I have the following code in Laravel that serves a React application that manipulates history states (reactRouter):
Route::any('{any}', 'HomeController#reactLoader')->where('any', '.*');
In Laravel, how to make Route::any accept all uri's except ones containing a dot? I want to prevent Laravel remembering invalid asset routes (ex: .map file) and serving it when a user relogs into the app.
I have tried with the following regex expression (didn't work): ^[^.]*$
Successful assets are served directly using Nginx, which they don't hit Laravel router hence not a problem.
I'm pretty new to working with Symfony and I cannot find a way around my problem:
I have a domain, say testing.domain.tld where I deploy my app for testing purposes. Routing works as expected for all my self written controllers, but when i send an email or in easyadmin, the generated URL is something like 127.0.0.1:8080/route instead of testing.domain.tld/route.
This can probably be done in config, but I do not see where/how...
I would be very thankful for any hints!
You have to configure the router request context base url. If you are using at least Symfony 5.1 you can configure it via the framework.router.default_uri configuration key, otherwise you have to specify the host, scheme and base path of your application.
Read more about this feature in this post from symfony blog
To deploy a php app to Google App Engine it says that you need a router, like something in Laravel...the problem is I don't use Laravel (or any other major PHP framework) and I have no intention to. I need to know how to route requests to the appropriate paths in just vanilla PHP. I haven't found any tutorials online that don't deal with a framework or just including client views. Here is what I need:
When a request comes into '/'...it routes to /index.php (obviously this is already happening)
When a request comes into '/account/' it routes to /account/index.php. This is the part I don't know how to do.
I have tried outputting $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] and then redirecting the path to the correct place, but $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] always just reads '/'.
I'm having issues when trying to consume a laravel route defined on the api.php routes. When running both (angular and laravel) independently they work fine, but I compiled the angular project and placed on laravel's public folder, changing the index.php to index.html and it loads perfectly (dashboard show's as it should etc). But the service returns an html... Not sure if this is the correct way to do this but...
Thanks in advanceenter image description here
this is not a best way to create a project with angular with laravel.
angular provide separate routing structure also laravel provide self routing.
you need to communicate both of them so you need to create a new url and send this url in you get, post.... request and receive in your laravel routing.
you need to get more information about laravel routing go here.
https://laravel.com/docs/5.7/routing
I am working on an existing site written in CodeIgniter and we are looking at using AngularJS for some pages that require a lot of frontend functionality but we don't want to replace all all CodeIgniter views (at once (yet)).
So i click a link that's controlled by angular's router and it is handled by javascript but next link could be a "normal" request that should handled by the CodeIgniter framework.
Is there some elegant way to combine these two methods? I don't really mind some extra client side overhead because the site is not running in production yet.
It sounds like you're looking to gradually make less use of CodeIgniter's (CI) routing as your angular application grows. This is not difficult but requires a lot of detail. Which method will work depends on your project structure. Note: I removed index.php from Code Igniter URLs, so the paths below may be different than default.
1) CodeIgniter installed in root
If CI is installed on the root of your server, you can create a folder within CI (for instance I have an "ng" folder). Your project will look like:
/controllers
/models
/ng
(etc)
/index.php (code igniter index file)
place an .htaccess file within /ng with the following:
Order allow, deny
Allow from all
This allows the files within /ng to be directly accessed, rather than sending those requests back through CI's routing system. For example you can load this directly now:
example.com/ng/partials/angular-view.html
The main web page will still be created by CodeIgniter, but it can now include Angular assets, such as partial views, etc. Eventually you can replace most of what CodeIgniter is doing by just returning a simple page, and having Angular load partial views from /ng like it's designed for.
This method is nice because CodeIgniter can control whether that initial page is loaded at all (via some user authentication code in your CI controller). If user isn't logged in, they are redirected and never see the Angular app.
2) CodeIgniter in Directory
If CI is installed in a directory, such as example.com/myapp/(code igniter) you can simply create a directory next to it, example.com/myappNg/
/myapp/
/myapp/controllers/
/myapp/models/
/myapp/(etc)
/myapp/index.php (code igniter index file)
/myappNg/
/myappNg/partials/
/myappNg/js/
/myappNg/(etc)
Now in your Angular application, you can request resources from CI by making paths relative to the domain root, rather than relative to the Angular app. For instance, in Angular, you will no longer request a partial view from the Angular folder partials/angular-view.html, rather you'll want to request views from CI /myapp/someResource. Note the leading /. "someResource" can return an html document, or JSON or whatever you're doing with Code Igniter in the first place.
Eventually you can replace the number of paths which reference /myapp/. Once you no longer use CI for anything, you can simply place your Angular index.html in /myapp/ and it will continue to reference your paths at /myappNg/.
TL;DR Make your Angular app fully available and decouple it from CodeIgniter. Gradually move toward using Angular partial views and other JSON sources instead of linking to CodeIgniter pages. Eventually replace your CodeIgniter endpoint with an HTML file which bootstraps Angular.
Your best bet is to keep your backend code separate from the angular code
and use the codeInginter code as an API
/Codeigniter Code
/Angular Code
Because CodeIgniter comes with its share of security feature this should be your best bet
I've never used Angular - nevertheless this may help.
So i click a link that's controlled by angular's router and it is
handled by javascript
Does this JavaScript make an Ajax request to one of your CI's controllers? If so, CI now has the is_ajax_request() method, which allows you to check if a request (POST or GET) is coming via ajax. You can proceed differently based on a request coming from Ajax vs a normal request.
User guide (bottom of the page): http://ellislab.com/codeigniter/user-guide/libraries/input.html
Hope it helps!
I inherited a CI app and I'm using Angular with CI mainly for routing requests. In my case I am not using Angular templates, so I use a ' ' empty but with a space parameter for the template option in my $routeProvider config. This allows me to do the usual CI ajax requests without too much change to the original server-side code.
angular.module('my_app', []).
config(['$routeProvider', function($routeProvider) {
$routeProvider.
when('/', { template: " ", controller: my_routes.mainpage}).
when('/design/:designId/:action', {template: " ", controller: my_routes.show_design}).
when('/vote_design/:designId', {template: " ", controller: my_routes.vote_design}).
otherwise({redirectTo: '/'});
}]);
To addition to the answer given by Aaron Martin, one can also use it as a client - server approach.
Lets say we make 2 folders in root of our project :
Client
Server
Client folder will contain all the code of AngularJS and the client side libraries including the Bower and Npm libraries.
The routing of the client side will also be handled by AngularJS router.
There will be factories or services which will act as providers for angularjs on client side.
Those file will contain the code of sending request and receiving response from server side.
Server Folder will have the code of Laravel or CodeIgniter or Any other PHP framework.
You will create all the APIs of the requests and develop the functionality accordingly.
Hence the PHP section (Server Directory) at the whole will be storing all the Media Files and Database Files. Moreover it will also have any receiving links for RSS feeds and so on.
The Client shall just receive all the response in JSON or XML format when it requests on any API on its server..
This according to me is one of the finest practice for developing Webapps.
I picked up a CI site from another programmer I work with that is on leave for a few months. Our site is build mostly with a lot of angular due to the the nature of its purpose. Our solution was a little different.
All that varies from the standard CI framework is a couple folders: js\angular\controllers andjs\angular\modules in CI's application folder, to hold all of the angular model and controller files. Then load the angular docs into the application base folder.