controller = course
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.action = view-batch
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.reqs.course_id = "\d+"
This works perfectly well.
Now I have a new page - which contains user reviews for Java
The actual URL is http://www.example.com/course/view-reviews/course_id/19
I want a friendlier URL http://www.example.com/java-reviews/19
I realize its not possible because one route is already setup to match that format.
So I was thinking if its possible to use regex and check if title contains "reviews" then use this route.
I tried this approach, but it doesn't work. Instead, it opens the view-batch page:
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.type = "Zend_Controller_Router_Route_Regex"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.route = "/:title/:course_id"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.controller = "course"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.action = "view-reviews"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.reqs.course_id = "\d+"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.reqs.title = "\breviews\b"
The closest I have got this to work is
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.route = "/:title/:course_id"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.controller = "course"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.action = "view-reviews"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.reqs.course_id = "\d+"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.reqs.title = "reviews"
Now if I enter the URL http://www.example.com/reviews/19, then the view-reviews action gets called.
Is it possible - to check if title contains the word "reviews" - then this route should be invoked?
Going back to my earlier working route for http://www.example.com/java-training/19:
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.route = "/:title/:course_id/"
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.controller = course
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.action = view-batch
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.reqs.course_id = "\d+"
The number 19 is the course id, which I need in the action to pull the details from the database.
But when the page is displayed, I dont want the number 19 visible.
I just want the URL to be http://www.example.com/java-training
Is this possible?
1) You can use Route_Regex to achieve what you want
protected function _initRoutes()
{
$router = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance()->getRouter();
$route = new Zend_Controller_Router_Route_Regex(
'([a-zA-Z]+)-reviews/(\d+)',
array(
'module' => 'default',
'controller' => 'course',
'action' => 'view-reviews'
),
array(
1 => 'language',
2 => 'course_id',
)
);
$router->addRoute('review', $route);
$route = new Zend_Controller_Router_Route_Regex(
'([a-zA-Z]+)-training/(\d+)',
array(
'module' => 'default',
'controller' => 'course',
'action' => 'view-batch'
),
array(
1 => 'language',
2 => 'course_id',
)
);
$router->addRoute('training', $route);
}
2) For the second point I can't see how it can be possible as is.
One thing you could do though is to use the name of the course, if you have one, to display an url like :
www.xyz.com/java-training/my-awesome-course-19
www.xyz.com/java-training/19/my-awesome-course
It would be pretty easy using the routes i mentionned above.
for question 1. I think you can solve this problem quite simply by altering the route. You don't need to have :title as part of the route, instead it can be hard coded in your case. I would recommend the following configuration.
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.route = "/java-training/:course_id/"
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.controller = course
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.action = view-batch
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.defaults.title = java-training
resources.router.routes.viewbatchcourse.reqs.course_id = "\d+"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.route = "/java-reviews/:course_id/"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.controller = course
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.action = view-reviews
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.title = java-reviews
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.reqs.course_id = "\d+"
For question 2. As you describe it, simply no.
Re: Q1. I haven’t tested this, but hopefully it is pointing you in the direction you want to go.
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.type = "Zend_Controller_Router_Route_Regex"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.route = "(.+)-reviews/(\d+)"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.controller = "course"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.defaults.action = "view-reviews"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.map.1 = "title"
resources.router.routes.viewreviews.map.2 = "course_id"
Re: Q2. I think you'd need to either forward the user to another (parameterless) URL or handle this via javascript. See Modify the URL without reloading the page.
Related
in my project I'm using zend to handle routing. Atm we've got routing rules which looks like this:
array(
'match' => 'page',
'params' => array('page', 'idConfiguration'),
'controller' => 'controler1',
'action' => 'action1'
)
So we access this action by: http://base_url/page/1/1223324 for example.
Is there a simple solution to create rules so i can determine which action is called based on number of params?
I'd like it to look the following way:
http://base_url/ - action 0
http://base_url/pageNumber - action 1
http://base_url/pageNumber/idConfiguration - action 2
http://base_url/pageNumber/idConfiguration/someotherparam - action 3
Thank you in advance for help
Ini-based solution (hope I understand what you want):
routes.action0.route = "/:pageNumber"
routes.action0.defaults.controller = "controller0"
routes.action0.defaults.action = "action0"
routes.action0.reqs.pageNumber = "\d+"
routes.action1.route = "/:pageNumber/:idConfiguration"
routes.action1.defaults.controller = "controller1"
routes.action1.defaults.action = "action1"
routes.action1.reqs.pageNumber = "\d+"
routes.action1.reqs.idConfiguration= "\d+"
routes.action2.route = "/:pageNumber/:idConfiguration/:someOtherParam"
routes.action2.defaults.controller = "controller2"
routes.action2.defaults.action = "action2"
routes.action2.reqs.pageNumber = "\d+"
routes.action2.reqs.idConfiguration= "\d+"
routes.action2.reqs.someOtherParam = "someOtherRegEx"
You can subclass Zend_Controller_Router_Route and create the routing behaviour you like. Of the top of my head, and without testing it you can try something like this:
class MyRoute extends Zend_Controller_Router_Route
{
public function match($path)
{
$result = array(
'controller' => 'index',
'action' => substr_count($path, '/'),
);
return $result;
}
}
You would need to add validations, of course. Also you should return FALSE if the URL doesn't match and you want it to be tested with other routes. But this should give you a general idea on how to work this out.
So I'm trying to install and get running Kohana. I am very new to it and frameworks in general (though I have used CakePHP a little bit).
Anyways...in my bootstrap file I have this:
// GET PARAMS -- This basically splits domain.com/kohana/controller/action/param1/etc
// into: controller | action | param1 | etc
$requestURI = explode('/', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
$scriptName = explode('/',$_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']);
for($i= 0;$i < sizeof($scriptName);$i++){
if ($requestURI[$i] == $scriptName[$i]){
unset($requestURI[$i]);
}
}
$param = array_values($requestURI);
$controller = # $param[0];
$action = # $param[1];
$param1 = # $param[2];
$param2 = # $param[3];
$param3 = # $param[4];
$param4 = # $param[5];
$param5 = # $param[6];
$param6 = # $param[7];
Now, I want to connect to my database and basically see if the first param aka $param[0] aka $controller is equal to one of my pages "categories" (corresponds to my categories_pages table). If it IS a category then I want to use the default "categories" controller otherwise, the controller should be whatever $param[0] is. This means if I go to domain.com/kohana/movies or domain.com/kohana/games it will display the categories controller otherwise domain.com/kohana/users will display the users controller.
$db = Database::instance();
$getiscategory = DB::select('*')->from('categories_pages')->where('directory', '=', $controller)->execute();
$is_category = $getiscategory->count();
if($is_category){
$controller = "categories";
}
$controller = (empty($controller)) ? 'index' : $controller;
$action = (empty($action)) ? 'index' : $action;
What I wanted to accomplish above works. If I echo $is_category I see that the value 1 is returned when there is a category match and if I echo $controller, I see that "categories" is set to be the controller.
Here is my code for the actual routing method...
Route::set(
'custom',
'(<controller>(/<action>(/<param1>)(/<param2>(/<param3>(/<param4>(/<param5>(/<param6>)))))))'
)->defaults(array(
'controller' => $controller,
'action' => $action,
'param1' => $param1,
'param2' => $param2,
'param3' => $param3,
'param4' => $param4,
'param5' => $param5,
'param6' => $param6,
));
Unfortunately, I'm not sure where it's routing to. As I mentioned $controller is returned previously as categories which is correct but yet I receive the error message "HTTP_Exception_404 [404]: The Requested URL $param[0] (movies or games, etc) was not found on this server."
Keep in mind I do not have a controller class for $param[0] if it matches a category because I want to use the "categories" controller class. If I go to domain.com/kohana/categories it works fine.
Anyone have any ideas/know a work-around?
Addition #1
I figured out that even though the categories controller is called and the correct action is called, it still is requiring the "shows" controller to display. I added a shows controller with the very basic info (template, content, etc) and it showed correctly. Is there a work around in the routing class to make the designated controller show? Like I said, I tell it what controller to go to and it acknowledges it but it doesn't actually go to it.
You're overcomplicating things I think. Also your code would force a limit of 6 parameters on every request.
I'll probably be easier to use two different routes, and if it doesn't match the first, then it can fall back to the second.
Route::set(
'categories',
'(<category>(/<action>(/<param1>)(/<param2>(/<param3>(/<param4>(/<param5>(/<param6>)))))))',
array('category' => '(movies|games)')
)->defaults(array(
'controller' => 'category',
'action' => 'index',
));
Route::set(
'users',
'<username>(/<action>(/<param1>)(/<param2>(/<param3>(/<param4>(/<param5>(/<param6>))))))'
)->defaults(array(
'controller' => 'users',
'action' => 'index',
));
If you only have one or two categories you could build them into the regex string, with some caching of course.
Otherwise, look up lambda routes, they're the means by which you can have dynamic routes like this.
I bumped into a problem and I can't seem to find a good solution to make it work. I have to make some dynamic routes into a Zend Framework project. I'll explain shortly what my problem is:
I need to have dynamic custom routes that "extend" the default route (module/controller/action/params). The project I'm working for has several partners and the routes have to work with those.
To store the partners I've made a static class and it looks like this.
<?php
class App_Partner
{
static public $partners = array(
array(
'name' => 'partner1',
'picture' => 'partner1.jpg'
),
array(
'name' => 'partner2',
'picture' => 'partner2.jpg'
),
array(
'name' => 'partner3',
'picture' => 'partner3.jpg'
)
);
static public function routePartners() {
$partners = array();
foreach(self::$partners as $partner) {
array_push($partners, strtolower($partner['name']));
}
$regex = '(' . implode('|', $partners) . ')';
return $regex;
}
}
So App_Partner::routePartners() return me a string like (partner1|partner2|partner3) which I use to create the right routes. My goal is to have the custom routes for each partner for every route I have set in the Bootstrap. So if I have a route add-product.html set I want it to work for each partner as partner1/add-product.html, partner2/add-product.html and partner3/add-product.html.
Also, partner1/, partner2/, partner3 should route to default/index/index.
In fact, I made this thing to work using routes like the one below.
<?php
$routeProposal = new Zend_Controller_Router_Route_Regex(
App_Partner::routePartners() . '?/?proposals.html',
array(
'module' => 'default',
'controller' => 'proposal',
'action' => 'index',
'page' => 1
),
array( 1 => 'partner'),
"%s/proposals.html"
);
$router->addRoute('proposal', $routeProposal);
The problem
The above route works fine if I use a partner in the request URI, but if I don't, I get double slashes like public//proposals.html because of the reverse route set in the route above to be "%s/proposals.html". I can't seem to find a way to avoid this reverse route because I build my urls using the url view helper and if the reverse route isn't set I get an exception stating this.
I also need the routes to work without a partner set, which will be the default way (add-product.html, proposals.html etc).
From your description, it seems like you're looking for a zend router chain, where your partner is an optional chain.
Here's a similar question, but using a hostname route : Zend Framework: get subdomain parameter from route. I adapted it to solve your problem, just put the following in your Bootstrap.php to initialize the routing :
protected function _initRoute()
{
$this->bootstrap('FrontController');
$router = $this->getResource('FrontController')->getRouter();
// Default route
$router->removeDefaultRoutes();
$defaultRoute = new Zend_Controller_Router_Route(
':controller/:action/*',
array(
'module' => 'default',
'controller' => 'index',
'action' => 'index',
)
);
$router->addRoute('default', $defaultRoute);
$partnerRoute = new Zend_Controller_Router_Route(
':partner',
array('partner' => 'none'),
array('partner' => '^(partner1|partner2|partner3)$')
);
$router->addRoute('partner', $partnerRoute->chain($defaultRoute));
}
Change as you see fit. In your controllers you will only get a value for the partner parameter if it was actually specified AND valid (you will get a routing error if the partner doesn't exist)...
I use a similar process to detech lang, in my route (but with a ini file).
You can use a default value for you partners parameter to make the route working without partner, and add a ? to your regex.
But actually, I don't know how to avoid the double //...
Hope that helps.
EDIT: For your information, here is a simplified version of my route with language:
routes.lang.type = "Zend_Controller_Router_Route"
routes.lang.route = "lang/:language/*"
routes.lang.reqs.language = "^(en|fr|nl|de)?$"
routes.lang.defaults.language = none
routes.lang.defaults.module = default
routes.lang.defaults.controller = index
routes.lang.defaults.action = language
I'm new to cakephp...and I have a page with a url this:
http://localhost/books/filteredByAuthor/John-Doe
so the controller is ´books´, the action is ´filteredByAuthor´ and ´John-Doe´ is a parameter.. but the url looks ugly so i've added a Route like this:
Router::connect('/author/:name', array( 'controller' => 'books','action' => 'filteredByAuthor'), array('pass'=>array('name'),'name'=>".*"));
and now my link is:
http://localhost/author/John-Doe
the problem is that the view has a paginator and when i change the page (by clicking on the next or prev button).. the paginator won't consider my routing... and will change the url to this
http://localhost/books/filteredByAuthor/John-Doe/page:2
the code on my view is just:
<?php echo $this->Paginator->prev('<< ' . __('previous', true), array(), null, array('class'=>'disabled'));?>
the documentation doesn't say anything about avoiding this and i've spent hours reading the paginators source code and api.. and in the end i just want my links to be something like this: (with the sort and direction included on the url)
http://localhost/author/John-Doe/1/name/asc
Is it possible to do that and how?
hate to answer my own question... but this might save some time to another developper =) (is all about getting good karma)
i found out that you can pass an "options" array to the paginator, and inside that array you can specify the url (an array of: controller, action and parameters) that the paginator will use to create the links.. so you have to write all the possible routes in the routes.php file. Basically there are 3 possibilities:
when the "page" is not defined
For example:
http://localhost/author/John-Doe
the paginator will assume that the it's the first page. The corresponding route would be:
Router::connect('/author/:name', array( 'controller' => 'books','action' => 'filteredByAuthor'),array('pass'=>array('name'),'name'=>'[a-zA-Z\-]+'));
when the "page" is defined
For example:
http://localhost/author/John-Doe/3 (page 3)
The route would be:
Router::connect('/author/:name/:page', array( 'controller' => 'books','action' => 'filteredByAuthor'),array('pass'=>array('name','page'),'name'=>'[a-zA-Z\-]+','page'=>'[0-9]+'));
finally when the page and the sort is defined on the url (by clicking on the sort links created by the paginator).
For example:
http://localhost/author/John-Doe/3/title/desc (John Doe's books ordered desc by title)
The route is:
Router::connect('/author/:name/:page/:sort/:direction', array( 'controller' => 'books','action' => 'filteredByAuthor'),
array('pass'=>array('name','page','sort','direction'),
'name'=>"[a-zA-Z\-]+",
'page'=>'[0-9]*',
'sort'=>'[a-zA-Z\.]+',
'direction'=>'[a-z]+',
));
on the view you have to unset the url created by the paginator, cause you'll specify your own url array on the controller:
Controller:
function filteredByAuthor($name = null,$page = null , $sort = null , $direction = null){
$option_url = array('controller'=>'books','action'=>'filteredByAuthor','name'=>$name);
if($sort){
$this->passedArgs['sort'] = $sort;
$options_url['sort'] = $sort;
}
if($direction){
$this->passedArgs['direction'] = $direction;
$options_url['direction'] = $direction;
}
Send the variable $options_url to the view using set()... so in the view you'll need to do this:
View:
unset($this->Paginator->options['url']);
echo $this->Paginator->prev(__('« Précédente', true), array('url'=>$options_url), null, array('class'=>'disabled'));
echo $this->Paginator->numbers(array('separator'=>'','url'=>$options_url));
echo $this->Paginator->next(__('Suivante »', true), array('url'=>$options_url), null, array('class' => 'disabled'));
Now, on the sort links you'll need to unset the variables 'sort' and 'direction'. We already used them to create the links on the paginator, but if we dont delete them, then the sort() function will use them... and we wont be able to sort =)
$options_sort = $options_url;
unset($options_sort['direction']);
unset($options_sort['sort']);
echo $this->Paginator->sort('Produit <span> </span>', 'title',array('escape'=>false,'url'=>$options_sort));
hope this helps =)
I'm looking to setup a custom route which supplies implicit parameter names to a Zend_Application. Essentially, I have an incoming URL which looks like this:
/StandardSystems/Dell/LatitudeE6500
I'd like that to be mapped to the StandardsystemsController, and I'd like that controller to be passed parameters "make" => "Dell" and "model" => "LatitudeE6500".
How can I setup such a system using Zend_Application and Zend_Controller_Router?
EDIT: I didn't explain myself all that clearly I guess -- if make and model aren't present I'd like to redirect the user to another action on the StandardsystemsController. currently, using Ballsacian1's answer with this in application.ini:
resources.router.routes.StandardSystem.route = "/StandardSystem/:make/:model"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystem.defaults.controller = "StandardSystem"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystem.defaults.action = "system"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystem.defaults.make = ""
resources.router.routes.StandardSystem.defaults.model = ""
resources.router.routes.StandardSystemDefault.route = "/StandardSystem"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystemDefault.defaults.controller = "StandardSystem"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystemDefault.defaults.action = "index"
You would first instantiate a new Zend_Controller_Router_Route to create your route.
$stdsys_route = new Zend_Controller_Router_Route(
'/StandardSystems/:make/:model',
array(
'controller' => 'StandardsystemsController',
'action' => 'myaction'
);
);
This route then needs to be added to your router.
$front_controller = Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance();
$front_controller->getRouter()->addRoute('stdsys', $stdsys_route);
Now when you dispatch, the route should take effect.
References:
http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/zend.controller.router.html
Resources:
resources.router.routes.StandardSystems.route = "/StandardSystems/:make/:model"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystems.defaults.controller = "standardsystems"
resources.router.routes.StandardSystems.defaults.action = "index"