This is an HTTP router for use in either a web framework, or on it's own using Rack. It takes a set of routes and attempts to find the best match for it. Take a look at the examples directory for how you'd use it in the Rack context.
- Ordered route resolution.
- Supports variables, and globbing, both named and unnamed.
- Regex support for variables.
- Request condition support.
- Partial matches.
- Supports interstitial variables (e.g. /my-:variable-brings.all.the.boys/yard) and unnamed variable /one/:/two
- Very fast and small code base (~1,000 loc).
- Sinatra via https://github.com/joshbuddy/http_router_sinatra
Please see the examples directory for a bunch of awesome rackup file examples, with tonnes of commentary. As well, the rdocs should provide a lot of useful specifics and exact usage.
Takes the following options:
:default_app
- The default #call made on non-matches. Defaults to a 404 generator.:ignore_trailing_slash
- Ignores the trailing slash when matching. Defaults to true.:middleware
- Perform matching without deferring to matched route. Defaults to false.
Maps a route. The format for variables in paths is: :variable *glob
Everything else is treated literally. Optional parts are surrounded by brackets. Partially matching paths have a trailing *
. Optional trailing slash matching is done with /?
.
As well, you can escape the following characters with a backslash: ( ) : *
Once you have a route object, use HttpRouter::Route#to
to add a destination and HttpRouter::Route#name
to name it.
e.g.
r = HttpRouter.new
r.add('/test/:variable(.:format)').name(:my_test_path).to {|env| [200, {}, "Hey dude #{env['router.params'][:variable]}"]}
r.add('/test').redirect("http://www.google.com/")
r.add('/static').static('/my_file_system')
As well, you can support regex matching and request conditions. To add a regex match, use matching(:id => /\d+/)
.
To match on a request condition you can use condition(:request_method => %w(POST HEAD))
or more succinctly request_method('POST', 'HEAD')
.
There are convenience methods HttpRouter#get, HttpRouter#post, etc for each request method.
Routes will not be recognized unless #to
has been called on it.
Generates a route. The args can either be a hash, a list, or a mix of both.
Recognizes and dispatches the request.
Only performs recognition.