I have a url redirect controller called "go". It can redirect topic model and company models. The route.rb looks like this:
resources :go, only: [] do
member do
get :topic
get :company
end
end
Currently it produce the following route:
topic_go GET /go/:id/topic(.:format) go#topic
company_go GET /go/:id/company(.:format) go#company
Is there a good way to make the route to be like this:
/go/topic/:id
/go/company/:id
Just remove the member block entirely and add these two lines above resources :go.
get '/go/topic/:id' => 'go#topic', :as => :topic_go
get '/go/company/:id' => 'go#company', :as => :company_go
Related
I have a route
collection do
get :show_logs
end
And I want the user should request show_logs/[:id].
Forbid user to send show_logs request without required id
What's the better ways to get it ?
UPDATE
If now, I wrote my rule as following,
And trying to access without :id, http://localhost:3000/tool/mvaas/relay_queries/show_logs
I'll get the error ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound in xxx
routes
get '/tool/mvaas/relay_queries/show_logs/:id', to: 'tool/mvaas/relay_queries#show_logs', :via => :get, :as => 'show_logs_tool_mvaas_relay_queries'
namespace :tool do
namespace :mvaas do
resources :relay_queries do
collection do
end
end
end
end
You should put it into member instead of collection
resources :users do
member do
get :show_logs
end
end
It will be accessible with the url /users/:id/show_logs
If you absolutely want the url to be /users/show_logs/:id then you should go with
get '/users/show_logs/:id', to: 'users#show_logs'
before your resources :users do block
You can verify if params exist by following way:
if(params.has_key?(:one))
If exist- request will done.
If absent - redirect/render or show notice.
you could try:
get "show_logs/:id" => "controller#action"
with updates: just write something like:
namespace :tool do
namespace :mvaas do
resources :relay_queries do
collection do
get "show_logs/:id", action: "show_logs"
end
end
end
end
i try to fill twice id in url, but when i send params twice id just one id fill the url id.
My route :
namespace :admin do
resources :stores
get "/:id/new_items"=> 'stores#new_items', as: :store_new_items
post "/:id/create_items"=> 'stores#create_items', as: :store_create_items
get "/:id/show_items/:id"=> 'stores#show_items', as: :store_show_items
get "/:id/items/:id/new_items_sub" => 'stores#new_items_sub', as: :store_new_items_sub
post "/:id/items/:id/create_items_sub" => 'stores#create_items_sub', as: :store_create_items_sub
get "/:id/items/:id/show_items_sub/:id" => 'stores#show_items_sub', as: :store_show_items_sub
end
my view :
<%= link_to "add new items", admin_store_new_items_sub_path(#store.id, #items.id), :class=> "btn" %>
i hope my url like this :
http://localhost:3000/admin/#{store.id}/items/#{items.id}/new_items_sub
but i get same id like this :
http://localhost:3000/admin/#{store.id}/items/#{store.id}/new_items_sub
please tell me when i'm wrong? thanks
you have to create neseted routes for that .have a look at
http://guides.rubyonrails.org/routing.html#nested-resources
for example
resources :publishers do
resources :magazines do
resources :photos
end
end
will accept routes /publishers/1/magazines/2/photos/3
Your params should be unique, so you can't pass more than one different :id params. Instead. you can do something like:
get '/:store_id/show_items/:id', as: :store_show_items
and in view:
<%= link_to 'show items', store_show_items_path(#store.id, #item.id) %>
Also, you should read more about Resources and Nested Resources in Rails, there's probably no need to complicate your life by creating each route independently.
You could refactor this to use nested routes like this (you may have to change controller method names):
namespace :admin do
resources :stores do
resources :items, :only => [:new, :create, :show] do
resources :subs, :only => [:new, :create, :show]
end
end
end
This would give you a few url helpers like this: new_store_item_sub_path(#store.id, #item.id) for the new action and store_item_sub_path(#store.id, #item.id, #sub.id) for the show action.
Run rake routes to see what helpers and routes you have access to.
Have a look here to find out more about nested routes.
Your code can be DRYed up significantly. Hopefully this works; might need some tweaking:
namespace :admin do
resources :stores do
member do
get :new_items, as: :store_new_items
post :create_items, as: :store_create_items
end
get "show_items/:id"=> 'stores#show_items', as: :store_show_items
resources :items do
get :new_items_stub => 'stores#new_items_sub', as: :store_new_items_sub
post :create_items_stub => 'stores#create_items_sub', as: :store_create_items_sub
get "show_items_sub/:id" => 'stores#show_items_sub', as: :store_show_items_sub
end
end
end
Uses Member Routes (see 2.10) & Nested Resources
Nested Resources
The crux of your issue is that you're trying to pass the :id param twice
Fortunately, Rails has a solution to this, in the form of Nested Resources. These work by taking the "parent" id and prepending a singular prefix, such as :store_id, allowing you to use the :id param for another set of methods
I have a subscriptions controller with routes that look like this:
get 'user/:user_id/subscription_requests' => 'subscriptions#index', as: :subscription_requests
post 'user/:user_id/subscribe' => 'subscriptions#subscribe', as: :user_subscribe
post 'user/:user_id/unsubscribe' => 'subscriptions#unsubscribe', as: :user_unsubscribe
post 'user/:user_id/request_subscription' => 'subscriptions#request_subscription', as: :request_user_subscription
post 'user/:user_id/accept_subscription' => 'subscriptions#accept', as: :accept_subscription_request
post 'user/:user_id/reject_subscription' => 'subscriptions#reject', as: :reject_subscription_request
All of them except index are non-restful actions. How do you make this cleaner in the routes file using something like resources while keeping the user/:user_id/ in the path?
Update for clarity:
I'm trying to avoid listing the routes line by line and instead do something like what rails provides with the restful actions. Something like:
resources :subscription_requests, :only => [:subscribe, :unsubscribe, :reject, :accept, etc]
You can use the member function of routing.
resources :user, to: 'subscriptions', :only => [] do
member do
get 'subscription_requests'
post 'subscribe'
etc
end
end
And this will produce routes such as:
subscription_requests_user GET /user/:id/subscription_requests(.:format) subscriptions#subscription_requests
subscribe_user POST /user/:id/subscribe(.:format) subscriptions#subscribe
Docs: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/routing.html#adding-more-restful-actions
As we all know, a simple
resources :meetings
will generate 7 actions for me. Two of these are index and create. A really cool thing about these two!: The URL for both is /meetings, but when I GET /meetings I am routed to the def index action and when I POST /meetings, I am routed to the def create action. Nice.
Now I want to do this:
resources :meetings do
member do
get 'scores'
post 'scores'
end
end
And, you guessed it!, I want them to route to different actions in MeetingsController: GETting /meetings/1/scores will route to def scores and POSTing to meetings/1/scores will route to def create_scores.
Try:
resources :meetings do
member do
get 'scores' => :scores
post 'scores' => :create_scores
end
end
I suppose you will be also interested in having named routes:
resources :meetings do
member do
get 'scores' => :scores, :as => 'scores_of'
post 'scores' => :create_scores, :as => 'create_scores_of'
end
end
Then you get scores_of_meeting_path and create_scores_of_meeting_path helpers.
Above may be DRYed more with:
get :scores, :as => 'scores_of'
Define the routes such as this:
resources :meetings do
member do
get 'scores', :action => "scores"
post 'scores', :action => "post_scores"
end
end
But it sounds to me like it would be much easier to create another controller to handle this, as scores to me feels like another resource entirely, even if they don't have their own model association.
Ha! Never underestimate the ability of asking a question well to lead you to its answer.
resources :meetings do
member do
get 'scores', :to => "meetings#scores"
post 'scores', :to => "meetings#create_scores"
end
end
I'm reading these two pages
resources
Adding more RESTful actions
The Rails Guides page shows
map.resources :photos, :new => { :upload => :post }
And its corresponding URL
/photos/upload
This looks wonderful.
My routes.rb shows this
map.resources :users, :new => { :signup => :get, :register => :post }
When I do: [~/my_app]$ rake routes
I see the two new routes added
signup_new_user GET /users/new/signup(.:format)
register_new_user POST /users/new/register(.:format)
Note the inclusion of /new! I don't want that. I just want /users/signup and /users/register (as described in the Rails Routing Guide).
Any help?
When you expose a controller as a resource, following actions are automatically added:
show
index
new
create
edit
update
destroy
These actions can be categorized in to two groups:
:member actions
The URL for the member action has the id of the target resource. E.g:
users/1/edit
users/1
You can think of :member action as an instance method on a class. It always applies on an existing resource.
Default member actions: show, edit, update, destroy
:collection actions
The URL for the :collection action does not contain the id of the target resource. E.g:
users/login
users/register
You can think of :collection action as a static method on a class.
Default collection actions: index, new, create
In your case you need two new actions for registration. These actions belong to :collection type( as you do not have the id of the user while submitting these actions). Your route can be as follows:
map.resources :users, :collection => { :signup => :get, :register => :post }
The URL for the actions are as follows:
users/signup
users/register
If you want to remove a standard action generated by Rails use :except/:only options:
map.resources :foo, :only => :show
map.resources :foo, :except => [:destroy, :show]
Edit 1
I usually treat the confirmation action as a :member action. In this case params[id] will contain the confirmation code.
Route configuration:
map.resources :users, :member => { :confirm => :get}
URL
/users/xab3454a/confirm
confirm_user_path(:id => #user.confirmation_code) # returns the URL above
Controller
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def confirm
# assuming you have an attribute called `confirmation_code` in `users` table
# and you have added a uniq index on the column!!
if User.find_by_confirmation_code(params[id])
# success
else
# error
end
end
end
This can be taken as just another syntax -- something good to know may be.
Syntax 1:
resources :users do
member do
get 'signup'
post 'register'
end
end
Rake Route Output will include
signup_users GET /users/signup(.:format) {:action=>"signup", :controller=>"users"}
register_users POST /users/register(.:format) {:action=>"register", :controller=>"use
rs"}
Syntax 2:
If you have only one collection route
resources :users do
get 'signup', :on => :collection
end
If i'm understanding your question right, you just want to rename the urls of the new and create actions.
This would be done like so:
map.resources :users, :path_names => {:new => 'signup', :create => 'register'}
If you really would like to add new routes with corresponding controller actions, then Damiens answer is the way to go.
The new option allows you to create new routes for creating new objects. That's why they're prefixed with that term.
What you're looking for is the :collection option.
map.resources :users, :collection => { :signup => :get, :register => :post }
Which will create the /users/signup and /users/register urls.