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256 lines
8 KiB
Ruby
256 lines
8 KiB
Ruby
module ActionDispatch
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# The routing module provides URL rewriting in native Ruby. It's a way to
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# redirect incoming requests to controllers and actions. This replaces
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# mod_rewrite rules. Best of all, Rails' \Routing works with any web server.
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# Routes are defined in <tt>config/routes.rb</tt>.
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#
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# Think of creating routes as drawing a map for your requests. The map tells
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# them where to go based on some predefined pattern:
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#
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# Rails.application.routes.draw do
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# Pattern 1 tells some request to go to one place
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# Pattern 2 tell them to go to another
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# ...
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# end
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#
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# The following symbols are special:
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#
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# :controller maps to your controller name
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# :action maps to an action with your controllers
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#
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# Other names simply map to a parameter as in the case of <tt>:id</tt>.
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#
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# == Resources
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#
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# Resource routing allows you to quickly declare all of the common routes
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# for a given resourceful controller. Instead of declaring separate routes
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# for your +index+, +show+, +new+, +edit+, +create+, +update+ and +destroy+
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# actions, a resourceful route declares them in a single line of code:
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#
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# resources :photos
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#
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# Sometimes, you have a resource that clients always look up without
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# referencing an ID. A common example, /profile always shows the profile of
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# the currently logged in user. In this case, you can use a singular resource
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# to map /profile (rather than /profile/:id) to the show action.
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#
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# resource :profile
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#
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# It's common to have resources that are logically children of other
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# resources:
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#
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# resources :magazines do
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# resources :ads
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# end
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#
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# You may wish to organize groups of controllers under a namespace. Most
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# commonly, you might group a number of administrative controllers under
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# an +admin+ namespace. You would place these controllers under the
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# <tt>app/controllers/admin</tt> directory, and you can group them together
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# in your router:
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#
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# namespace "admin" do
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# resources :posts, :comments
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# end
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#
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# Alternatively, you can add prefixes to your path without using a separate
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# directory by using +scope+. +scope+ takes additional options which
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# apply to all enclosed routes.
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#
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# scope path: "/cpanel", as: 'admin' do
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# resources :posts, :comments
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# end
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#
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# For more, see <tt>Routing::Mapper::Resources#resources</tt>,
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# <tt>Routing::Mapper::Scoping#namespace</tt>, and
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# <tt>Routing::Mapper::Scoping#scope</tt>.
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#
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# == Non-resourceful routes
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#
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# For routes that don't fit the <tt>resources</tt> mold, you can use the HTTP helper
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# methods <tt>get</tt>, <tt>post</tt>, <tt>patch</tt>, <tt>put</tt> and <tt>delete</tt>.
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#
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# get 'post/:id' => 'posts#show'
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# post 'post/:id' => 'posts#create_comment'
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#
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# If your route needs to respond to more than one HTTP method (or all methods) then using the
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# <tt>:via</tt> option on <tt>match</tt> is preferable.
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#
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# match 'post/:id' => 'posts#show', via: [:get, :post]
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#
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# Now, if you POST to <tt>/posts/:id</tt>, it will route to the <tt>create_comment</tt> action. A GET on the same
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# URL will route to the <tt>show</tt> action.
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#
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# == Named routes
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#
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# Routes can be named by passing an <tt>:as</tt> option,
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# allowing for easy reference within your source as +name_of_route_url+
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# for the full URL and +name_of_route_path+ for the URI path.
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#
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# Example:
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#
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# # In routes.rb
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# get '/login' => 'accounts#login', as: 'login'
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#
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# # With render, redirect_to, tests, etc.
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# redirect_to login_url
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#
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# Arguments can be passed as well.
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#
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# redirect_to show_item_path(id: 25)
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#
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# Use <tt>root</tt> as a shorthand to name a route for the root path "/".
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#
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# # In routes.rb
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# root to: 'blogs#index'
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#
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# # would recognize http://www.example.com/ as
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# params = { controller: 'blogs', action: 'index' }
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#
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# # and provide these named routes
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# root_url # => 'http://www.example.com/'
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# root_path # => '/'
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#
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# Note: when using +controller+, the route is simply named after the
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# method you call on the block parameter rather than map.
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#
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# # In routes.rb
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# controller :blog do
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# get 'blog/show' => :list
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# get 'blog/delete' => :delete
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# get 'blog/edit/:id' => :edit
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# end
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#
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# # provides named routes for show, delete, and edit
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# link_to @article.title, show_path(id: @article.id)
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#
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# == Pretty URLs
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#
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# Routes can generate pretty URLs. For example:
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#
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# get '/articles/:year/:month/:day' => 'articles#find_by_id', constraints: {
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# year: /\d{4}/,
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# month: /\d{1,2}/,
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# day: /\d{1,2}/
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# }
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#
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# Using the route above, the URL "http://localhost:3000/articles/2005/11/06"
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# maps to
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#
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# params = {year: '2005', month: '11', day: '06'}
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#
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# == Regular Expressions and parameters
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# You can specify a regular expression to define a format for a parameter.
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#
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# controller 'geocode' do
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# get 'geocode/:postalcode' => :show, constraints: {
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# postalcode: /\d{5}(-\d{4})?/
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# }
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# end
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#
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# Constraints can include the 'ignorecase' and 'extended syntax' regular
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# expression modifiers:
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#
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# controller 'geocode' do
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# get 'geocode/:postalcode' => :show, constraints: {
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# postalcode: /hx\d\d\s\d[a-z]{2}/i
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# }
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# end
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#
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# controller 'geocode' do
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# get 'geocode/:postalcode' => :show, constraints: {
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# postalcode: /# Postalcode format
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# \d{5} #Prefix
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# (-\d{4})? #Suffix
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# /x
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# }
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# end
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#
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# Using the multiline modifier will raise an +ArgumentError+.
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# Encoding regular expression modifiers are silently ignored. The
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# match will always use the default encoding or ASCII.
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#
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# == External redirects
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#
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# You can redirect any path to another path using the redirect helper in your router:
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#
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# get "/stories" => redirect("/posts")
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#
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# == Unicode character routes
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#
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# You can specify unicode character routes in your router:
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#
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# get "こんにちは" => "welcome#index"
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#
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# == Routing to Rack Applications
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#
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# Instead of a String, like <tt>posts#index</tt>, which corresponds to the
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# index action in the PostsController, you can specify any Rack application
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# as the endpoint for a matcher:
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#
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# get "/application.js" => Sprockets
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#
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# == Reloading routes
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#
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# You can reload routes if you feel you must:
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#
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# Rails.application.reload_routes!
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#
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# This will clear all named routes and reload routes.rb if the file has been modified from
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# last load. To absolutely force reloading, use <tt>reload!</tt>.
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#
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# == Testing Routes
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#
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# The two main methods for testing your routes:
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#
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# === +assert_routing+
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#
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# def test_movie_route_properly_splits
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# opts = {controller: "plugin", action: "checkout", id: "2"}
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# assert_routing "plugin/checkout/2", opts
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# end
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#
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# +assert_routing+ lets you test whether or not the route properly resolves into options.
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#
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# === +assert_recognizes+
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#
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# def test_route_has_options
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# opts = {controller: "plugin", action: "show", id: "12"}
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# assert_recognizes opts, "/plugins/show/12"
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# end
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#
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# Note the subtle difference between the two: +assert_routing+ tests that
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# a URL fits options while +assert_recognizes+ tests that a URL
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# breaks into parameters properly.
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#
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# In tests you can simply pass the URL or named route to +get+ or +post+.
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#
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# def send_to_jail
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# get '/jail'
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# assert_response :success
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# end
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#
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# def goes_to_login
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# get login_url
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# #...
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# end
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#
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# == View a list of all your routes
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#
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# rails routes
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#
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# Target specific controllers by prefixing the command with <tt>-c</tt> option.
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#
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module Routing
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extend ActiveSupport::Autoload
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autoload :Mapper
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autoload :RouteSet
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autoload :RoutesProxy
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autoload :UrlFor
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autoload :PolymorphicRoutes
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SEPARATORS = %w( / . ? ) #:nodoc:
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HTTP_METHODS = [:get, :head, :post, :patch, :put, :delete, :options] #:nodoc:
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end
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end
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