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Routing
Routing is the act of matching a request to a given controller.
Typically, routing will examine the request URI, and attempt to match the URI path segment against provided constraints. If the constraints match, a set of "matches" are returned, one of which should be the controller name to execute. Routing can utilize other portions of the request URI or environment as well. For example, the host or scheme, query parameters, headers, request method, and more.
The base unit of routing is a Route:
namespace Zend\Router;
use Zend\Stdlib\RequestInterface as Request;
interface RouteInterface
{
public static function factory(array $options = []);
public function match(Request $request);
public function assemble(array $params = [], array $options = []);
}
A Route accepts a Request, and determines if it matches. If so, it returns a
RouteMatch object:
namespace Zend\Router;
class RouteMatch
{
public function __construct(array $params);
public function setMatchedRouteName($name);
public function getMatchedRouteName();
public function setParam($name, $value);
public function getParams();
public function getParam($name, $default = null);
}
Typically, when a Route matches, it will define one or more parameters. These
are passed into the RouteMatch, and objects may query the RouteMatch for
their values.
$id = $routeMatch->getParam('id', false);
if (! $id) {
throw new Exception('Required identifier is missing!');
}
$entity = $resource->get($id);
Usually you will have multiple routes you wish to test against. In order to
facilitate this, you will use a route aggregate, usually implementing
RouteStack:
namespace Zend\Router;
interface RouteStackInterface extends RouteInterface
{
public function addRoute($name, $route, $priority = null);
public function addRoutes(array $routes);
public function removeRoute($name);
public function setRoutes(array $routes);
}
Routes will be queried in a LIFO order, and hence the reason behind the name
RouteStack. zend-mvc provides two implementations of this interface,
SimpleRouteStack and TreeRouteStack. In each, you register routes either one
at a time using addRoute(), or in bulk using addRoutes().
// One at a time:
$route = Literal::factory([
'route' => '/foo',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'foo-index',
'action' => 'index',
],
]);
$router->addRoute('foo', $route);
// In bulk:
$router->addRoutes([
// using already instantiated routes:
'foo' => $route,
// providing configuration to allow lazy-loading routes:
'bar' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/bar',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'bar-index',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
],
]);
Router Types
Two routers are provided, the SimpleRouteStack and TreeRouteStack. Each
works with the above interface, but utilize slightly different options and
execution paths. By default, the zend-mvc uses the TreeRouteStack as the
router.
SimpleRouteStack
This router takes individual routes that provide their full matching logic in
one go, and loops through them in LIFO order until a match is found. As such,
routes that will match most often should be registered last, and least common
routes first. Additionally, you will need to ensure that routes that potentially
overlap are registered such that the most specific match will match first (i.e.,
register later). Alternatively, you can set priorities by giving the priority as
third parameter to the addRoute() method, specifying the priority in the route
specifications or setting the priority property within a route instance before
adding it to the route stack.
TreeRouteStack
Zend\Router\Http\TreeRouteStack provides the ability to register trees of
routes, and uses a B-tree algorithm to match routes. As such, you register a
single route with many children.
A TreeRouteStack will consist of the following configuration:
- A base "route", which describes the base match needed, the root of the tree.
- An optional
route_plugins, which is a configuredZend\Router\RoutePluginManagerthat can lazy-load routes. - The option
may_terminate, which hints to the router that no other segments will follow it. - An optional
child_routesarray, which contains additional routes that stem from the base "route" (i.e., build from it). Each child route can itself be aTreeRouteStackif desired; in fact, thePartroute works exactly this way.
When a route matches against a TreeRouteStack, the matched parameters from
each segment of the tree will be returned.
A TreeRouteStack can be your sole route for your application, or describe
particular path segments of the application.
An example of a TreeRouteStack is provided in the documentation of the Part
route.
HTTP Route Types
zend-mvc ships with the following HTTP route types.
Zend\Router\Http\Hostname
The Hostname route attempts to match the hostname registered in the request
against specific criteria. Typically, this will be in one of the following
forms:
subdomain.domain.tld:subdomain.domain.tld
In the above, the second route would return a "subdomain" key as part of the route match.
For any given hostname segment, you may also provide a constraint. As an example, if the "subdomain" segment needed to match only if it started with "fw" and contained exactly 2 digits following, the following route would be needed:
$route = Hostname::factory([
'route' => ':subdomain.domain.tld',
'constraints' => [
'subdomain' => 'fw\d{2}',
],
]);
In the above example, only a "subdomain" key will be returned in the
RouteMatch. If you wanted to also provide other information based on matching,
or a default value to return for the subdomain, you need to also provide
defaults.
$route = Hostname::factory([
'route' => ':subdomain.domain.tld',
'constraints' => [
'subdomain' => 'fw\d{2}',
],
'defaults' => [
'type' => 'json',
],
]);
When matched, the above will return two keys in the RouteMatch, "subdomain"
and "type".
Zend\Router\Http\Literal
The Literal route is for doing exact matching of the URI path. Configuration
therefore is solely the path you want to match, and the "defaults", or
parameters you want returned on a match.
$route = Literal::factory([
'route' => '/foo',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController',
'action' => 'foo',
],
]);
The above route would match a path "/foo", and return the key "action" in the
RouteMatch, with the value "foo".
Zend\Router\Http\Method
The Method route is used to match the HTTP method or 'verb' specified in the
request (See RFC 2616 Sec. 5.1.1). It can optionally be configured to match
against multiple methods by providing a comma-separated list of method tokens.
$route = Method::factory([
'verb' => 'post,put',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController',
'action' => 'form-submit',
],
]);
The above route would match an http "POST" or "PUT" request and return a
RouteMatch object containing a key "action" with a value of "form-submit".
Zend\Router\Http\Part
A Part route allows crafting a tree of possible routes based on segments of
the URI path. It actually extends the TreeRouteStack.
Part routes are difficult to describe, so we'll simply provide a sample one
here.
$route = Part::factory([
'route' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
],
'route_plugins' => $routePlugins,
'may_terminate' => true,
'child_routes' => [
'blog' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/blog',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\BlogController',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
'may_terminate' => true,
'child_routes' => [
'rss' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/rss',
'defaults' => [
'action' => 'rss',
]
],
'may_terminate' => true,
'child_routes' => [
'subrss' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/sub',
'defaults' => [
'action' => 'subrss',
],
],
],
],
],
],
],
'forum' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => 'forum',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\ForumController',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
],
],
]);
The above would match the following:
/would load the "Index" controller, "index" action./blogwould load the "Blog" controller, "index" action./blog/rsswould load the "Blog" controller, "rss" action./blog/rss/subwould load the "Blog" controller, "subrss" action./forumwould load the "Forum" controller, "index" action.
You may use any route type as a child route of a Part route.
Part routes are an implementation detail
Partroutes are not meant to be used directly. When you add definitions forchild_routesto any route type, that route will become aPartroute. As already said, describingPartroutes with words is difficult, so hopefully the additional examples at the end will provide further insight.Route plugins
In the above example, the
$routePluginsis an instance ofZend\Router\RoutePluginManager, containing essentially the following configuration:$routePlugins = new Zend\Router\RoutePluginManager(); $plugins = [ 'hostname' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Hostname', 'literal' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Literal', 'part' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Part', 'regex' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Regex', 'scheme' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Scheme', 'segment' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Segment', 'wildcard' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Wildcard', 'query' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Query', 'method' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Method', ]; foreach ($plugins as $name => $class) { $routePlugins->setInvokableClass($name, $class); }When using
Zend\Router\Http\TreeRouteStack, theRoutePluginManageris set up by default, and the developer does not need to worry about autoloading of standard HTTP routes.
Zend\Router\Http\Regex
A Regex route utilizes a regular expression to match against the URI path. Any
valid regular expression is allowed; our recommendation is to use named captures
for any values you want to return in the RouteMatch.
Since regular expression routes are often complex, you must specify a "spec" or
specification to use when assembling URLs from regex routes. The spec is simply
a string; replacements are identified using %keyname% within the string, with
the keys coming from either the captured values or named parameters passed to
the assemble() method.
Just like other routes, the Regex route can accept "defaults", parameters to
include in the RouteMatch when successfully matched.
$route = Regex::factory([
'regex' => '/blog/(?<id>[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+)(\.(?<format>(json|html|xml|rss)))?',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\BlogController',
'action' => 'view',
'format' => 'html',
],
'spec' => '/blog/%id%.%format%',
]);
The above would match /blog/001-some-blog_slug-here.html, and return four
items in the RouteMatch, an "id", the "controller", the "action", and the
"format". When assembling a URL from this route, the "id" and "format" values
would be used to fill the specification.
Zend\Router\Http\Scheme
The Scheme route matches the URI scheme only, and must be an exact match. As
such, this route, like the Literal route, simply takes what you want to match
and the "defaults", parameters to return on a match.
$route = Scheme::factory([
'scheme' => 'https',
'defaults' => [
'https' => true,
],
]);
The above route would match the "https" scheme, and return the key "https" in
the RouteMatch with a boolean true value.
Zend\Router\Http\Segment
A Segment route allows matching any segment of a URI path. Segments are
denoted using a colon, followed by alphanumeric characters; if a segment is
optional, it should be surrounded by brackets. As an example, /:foo[/:bar]
would match a / followed by text and assign it to the key "foo"; if any
additional / characters are found, any text following the last one will be
assigned to the key "bar".
The separation between literal and named segments can be anything. For example,
the above could be done as /:foo{-}[-:bar] as well. The {-} after the :foo
parameter indicates a set of one or more delimiters, after which matching of the
parameter itself ends.
Each segment may have constraints associated with it. Each constraint should simply be a regular expression expressing the conditions under which that segment should match.
Also, as you can in other routes, you may provide defaults to use; these are particularly useful when using optional segments.
As a complex example:
$route = Segment::factory([
'route' => '/:controller[/:action]',
'constraints' => [
'controller' => '[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_-]+',
'action' => '[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_-]+',
],
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController',
'action' => 'index',
],
]);
Zend\Router\Http\Query (Deprecated)
Potential security issue
Misuse of this route can lead to potential security issues.
Deprecated
This route part is deprecated since you can now add query parameters without a query route. It was removed in version 3 of the router.
The Query route part allows you to specify and capture query string parameters
for a given route.
The intention of the Query part is that you do not instantiate it in its own
right, but use it as a child of another route part.
An example of its usage would be:
$route = Part::factory([
'route' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => 'page',
'defaults' => [],
],
],
'may_terminate' => true,
'route_plugins' => $routePlugins,
'child_routes' => [
'query' => [
'type' => 'Query',
'options' => [
'defaults' => [
'foo' => 'bar',
],
],
],
],
]);
This then allows you to create query strings using the url view helper.
$this->url(
'page/query',
[
'name' => 'my-test-page',
'format' => 'rss',
'limit' => 10,
]
);
Per the above example, you must add /query (the name we gave to our query
route segment) to your route name in order to append a query string. If you do
not specify /query in the route name, then no query string will be appended.
Our example "page" route has only one defined parameter of "name"
(/page[/:name]), meaning that the remaining parameters of "format" and "limit"
will then be appended as a query string.
The output from our example should then be
/page/my-test-page?format=rss&limit=10
Zend\Router\Http\Wildcard (Deprecated)
Potential security issue
Misuse of this route type can lead to potential security issues.
Deprecated
This route type is deprecated. Use the
Segmentroute type.
The Wildcard route type matches all remaining segments of a URI path.
HTTP Routing Examples
Most of the routing definitions will be done in module configuration files, so the following examples will show how to set up routes in config files.
Simple example with two literal routes
return [
'router' => [
'routes' => [
// Literal route named "home"
'home' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
],
// Literal route named "contact"
'contact' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => 'contact',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\ContactController',
'action' => 'form',
],
],
],
],
],
];
A complex example with child routes
return [
'router' => [
'routes' => [
// Literal route named "home"
'home' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\IndexController',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
],
// Literal route named "blog", with child routes
'blog' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/blog',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Application\Controller\BlogController',
'action' => 'index',
],
],
'may_terminate' => true,
'child_routes' => [
// Segment route for viewing one blog post
'post' => [
'type' => 'segment',
'options' => [
'route' => '/[:slug]',
'constraints' => [
'slug' => '[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+',
],
'defaults' => [
'action' => 'view',
],
],
],
// Literal route for viewing blog RSS feed
'rss' => [
'type' => 'literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/rss',
'defaults' => [
'action' => 'rss',
],
],
],
],
],
],
],
];
When using child routes, naming of the routes follows the parent/child
pattern, so to use the child routes from the above example:
echo $this->url('blog'); // gives "/blog"
echo $this->url('blog/post', ['slug' => 'my-post']); // gives "/blog/my-post"
echo $this->url('blog/rss'); // gives "/blog/rss"
An example with multiple Hostnames and subdomains within a single application
return [
'router' => [
'routes' => [
'modules.zendframework.com' => [
'type' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Hostname',
'options' => [
'route' => ':4th.[:3rd.]:2nd.:1st', // domain levels from right to left
'constraints' => [
'4th' => 'modules',
'3rd' => '.*?', // optional 3rd level domain such as .ci, .dev or .test
'2nd' => 'zendframework',
'1st' => 'com',
],
// Purposely omit default controller and action
// to let the child routes control the route match
],
// child route controllers may span multiple modules as desired
'child_routes' => [
'index' => [
'type' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Module\Controller\Index',
'action' = > 'index',
],
],
'may_terminate' => true,
],
],
],
'packages.zendframework.com' => [
'type' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Hostname',
'options' => [
'route' => ':4th.[:3rd.]:2nd.:1st', // domain levels from right to left
'constraints' => [
'4th' => 'packages',
'3rd' => '.*?', // optional 3rd level domain such as .ci, .dev or .test
'2nd' => 'zendframework',
'1st' => 'com',
],
// Purposely omit default controller and action
// to let the child routes control the route match
],
// child route controllers may span multiple modules as desired
'child_routes' => [
'index' => [
'type' => 'Zend\Router\Http\Literal',
'options' => [
'route' => '/',
'defaults' => [
'controller' => 'Package\Controller\Index',
'action' = > 'index',
],
],
'may_terminate' => true,
],
],
],
],
],
];
The above would match the following:
modules.zendframework.comwould dispatch theIndexcontroller'sindexaction of theModulemodule.modules.ci.zendframework.comwould dispatch theIndexcontroller'sindexaction of theModulemodule.packages.zendframework.comwould dispatch theIndexcontroller'sindexaction of thePackagemodule.packages.dev.zendframework.comwould dispatch theIndexcontroller'sindexaction of thePackagemodule.
The Url controller plugin or view helper may be used to generate URLs
following the above example:
// reuse the route matched parameters to generate URLs
echo $this->url('modules.zendframework.com/index', [], [], true);
echo $this->url('packages.zendframework.com/index', [], [], true);
may_terminate and child_routes placement
When defining child routes pay attention that the
may_terminateandchild_routesdefinitions are in same level as theoptionsandtypedefinitions. A common pitfall is to have those two definitions nested inoptions, which will not result in the desired routes.
Console Route Types
zend-mvc also allows routing Console based applications; console routes are explained in the zend-console routing documentation.
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