ActionController::Routing::Routes.draw do
map.resources :users, :sent
map.resources :mailbox, :collection => { :trash => :get }
map.resources :messages, :member => { :reply => :get, :forward => :get, :reply_all => :get, :undelete => :put }
map.resource :session
map.inbox '', :controller => "mailbox", :action => "index"
map.connect ':controller/:action/:id'
map.connect ':controller/:action/:id.:format'
end
I believe what you're looking for is this:
ActionController::Routing::Routes.draw do
root to: "mailbox#index"
resources :users
resources :sent
resources :mailbox do
collection do
get :trash
end
end
resources :messages do
member do
get :reply
get :forward
put :undelete
end
end
resource :session
end
The two connect routing definitions are no longer used in Rails, as they make all actions of all controllers available as GET requests. For instance, GET /users/1/destroy. If you find routes that that used to work are no longer working, you will need to define new routes in config/routes.rb for them.
I have this scope:
scope ":user_id", :as => "user" do
resources :boards, :controller => 'users/boards'
end
I get this route:
http://localhost/hyperrjas/boards/
I want a url without boards then on routes.rb I add:
scope ":user_id", :as => "user" do
resources :boards, :controller => 'users/boards', :path => '/'
end
That works great, but it is still accessible via "/boards" ... How do I prevent that? (I'm using Rails 3.1)
You shouldn't have to specify the controller names when using resources and in this caseI would use nested resources:
resource :user, only: :show do
resources :boards
end
This should give you the following:
/:user_id
/:user_id/boards
/:user_id/boards/new
/:user_id/boards/:id/
/:user_id/boards/:id/edit
and of course your restful routes!
I'm trying to define a route in routes.rb and I can't do anything from this Ruby on Rails routing guide that will let this error pass.
No route matches {:controller=>"devise/home"}
Here's my routes.rb source.
SchoolCMS::Application.routes.draw do
root :to => "home#index"
devise_for :teachers, :admin
resources :home, :only => :index
resources :admin, :only => :index
resources :events do
resources :event
end
resources :posts do
resources :comments
end
end
Just to be safe I would remove devise_for :teachers, :admin and split it so that it is
devise_for :teachers
devise_for :admin
I'm not sure you can specify multiple devises the way you use it, see if this fixes your error.
Also try to use path helpers were possible so instead of doing <%= link_to 'Home', :controller => 'home' %> make it <%= link_to 'Home', homes_path %> but make sure you define your home as resource :home, :only => :show since it's a singular resource.
I have a widget that has many links. In the routes file:
map.resources :widgets, :has_many => [:links]
I want to add a "sort" action to links. What do I need to add to the routes file, so I can write sort_widget_links_path(widget)
You can define it using a block:
map.resources :widgets do |widget|
widget.resources :links, :member => {:sort => :get}
end
I'm new to testing, and I'm having some difficulties trying to run a functional test.
I've a messages_controller, and a user_controller here.
in the routes, I've defined that the users resources has_many message resources.
Now I'm trying to run a simple test in the messages controller:
def test_index
get :index, { :user_id => 1 }
assert_template 'index'
end
But get a routing error from rails, that he cant find a route to messages. I don't want to include a route to messages only because of the tests. How can I tell the test that he must access from the /users/messages url?
the full routes.rb:
ActionController::Routing::Routes.draw do |map|
map.login 'login', :controller => :user_sessions, :action => :new
map.logout 'logout', :controller => :user_sessions, :action => :destroy
map.signin 'signin', :controller => :users, :action => :new
map.connect 'search/:action/:word', :controller => :search
map.connect 'search/:word', :controller => :search, :action => :index
map.resources :forums do |forums|
forums.resources :forum_posts, :collection => {:preview => :post }, :as => :posts do |post|
post.resources :forum_posts, :as => :reply
post.resources :reports
end
end
map.resources :newsitems, :as => :news do |news|
news.resources :comments do |comment|
comment.resources :reports
end
end
map.resource :user_sessions
map.resources :users,
:as => :profiles,
:controller => :profiles,
:has_many => [ :messages ]
map.resource :profiles
map.resource :me,
:controller => :me,
:has_many => [ :messages ]
map.resources :comments, :has_many => [ :reports ]
map.resources :forum_posts, :has_many => [ :reports ]
map.resources :reports
map.home '/', :controller => :home
map.root :controller => :home
map.namespace :admin do |admin|
admin.namespace :forum do |forum|
forum.resources :categories
forum.resources :posts
forum.resources :forums
forum.root :controller => :home
end
admin.resources :notices
admin.resources :users
admin.workflow 'workflow/:action', :controller => :workflow
admin.resources :newsitems
admin.resources :reports
admin.resources :comments
admin.root :controller => :home
end
map.connect ':controller/:action/:id'
map.connect ':controller/:action/:id.:format'
end
UPDATE
I've noticed that every functional test get a routing error. Even the simpliests ones like newsitem. I've no idea why.
I recreated your scenario in a blank rails app with the routing code and and test you specified, and it worked without a problem, as it should. I'll paste my controller code here since that's the only part you left out:
class MessagesController < ApplicationController
def index
#messages = User.find(params[:user_id]).messages
end
end
If yours is doing basically the same thing, then a routing issue could be caused by a conflict in your routing file, which is what I suspect might be the case. Can you post it? FYI, I wrote an article on testing your routes, and that would be a very good idea because it would catch routing errors early, before they interfere with controllers.
Anyway, if you can post your routes I can take a look.
UPDATE: After looking at your routes, there are a couple conflicts. You can have messages as a sub-resource of more than one other resource, but in your messages controller you're going to have to account for the possibility of either a params[:me_id] or params[:profile_id]. It looks like they're both really the user model underneath, so it can be as simple as:
#user = User.find(params[:me_id] || params[:profile_id])
and you'll probably want to abstract that out into a method you call with before_filter.
The other issue is that you have two overlapping profiles routes, and I'm not sure why. I don't think it's a routing error in the test, because tests bypass the routing engine anyway. I think it's an error in the index view, because it probably contains links to messages with improperly formatted urls. If you have a link to a message, for instance, and you have a #profile object, then you'll need to call them like this:
<%= link_to message.name, profile_message_path(#profile, #message) %>
However, if you're using non-nested paths like message_path(#message), it will fail because there are no non-nested message routes.
It was a problem in my "journey" gem. They made routes more stricter in journey 1.0.4 which only show up on "test" environment. It is good for "developement" and "production".
** Ensure you are using exactly the same parameters as declared in routes **
Either add:
get :index, :locale => "en"
or in your Gemfile update:
gem 'journey', '1.0.3'
The second solution is a workaround for time being. Ideally you should be testing your routes will all exact params. Journey 1.0.4 is a lot stricter