mirror of
https://github.com/sinatra/sinatra
synced 2023-03-27 23:18:01 -04:00
df7cc200ca
Signed-off-by: Konstantin Haase <konstantin.mailinglists@googlemail.com>
1024 lines
26 KiB
Text
1024 lines
26 KiB
Text
= Sinatra
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Sinatra is a DSL for quickly creating web applications in Ruby with minimal
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effort:
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# myapp.rb
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require 'sinatra'
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get '/' do
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'Hello world!'
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end
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Install the gem and run with:
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gem install sinatra
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ruby -rubygems myapp.rb
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View at: http://localhost:4567
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== Routes
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In Sinatra, a route is an HTTP method paired with an URL matching pattern.
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Each route is associated with a block:
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get '/' do
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.. show something ..
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end
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post '/' do
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.. create something ..
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end
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put '/' do
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.. update something ..
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end
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delete '/' do
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.. annihilate something ..
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end
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Routes are matched in the order they are defined. The first route that
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matches the request is invoked.
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Route patterns may include named parameters, accessible via the
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<tt>params</tt> hash:
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get '/hello/:name' do
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# matches "GET /hello/foo" and "GET /hello/bar"
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# params[:name] is 'foo' or 'bar'
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"Hello #{params[:name]}!"
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end
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You can also access named parameters via block parameters:
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get '/hello/:name' do |n|
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"Hello #{n}!"
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end
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Route patterns may also include splat (or wildcard) parameters, accessible
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via the <tt>params[:splat]</tt> array.
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get '/say/*/to/*' do
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# matches /say/hello/to/world
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params[:splat] # => ["hello", "world"]
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end
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get '/download/*.*' do
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# matches /download/path/to/file.xml
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params[:splat] # => ["path/to/file", "xml"]
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end
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Route matching with Regular Expressions:
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get %r{/hello/([\w]+)} do
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"Hello, #{params[:captures].first}!"
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end
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Or with a block parameter:
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get %r{/hello/([\w]+)} do |c|
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"Hello, #{c}!"
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end
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=== Conditions
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Routes may include a variety of matching conditions, such as the user agent:
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get '/foo', :agent => /Songbird (\d\.\d)[\d\/]*?/ do
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"You're using Songbird version #{params[:agent][0]}"
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end
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get '/foo' do
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# Matches non-songbird browsers
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end
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Other available conditions are +host_name+ and +provides+:
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get '/', :host_name => /^admin\./ do
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"Admin Area, Access denied!"
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end
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get '/', :provides => 'html' do
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haml :index
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end
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get '/', :provides => ['rss', 'atom', 'xml'] do
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builder :feed
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end
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You can easily define your own conditions:
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set(:probability) { |value| condition { rand <= value } }
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get '/win_a_car', :probability => 0.1 do
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"You won!"
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end
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get '/win_a_car' do
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"Sorry, you lost."
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end
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=== Return values
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The return value of a route block determines at least the response body passed
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on to the HTTP client, or at least the next middleware in the Rack stack.
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Most commonly this is a string, as in the above examples. But other values are
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also accepted.
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You can return any object that would either be a valid Rack response, Rack
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body object or HTTP status code:
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* An Array with three elements: <tt>[status (Fixnum), headers (Hash), response body (responds to #each)]</tt>
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* An Array with two elements: <tt>[status (Fixnum), response body (responds to #each)]</tt>
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* An object that responds to <tt>#each</tt> and passes nothing but strings to the given block
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* A Fixnum representing the status code
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That way we can for instance easily implement a streaming example:
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class Stream
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def each
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100.times { |i| yield "#{i}\n" }
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end
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end
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get('/') { Stream.new }
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== Static Files
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Static files are served from the <tt>./public</tt> directory. You can specify
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a different location by setting the <tt>:public</tt> option:
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set :public, File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/static'
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Note that the public directory name is not included in the URL. A file
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<tt>./public/css/style.css</tt> is made available as
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<tt>http://example.com/css/style.css</tt>.
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== Views / Templates
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Templates are assumed to be located directly under the <tt>./views</tt>
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directory. To use a different views directory:
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set :views, File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/templates'
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One important thing to remember is that you always have to reference
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templates with symbols, even if they're in a subdirectory (in this
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case use <tt>:'subdir/template'</tt>). You must use a symbol because
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otherwise rendering methods will render any strings passed to them
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directly.
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=== Haml Templates
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The haml gem/library is required to render HAML templates:
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## You'll need to require haml in your app
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require 'haml'
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get '/' do
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haml :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.haml</tt>.
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{Haml's options}[http://haml-lang.com/docs/yardoc/file.HAML_REFERENCE.html#options]
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can be set globally through Sinatra's configurations,
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see {Options and Configurations}[http://www.sinatrarb.com/configuration.html],
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and overridden on an individual basis.
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set :haml, :format => :html5 # default Haml format is :xhtml
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get '/' do
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haml :index, :format => :html4 # overridden
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end
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=== Erb Templates
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## You'll need to require erb in your app
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require 'erb'
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get '/' do
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erb :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.erb</tt>
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=== Erubis
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The erubis gem/library is required to render erubis templates:
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## You'll need to require erubis in your app
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require 'erubis'
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get '/' do
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erubis :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.erubis</tt>
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=== Builder Templates
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The builder gem/library is required to render builder templates:
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## You'll need to require builder in your app
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require 'builder'
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get '/' do
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builder :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.builder</tt>.
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=== Nokogiri Templates
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The nokogiri gem/library is required to render nokogiri templates:
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## You'll need to require nokogiri in your app
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require 'nokogiri'
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get '/' do
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nokogiri :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.nokogiri</tt>.
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=== Sass Templates
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The haml gem/library is required to render Sass templates:
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## You'll need to require haml or sass in your app
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require 'sass'
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get '/stylesheet.css' do
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sass :stylesheet
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/stylesheet.sass</tt>.
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{Sass' options}[http://sass-lang.com/docs/yardoc/file.SASS_REFERENCE.html#options]
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can be set globally through Sinatra's configurations,
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see {Options and Configurations}[http://www.sinatrarb.com/configuration.html],
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and overridden on an individual basis.
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set :sass, :style => :compact # default Sass style is :nested
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get '/stylesheet.css' do
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sass :stylesheet, :style => :expanded # overridden
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end
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=== Scss Templates
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The haml gem/library is required to render Scss templates:
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## You'll need to require haml or sass in your app
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require 'sass'
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get '/stylesheet.css' do
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scss :stylesheet
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/stylesheet.scss</tt>.
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{Scss' options}[http://sass-lang.com/docs/yardoc/file.SASS_REFERENCE.html#options]
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can be set globally through Sinatra's configurations,
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see {Options and Configurations}[http://www.sinatrarb.com/configuration.html],
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and overridden on an individual basis.
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set :scss, :style => :compact # default Scss style is :nested
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get '/stylesheet.css' do
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scss :stylesheet, :style => :expanded # overridden
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end
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=== Less Templates
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The less gem/library is required to render Less templates:
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## You'll need to require less in your app
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require 'less'
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get '/stylesheet.css' do
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less :stylesheet
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/stylesheet.less</tt>.
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=== Liquid Templates
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The liquid gem/library is required to render Liquid templates:
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## You'll need to require liquid in your app
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require 'liquid'
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get '/' do
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liquid :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.liquid</tt>.
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Since you cannot call Ruby methods (except for +yield+) from a Liquid
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template, you almost always want to pass locals to it:
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liquid :index, :locals => { :key => 'value' }
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=== Markdown Templates
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The rdiscount gem/library is required to render Markdown templates:
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## You'll need to require rdiscount in your app
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require "rdiscount"
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get '/' do
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markdown :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.markdown</tt> (+md+ and +mkd+ are also valid file
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extensions).
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It is not possible to call methods from markdown, nor to pass locals to it. You therefore will usually use it in combination with another rendering engine:
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erb :overview, :locals => { :text => markdown(:introduction) }
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Note that you may also call the markdown method from within other templates:
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%h1 Hello From Haml!
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%p= markdown(:greetings)
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=== Textile Templates
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The RedCloth gem/library is required to render Textile templates:
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## You'll need to require redcloth in your app
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require "redcloth"
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get '/' do
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textile :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.textile</tt>.
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It is not possible to call methods from textile, nor to pass locals to it. You therefore will usually use it in combination with another rendering engine:
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erb :overview, :locals => { :text => textile(:introduction) }
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Note that you may also call the textile method from within other templates:
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%h1 Hello From Haml!
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%p= textile(:greetings)
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=== RDoc Templates
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The RDoc gem/library is required to render RDoc templates:
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## You'll need to require rdoc in your app
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require "rdoc"
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get '/' do
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rdoc :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.rdoc</tt>.
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It is not possible to call methods from rdoc, nor to pass locals to it. You therefore will usually use it in combination with another rendering engine:
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erb :overview, :locals => { :text => rdoc(:introduction) }
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Note that you may also call the rdoc method from within other templates:
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%h1 Hello From Haml!
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%p= rdoc(:greetings)
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=== Radius Templates
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The radius gem/library is required to render Radius templates:
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## You'll need to require radius in your app
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require 'radius'
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get '/' do
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radius :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.radius</tt>.
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Since you cannot call Ruby methods (except for +yield+) from a Radius
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template, you almost always want to pass locals to it:
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radius :index, :locals => { :key => 'value' }
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=== Markaby Templates
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The markaby gem/library is required to render Markaby templates:
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## You'll need to require markaby in your app
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require 'markaby'
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get '/' do
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markaby :index
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/index.mab</tt>.
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=== CoffeeScript Templates
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The coffee-script gem/library and the `coffee` binary are required to render
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CoffeeScript templates:
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## You'll need to require coffee-script in your app
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require 'coffee-script'
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get '/application.js' do
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coffee :application
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end
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Renders <tt>./views/application.coffee</tt>.
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=== Inline Templates
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get '/' do
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haml '%div.title Hello World'
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end
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Renders the inlined template string.
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=== Accessing Variables in Templates
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Templates are evaluated within the same context as route handlers. Instance
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variables set in route handlers are direcly accessible by templates:
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get '/:id' do
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@foo = Foo.find(params[:id])
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haml '%h1= @foo.name'
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end
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Or, specify an explicit Hash of local variables:
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get '/:id' do
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foo = Foo.find(params[:id])
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haml '%h1= foo.name', :locals => { :foo => foo }
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end
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This is typically used when rendering templates as partials from within
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other templates.
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=== Inline Templates
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Templates may be defined at the end of the source file:
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require 'sinatra'
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get '/' do
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haml :index
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end
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__END__
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@@ layout
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%html
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= yield
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@@ index
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%div.title Hello world!!!!!
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NOTE: Inline templates defined in the source file that requires sinatra are
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automatically loaded. Call <tt>enable :inline_templates</tt> explicitly if you
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have inline templates in other source files.
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=== Named Templates
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Templates may also be defined using the top-level <tt>template</tt> method:
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template :layout do
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"%html\n =yield\n"
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end
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template :index do
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'%div.title Hello World!'
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end
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get '/' do
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haml :index
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end
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If a template named "layout" exists, it will be used each time a template
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is rendered. You can disable layouts by passing <tt>:layout => false</tt>.
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get '/' do
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haml :index, :layout => !request.xhr?
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end
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== Helpers
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Use the top-level <tt>helpers</tt> method to define helper methods for use in
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route handlers and templates:
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helpers do
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def bar(name)
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"#{name}bar"
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end
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end
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get '/:name' do
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bar(params[:name])
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end
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== Filters
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Before filters are evaluated before each request within the same context as
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the routes will be and can modify the request and response. Instance variables
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set in filters are accessible by routes and templates:
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before do
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@note = 'Hi!'
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request.path_info = '/foo/bar/baz'
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end
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get '/foo/*' do
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@note #=> 'Hi!'
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params[:splat] #=> 'bar/baz'
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end
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After filter are evaluated after each request within the same context and can
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also modify the request and response. Instance variables set in before filters
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and routes are accessible by after filters:
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after do
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puts response.status
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end
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Filters optionally taking a pattern, causing them to be evaluated only if the
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request path matches that pattern:
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before '/protected/*' do
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authenticate!
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end
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after '/create/:slug' do |slug|
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session[:last_slug] = slug
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end
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== Halting
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To immediately stop a request within a filter or route use:
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halt
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You can also specify the status when halting:
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halt 410
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Or the body:
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halt 'this will be the body'
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Or both:
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halt 401, 'go away!'
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With headers:
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halt 402, {'Content-Type' => 'text/plain'}, 'revenge'
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== Passing
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A route can punt processing to the next matching route using <tt>pass</tt>:
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get '/guess/:who' do
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pass unless params[:who] == 'Frank'
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'You got me!'
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end
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get '/guess/*' do
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'You missed!'
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end
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The route block is immediately exited and control continues with the next
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matching route. If no matching route is found, a 404 is returned.
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== Accessing the Request Object
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The incoming request object can be accessed from request level (filter, routes, error handlers) through the `request` method:
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# app running on http://example.com/example
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get '/foo' do
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request.body # request body sent by the client (see below)
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request.scheme # "http"
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request.script_name # "/example"
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request.path_info # "/foo"
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request.port # 80
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request.request_method # "GET"
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request.query_string # ""
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request.content_length # length of request.body
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request.media_type # media type of request.body
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request.host # "example.com"
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request.get? # true (similar methods for other verbs)
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request.form_data? # false
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request["SOME_HEADER"] # value of SOME_HEADER header
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request.referer # the referer of the client or '/'
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request.user_agent # user agent (used by :agent condition)
|
|
request.cookies # hash of browser cookies
|
|
request.xhr? # is this an ajax request?
|
|
request.url # "http://example.com/example/foo"
|
|
request.path # "/example/foo"
|
|
request.ip # client IP address
|
|
request.secure? # false
|
|
request.env # raw env hash handed in by Rack
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Some options, like <tt>script_name</tt> or <tt>path_info</tt> can also be
|
|
written:
|
|
|
|
before { request.path_info = "/" }
|
|
|
|
get "/" do
|
|
"all requests end up here"
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
The <tt>request.body</tt> is an IO or StringIO object:
|
|
|
|
post "/api" do
|
|
request.body.rewind # in case someone already read it
|
|
data = JSON.parse request.body.read
|
|
"Hello #{data['name']}!"
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
== Configuration
|
|
|
|
Run once, at startup, in any environment:
|
|
|
|
configure do
|
|
...
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Run only when the environment (RACK_ENV environment variable) is set to
|
|
<tt>:production</tt>:
|
|
|
|
configure :production do
|
|
...
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Run when the environment is set to either <tt>:production</tt> or
|
|
<tt>:test</tt>:
|
|
|
|
configure :production, :test do
|
|
...
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
== Error handling
|
|
|
|
Error handlers run within the same context as routes and before filters, which
|
|
means you get all the goodies it has to offer, like <tt>haml</tt>,
|
|
<tt>erb</tt>, <tt>halt</tt>, etc.
|
|
|
|
=== Not Found
|
|
|
|
When a <tt>Sinatra::NotFound</tt> exception is raised, or the response's status
|
|
code is 404, the <tt>not_found</tt> handler is invoked:
|
|
|
|
not_found do
|
|
'This is nowhere to be found.'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
=== Error
|
|
|
|
The +error+ handler is invoked any time an exception is raised from a route
|
|
block or a filter. The exception object can be obtained from the
|
|
<tt>sinatra.error</tt> Rack variable:
|
|
|
|
error do
|
|
'Sorry there was a nasty error - ' + env['sinatra.error'].name
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Custom errors:
|
|
|
|
error MyCustomError do
|
|
'So what happened was...' + request.env['sinatra.error'].message
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Then, if this happens:
|
|
|
|
get '/' do
|
|
raise MyCustomError, 'something bad'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
You get this:
|
|
|
|
So what happened was... something bad
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, you can install error handler for a status code:
|
|
|
|
error 403 do
|
|
'Access forbidden'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
get '/secret' do
|
|
403
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Or a range:
|
|
|
|
error 400..510 do
|
|
'Boom'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Sinatra installs special <tt>not_found</tt> and <tt>error</tt> handlers when
|
|
running under the development environment.
|
|
|
|
== Mime types
|
|
|
|
When using <tt>send_file</tt> or static files you may have mime types Sinatra
|
|
doesn't understand. Use +mime_type+ to register them by file extension:
|
|
|
|
mime_type :foo, 'text/foo'
|
|
|
|
You can also use it with the +content_type+ helper:
|
|
|
|
content_type :foo
|
|
|
|
== Rack Middleware
|
|
|
|
Sinatra rides on Rack[http://rack.rubyforge.org/], a minimal standard
|
|
interface for Ruby web frameworks. One of Rack's most interesting capabilities
|
|
for application developers is support for "middleware" -- components that sit
|
|
between the server and your application monitoring and/or manipulating the
|
|
HTTP request/response to provide various types of common functionality.
|
|
|
|
Sinatra makes building Rack middleware pipelines a cinch via a top-level
|
|
+use+ method:
|
|
|
|
require 'sinatra'
|
|
require 'my_custom_middleware'
|
|
|
|
use Rack::Lint
|
|
use MyCustomMiddleware
|
|
|
|
get '/hello' do
|
|
'Hello World'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
The semantics of +use+ are identical to those defined for the
|
|
Rack::Builder[http://rack.rubyforge.org/doc/classes/Rack/Builder.html] DSL
|
|
(most frequently used from rackup files). For example, the +use+ method
|
|
accepts multiple/variable args as well as blocks:
|
|
|
|
use Rack::Auth::Basic do |username, password|
|
|
username == 'admin' && password == 'secret'
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
Rack is distributed with a variety of standard middleware for logging,
|
|
debugging, URL routing, authentication, and session handling. Sinatra uses
|
|
many of of these components automatically based on configuration so you
|
|
typically don't have to +use+ them explicitly.
|
|
|
|
== Testing
|
|
|
|
Sinatra tests can be written using any Rack-based testing library
|
|
or framework. {Rack::Test}[http://gitrdoc.com/brynary/rack-test] is
|
|
recommended:
|
|
|
|
require 'my_sinatra_app'
|
|
require 'test/unit'
|
|
require 'rack/test'
|
|
|
|
class MyAppTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
|
|
include Rack::Test::Methods
|
|
|
|
def app
|
|
Sinatra::Application
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def test_my_default
|
|
get '/'
|
|
assert_equal 'Hello World!', last_response.body
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def test_with_params
|
|
get '/meet', :name => 'Frank'
|
|
assert_equal 'Hello Frank!', last_response.body
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
def test_with_rack_env
|
|
get '/', {}, 'HTTP_USER_AGENT' => 'Songbird'
|
|
assert_equal "You're using Songbird!", last_response.body
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
NOTE: The built-in Sinatra::Test module and Sinatra::TestHarness class
|
|
are deprecated as of the 0.9.2 release.
|
|
|
|
== Sinatra::Base - Middleware, Libraries, and Modular Apps
|
|
|
|
Defining your app at the top-level works well for micro-apps but has
|
|
considerable drawbacks when building reusable components such as Rack
|
|
middleware, Rails metal, simple libraries with a server component, or
|
|
even Sinatra extensions. The top-level DSL pollutes the Object namespace
|
|
and assumes a micro-app style configuration (e.g., a single application
|
|
file, ./public and ./views directories, logging, exception detail page,
|
|
etc.). That's where Sinatra::Base comes into play:
|
|
|
|
require 'sinatra/base'
|
|
|
|
class MyApp < Sinatra::Base
|
|
set :sessions, true
|
|
set :foo, 'bar'
|
|
|
|
get '/' do
|
|
'Hello world!'
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
The MyApp class is an independent Rack component that can act as
|
|
Rack middleware, a Rack application, or Rails metal. You can +use+ or
|
|
+run+ this class from a rackup +config.ru+ file; or, control a server
|
|
component shipped as a library:
|
|
|
|
MyApp.run! :host => 'localhost', :port => 9090
|
|
|
|
The methods available to Sinatra::Base subclasses are exactly as those
|
|
available via the top-level DSL. Most top-level apps can be converted to
|
|
Sinatra::Base components with two modifications:
|
|
|
|
* Your file should require +sinatra/base+ instead of +sinatra+;
|
|
otherwise, all of Sinatra's DSL methods are imported into the main
|
|
namespace.
|
|
* Put your app's routes, error handlers, filters, and options in a subclass
|
|
of Sinatra::Base.
|
|
|
|
<tt>Sinatra::Base</tt> is a blank slate. Most options are disabled by default,
|
|
including the built-in server. See {Options and Configuration}[http://sinatra.github.com/configuration.html]
|
|
for details on available options and their behavior.
|
|
|
|
=== Using Sinatra as Middleware
|
|
|
|
Not only is Sinatra able to use other Rack middleware, any Sinatra application
|
|
can in turn be added in front of any Rack endpoint as middleware itself. This
|
|
endpoint could be another Sinatra application, or any other Rack-based
|
|
application (Rails/Ramaze/Camping/...).
|
|
|
|
require 'sinatra/base'
|
|
|
|
class LoginScreen < Sinatra::Base
|
|
enable :session
|
|
|
|
get('/login') { haml :login }
|
|
|
|
post('/login') do
|
|
if params[:name] = 'admin' and params[:password] = 'admin'
|
|
session['user_name'] = params[:name]
|
|
else
|
|
redirect '/login'
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
class MyApp < Sinatra::Base
|
|
# middleware will run before filters
|
|
use LoginScreen
|
|
|
|
before do
|
|
unless session['user_name']
|
|
halt "Access denied, please <a href='/login'>login</a>."
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
get('/') { "Hello #{session['user_name']}." }
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
== Scopes and Binding
|
|
|
|
The scope you are currently in determines what methods and variables are
|
|
available.
|
|
|
|
=== Application/Class Scope
|
|
|
|
Every Sinatra application corresponds to a subclass of Sinatra::Base. If you
|
|
are using the top level DSL (<tt>require 'sinatra'</tt>), then this class is
|
|
Sinatra::Application, otherwise it is the subclass you created explicitly. At
|
|
class level you have methods like `get` or `before`, but you cannot access the
|
|
`request` object or the `session`, as there only is a single application class
|
|
for all requests.
|
|
|
|
Options created via `set` are methods at class level:
|
|
|
|
class MyApp << Sinatra::Base
|
|
# Hey, I'm in the application scope!
|
|
set :foo, 42
|
|
foo # => 42
|
|
|
|
get '/foo' do
|
|
# Hey, I'm no longer in the application scope!
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
You have the application scope binding inside:
|
|
|
|
* Your application class body
|
|
* Methods defined by extensions
|
|
* The block passed to `helpers`
|
|
* Procs/blocks used as value for `set`
|
|
|
|
You can reach the scope object (the class) like this:
|
|
|
|
* Via the object passed to configure blocks (<tt>configure { |c| ... }</tt>)
|
|
* `settings` from within request scope
|
|
|
|
=== Request/Instance Scope
|
|
|
|
For every incoming request, a new instance of your application class is
|
|
created and all handler blocks run in that scope. From within this scope you
|
|
can access the `request` and `session` object or call rendering methods like
|
|
`erb` or `haml`. You can access the application scope from within the request
|
|
scope via the `settings` helper:
|
|
|
|
class MyApp << Sinatra::Base
|
|
# Hey, I'm in the application scope!
|
|
get '/define_route/:name' do
|
|
# Request scope for '/define_route/:name'
|
|
@value = 42
|
|
|
|
settings.get("/#{params[:name]}") do
|
|
# Request scope for "/#{params[:name]}"
|
|
@value # => nil (not the same request)
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
"Route defined!"
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
You have the request scope binding inside:
|
|
|
|
* get/head/post/put/delete blocks
|
|
* before/after filters
|
|
* helper methods
|
|
* templates/views
|
|
|
|
=== Delegation Scope
|
|
|
|
The delegation scope just forwards methods to the class scope. However, it
|
|
does not behave 100% like the class scope, as you do not have the class'
|
|
binding: Only methods explicitly marked for delegation are available and you
|
|
do not share variables/state with the class scope (read: you have a different
|
|
`self`). You can explicitly add method delegations by calling
|
|
<tt>Sinatra::Delegator.delegate :method_name</tt>.
|
|
|
|
You have the delegate scope binding inside:
|
|
|
|
* The top level binding, if you did <tt>require "sinatra"</tt>
|
|
* An object extended with the `Sinatra::Delegator` mixin
|
|
|
|
Have a look at the code for yourself: here's the
|
|
{Sinatra::Delegator mixin}[http://github.com/sinatra/sinatra/blob/ceac46f0bc129a6e994a06100aa854f606fe5992/lib/sinatra/base.rb#L1128]
|
|
being {included into the main namespace}[http://github.com/sinatra/sinatra/blob/ceac46f0bc129a6e994a06100aa854f606fe5992/lib/sinatra/main.rb#L28].
|
|
|
|
== Command line
|
|
|
|
Sinatra applications can be run directly:
|
|
|
|
ruby myapp.rb [-h] [-x] [-e ENVIRONMENT] [-p PORT] [-o HOST] [-s HANDLER]
|
|
|
|
Options are:
|
|
|
|
-h # help
|
|
-p # set the port (default is 4567)
|
|
-o # set the host (default is 0.0.0.0)
|
|
-e # set the environment (default is development)
|
|
-s # specify rack server/handler (default is thin)
|
|
-x # turn on the mutex lock (default is off)
|
|
|
|
== The Bleeding Edge
|
|
|
|
If you would like to use Sinatra's latest bleeding code, create a local
|
|
clone and run your app with the <tt>sinatra/lib</tt> directory on the
|
|
<tt>LOAD_PATH</tt>:
|
|
|
|
cd myapp
|
|
git clone git://github.com/sinatra/sinatra.git
|
|
ruby -Isinatra/lib myapp.rb
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, you can add the <tt>sinatra/lib</tt> directory to the
|
|
<tt>LOAD_PATH</tt> in your application:
|
|
|
|
$LOAD_PATH.unshift File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/sinatra/lib'
|
|
require 'rubygems'
|
|
require 'sinatra'
|
|
|
|
get '/about' do
|
|
"I'm running version " + Sinatra::VERSION
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
To update the Sinatra sources in the future:
|
|
|
|
cd myproject/sinatra
|
|
git pull
|
|
|
|
== More
|
|
|
|
* {Project Website}[http://www.sinatrarb.com/] - Additional documentation,
|
|
news, and links to other resources.
|
|
* {Contributing}[http://www.sinatrarb.com/contributing] - Find a bug? Need
|
|
help? Have a patch?
|
|
* {Issue tracker}[http://github.com/sinatra/sinatra/issues]
|
|
* {Twitter}[http://twitter.com/sinatra]
|
|
* {Mailing List}[http://groups.google.com/group/sinatrarb/topics]
|
|
* {IRC: #sinatra}[irc://chat.freenode.net/#sinatra] on http://freenode.net
|