tracks/vendor/rails/actionpack/lib/action_controller/routing.rb
Luke Melia 901a58f8a3 Upgraded to Rails 2.1. This can have wide ranging consequences, so please help track down any issues introduced by the upgrade. Requires environment.rb modifications.
Changes you will need to make:

 * In your environment.rb, you will need to update references to a few files per environment.rb.tmpl
 * In your environment.rb, you will need to specify the local time zone of the computer that is running your Tracks install.

Other notes on my changes:

 * Modified our code to take advantage of Rails 2.1's slick time zone support.
 * Upgraded will_paginate for compatibility
 * Hacked the Selenium on Rails plugin, which has not been updated in some time and does not support Rails 2.1
 * Verified that all tests pass on my machine, including Selenium tests -- I'd like confirmation from others, too.
2008-06-17 01:13:25 -04:00

383 lines
13 KiB
Ruby

require 'cgi'
require 'uri'
require 'action_controller/polymorphic_routes'
require 'action_controller/routing/optimisations'
require 'action_controller/routing/routing_ext'
require 'action_controller/routing/route'
require 'action_controller/routing/segments'
require 'action_controller/routing/builder'
require 'action_controller/routing/route_set'
require 'action_controller/routing/recognition_optimisation'
module ActionController
# == Routing
#
# The routing module provides URL rewriting in native Ruby. It's a way to
# redirect incoming requests to controllers and actions. This replaces
# mod_rewrite rules. Best of all, Rails' Routing works with any web server.
# Routes are defined in <tt>config/routes.rb</tt>.
#
# Consider the following route, installed by Rails when you generate your
# application:
#
# map.connect ':controller/:action/:id'
#
# This route states that it expects requests to consist of a
# <tt>:controller</tt> followed by an <tt>:action</tt> that in turn is fed
# some <tt>:id</tt>.
#
# Suppose you get an incoming request for <tt>/blog/edit/22</tt>, you'll end up
# with:
#
# params = { :controller => 'blog',
# :action => 'edit',
# :id => '22'
# }
#
# Think of creating routes as drawing a map for your requests. The map tells
# them where to go based on some predefined pattern:
#
# ActionController::Routing::Routes.draw do |map|
# Pattern 1 tells some request to go to one place
# Pattern 2 tell them to go to another
# ...
# end
#
# The following symbols are special:
#
# :controller maps to your controller name
# :action maps to an action with your controllers
#
# Other names simply map to a parameter as in the case of <tt>:id</tt>.
#
# == Route priority
#
# Not all routes are created equally. Routes have priority defined by the
# order of appearance of the routes in the <tt>config/routes.rb</tt> file. The priority goes
# from top to bottom. The last route in that file is at the lowest priority
# and will be applied last. If no route matches, 404 is returned.
#
# Within blocks, the empty pattern is at the highest priority.
# In practice this works out nicely:
#
# ActionController::Routing::Routes.draw do |map|
# map.with_options :controller => 'blog' do |blog|
# blog.show '', :action => 'list'
# end
# map.connect ':controller/:action/:view'
# end
#
# In this case, invoking blog controller (with an URL like '/blog/')
# without parameters will activate the 'list' action by default.
#
# == Defaults routes and default parameters
#
# Setting a default route is straightforward in Rails - you simply append a
# Hash at the end of your mapping to set any default parameters.
#
# Example:
#
# ActionController::Routing:Routes.draw do |map|
# map.connect ':controller/:action/:id', :controller => 'blog'
# end
#
# This sets up +blog+ as the default controller if no other is specified.
# This means visiting '/' would invoke the blog controller.
#
# More formally, you can define defaults in a route with the <tt>:defaults</tt> key.
#
# map.connect ':controller/:action/:id', :action => 'show', :defaults => { :page => 'Dashboard' }
#
# == Named routes
#
# Routes can be named with the syntax <tt>map.name_of_route options</tt>,
# allowing for easy reference within your source as +name_of_route_url+
# for the full URL and +name_of_route_path+ for the URI path.
#
# Example:
#
# # In routes.rb
# map.login 'login', :controller => 'accounts', :action => 'login'
#
# # With render, redirect_to, tests, etc.
# redirect_to login_url
#
# Arguments can be passed as well.
#
# redirect_to show_item_path(:id => 25)
#
# Use <tt>map.root</tt> as a shorthand to name a route for the root path "".
#
# # In routes.rb
# map.root :controller => 'blogs'
#
# # would recognize http://www.example.com/ as
# params = { :controller => 'blogs', :action => 'index' }
#
# # and provide these named routes
# root_url # => 'http://www.example.com/'
# root_path # => ''
#
# You can also specify an already-defined named route in your <tt>map.root</tt> call:
#
# # In routes.rb
# map.new_session :controller => 'sessions', :action => 'new'
# map.root :new_session
#
# Note: when using +with_options+, the route is simply named after the
# method you call on the block parameter rather than map.
#
# # In routes.rb
# map.with_options :controller => 'blog' do |blog|
# blog.show '', :action => 'list'
# blog.delete 'delete/:id', :action => 'delete',
# blog.edit 'edit/:id', :action => 'edit'
# end
#
# # provides named routes for show, delete, and edit
# link_to @article.title, show_path(:id => @article.id)
#
# == Pretty URLs
#
# Routes can generate pretty URLs. For example:
#
# map.connect 'articles/:year/:month/:day',
# :controller => 'articles',
# :action => 'find_by_date',
# :year => /\d{4}/,
# :month => /\d{1,2}/,
# :day => /\d{1,2}/
#
# Using the route above, the URL "http://localhost:3000/articles/2005/11/06"
# maps to
#
# params = {:year => '2005', :month => '11', :day => '06'}
#
# == Regular Expressions and parameters
# You can specify a regular expression to define a format for a parameter.
#
# map.geocode 'geocode/:postalcode', :controller => 'geocode',
# :action => 'show', :postalcode => /\d{5}(-\d{4})?/
#
# or, more formally:
#
# map.geocode 'geocode/:postalcode', :controller => 'geocode',
# :action => 'show', :requirements => { :postalcode => /\d{5}(-\d{4})?/ }
#
# Formats can include the 'ignorecase' and 'extended syntax' regular
# expression modifiers:
#
# map.geocode 'geocode/:postalcode', :controller => 'geocode',
# :action => 'show', :postalcode => /hx\d\d\s\d[a-z]{2}/i
#
# map.geocode 'geocode/:postalcode', :controller => 'geocode',
# :action => 'show',:requirements => {
# :postalcode => /# Postcode format
# \d{5} #Prefix
# (-\d{4})? #Suffix
# /x
# }
#
# Using the multiline match modifier will raise an ArgumentError.
# Encoding regular expression modifiers are silently ignored. The
# match will always use the default encoding or ASCII.
#
# == Route globbing
#
# Specifying <tt>*[string]</tt> as part of a rule like:
#
# map.connect '*path' , :controller => 'blog' , :action => 'unrecognized?'
#
# will glob all remaining parts of the route that were not recognized earlier. This idiom
# must appear at the end of the path. The globbed values are in <tt>params[:path]</tt> in
# this case.
#
# == Route conditions
#
# With conditions you can define restrictions on routes. Currently the only valid condition is <tt>:method</tt>.
#
# * <tt>:method</tt> - Allows you to specify which method can access the route. Possible values are <tt>:post</tt>,
# <tt>:get</tt>, <tt>:put</tt>, <tt>:delete</tt> and <tt>:any</tt>. The default value is <tt>:any</tt>,
# <tt>:any</tt> means that any method can access the route.
#
# Example:
#
# map.connect 'post/:id', :controller => 'posts', :action => 'show',
# :conditions => { :method => :get }
# map.connect 'post/:id', :controller => 'posts', :action => 'create_comment',
# :conditions => { :method => :post }
#
# Now, if you POST to <tt>/posts/:id</tt>, it will route to the <tt>create_comment</tt> action. A GET on the same
# URL will route to the <tt>show</tt> action.
#
# == Reloading routes
#
# You can reload routes if you feel you must:
#
# ActionController::Routing::Routes.reload
#
# This will clear all named routes and reload routes.rb if the file has been modified from
# last load. To absolutely force reloading, use <tt>reload!</tt>.
#
# == Testing Routes
#
# The two main methods for testing your routes:
#
# === +assert_routing+
#
# def test_movie_route_properly_splits
# opts = {:controller => "plugin", :action => "checkout", :id => "2"}
# assert_routing "plugin/checkout/2", opts
# end
#
# +assert_routing+ lets you test whether or not the route properly resolves into options.
#
# === +assert_recognizes+
#
# def test_route_has_options
# opts = {:controller => "plugin", :action => "show", :id => "12"}
# assert_recognizes opts, "/plugins/show/12"
# end
#
# Note the subtle difference between the two: +assert_routing+ tests that
# a URL fits options while +assert_recognizes+ tests that a URL
# breaks into parameters properly.
#
# In tests you can simply pass the URL or named route to +get+ or +post+.
#
# def send_to_jail
# get '/jail'
# assert_response :success
# assert_template "jail/front"
# end
#
# def goes_to_login
# get login_url
# #...
# end
#
# == View a list of all your routes
#
# Run <tt>rake routes</tt>.
#
module Routing
SEPARATORS = %w( / . ? )
HTTP_METHODS = [:get, :head, :post, :put, :delete]
ALLOWED_REQUIREMENTS_FOR_OPTIMISATION = [:controller, :action].to_set
# The root paths which may contain controller files
mattr_accessor :controller_paths
self.controller_paths = []
# A helper module to hold URL related helpers.
module Helpers
include PolymorphicRoutes
end
class << self
# Expects an array of controller names as the first argument.
# Executes the passed block with only the named controllers named available.
# This method is used in internal Rails testing.
def with_controllers(names)
prior_controllers = @possible_controllers
use_controllers! names
yield
ensure
use_controllers! prior_controllers
end
# Returns an array of paths, cleaned of double-slashes and relative path references.
# * "\\\" and "//" become "\\" or "/".
# * "/foo/bar/../config" becomes "/foo/config".
# The returned array is sorted by length, descending.
def normalize_paths(paths)
# do the hokey-pokey of path normalization...
paths = paths.collect do |path|
path = path.
gsub("//", "/"). # replace double / chars with a single
gsub("\\\\", "\\"). # replace double \ chars with a single
gsub(%r{(.)[\\/]$}, '\1') # drop final / or \ if path ends with it
# eliminate .. paths where possible
re = %r{[^/\\]+[/\\]\.\.[/\\]}
path.gsub!(re, "") while path.match(re)
path
end
# start with longest path, first
paths = paths.uniq.sort_by { |path| - path.length }
end
# Returns the array of controller names currently available to ActionController::Routing.
def possible_controllers
unless @possible_controllers
@possible_controllers = []
paths = controller_paths.select { |path| File.directory?(path) && path != "." }
seen_paths = Hash.new {|h, k| h[k] = true; false}
normalize_paths(paths).each do |load_path|
Dir["#{load_path}/**/*_controller.rb"].collect do |path|
next if seen_paths[path.gsub(%r{^\.[/\\]}, "")]
controller_name = path[(load_path.length + 1)..-1]
controller_name.gsub!(/_controller\.rb\Z/, '')
@possible_controllers << controller_name
end
end
# remove duplicates
@possible_controllers.uniq!
end
@possible_controllers
end
# Replaces the internal list of controllers available to ActionController::Routing with the passed argument.
# ActionController::Routing.use_controllers!([ "posts", "comments", "admin/comments" ])
def use_controllers!(controller_names)
@possible_controllers = controller_names
end
# Returns a controller path for a new +controller+ based on a +previous+ controller path.
# Handles 4 scenarios:
#
# * stay in the previous controller:
# controller_relative_to( nil, "groups/discussion" ) # => "groups/discussion"
#
# * stay in the previous namespace:
# controller_relative_to( "posts", "groups/discussion" ) # => "groups/posts"
#
# * forced move to the root namespace:
# controller_relative_to( "/posts", "groups/discussion" ) # => "posts"
#
# * previous namespace is root:
# controller_relative_to( "posts", "anything_with_no_slashes" ) # =>"posts"
#
def controller_relative_to(controller, previous)
if controller.nil? then previous
elsif controller[0] == ?/ then controller[1..-1]
elsif %r{^(.*)/} =~ previous then "#{$1}/#{controller}"
else controller
end
end
end
Routes = RouteSet.new
::Inflector.module_eval do
# Ensures that routes are reloaded when Rails inflections are updated.
def inflections_with_route_reloading(&block)
returning(inflections_without_route_reloading(&block)) {
ActionController::Routing::Routes.reload! if block_given?
}
end
alias_method_chain :inflections, :route_reloading
end
end
end