# frozen-string-literal: true # class Roda module RodaPlugins # The named_routes plugin allows for multiple named routes, which the # main route block can dispatch to by name at any point by calling +r.route+. # If the named route doesn't handle the request, execution will continue, # and if the named route does handle the request, the response returned by # the named route will be returned. # # Example: # # plugin :multi_route # # route('foo') do |r| # r.is 'bar' do # '/foo/bar' # end # end # # route('bar') do |r| # r.is 'foo' do # '/bar/foo' # end # end # # route do |r| # r.on "foo" do # r.route 'foo' # end # # r.on "bar" do # r.route 'bar' # end # end # # Note that in multi-threaded code, you should not attempt to add a # named route after accepting requests. # # To handle development environments that reload code, you can call the # +route+ class method without a block to remove an existing named route. # # == Routing Files # # The convention when using the named_routes plugin is to have a single # named route per file, and these routing files should be stored in # a routes subdirectory in your application. So for the above example, you # would use the following files: # # routes/bar.rb # routes/foo.rb # # == Namespace Support # # The named_routes plugin also has support for namespaces, allowing you to # use +r.route+ at multiple levels in your routing tree. Example: # # route('foo') do |r| # r.on("baz"){r.route("baz", "foo")} # r.on("quux"){r.route("quux", "foo")} # end # # route('bar') do |r| # r.on("baz"){r.route("baz", "bar")} # r.on("quux"){r.route("quux", "bar")} # end # # route('baz', 'foo') do |r| # # handles /foo/baz prefix # end # # route('quux', 'foo') do |r| # # handles /foo/quux prefix # end # # route('baz', 'bar') do |r| # # handles /bar/baz prefix # end # # route('quux', 'bar') do |r| # # handles /bar/quux prefix # end # # route do |r| # r.on "foo" do # r.route("foo") # end # # r.on "bar" do # r.route("bar") # end # end # # === Routing Files # # The convention when using namespaces with the multi_route plugin is to # store the routing files in subdirectories per namespace. So for the # above example, you would have the following routing files: # # routes/bar.rb # routes/bar/baz.rb # routes/bar/quux.rb # routes/foo.rb # routes/foo/baz.rb # routes/foo/quux.rb module NamedRoutes # Initialize storage for the named routes. def self.configure(app) app.opts[:namespaced_routes] ||= {} end module ClassMethods # Freeze the namespaced routes so that there can be no thread safety issues at runtime. def freeze opts[:namespaced_routes].freeze.each_value(&:freeze) super end # Copy the named routes into the subclass when inheriting. def inherited(subclass) super nsr = subclass.opts[:namespaced_routes] opts[:namespaced_routes].each{|k, v| nsr[k] = v.dup} end # The names for the currently stored named routes def named_routes(namespace=nil) unless routes = opts[:namespaced_routes][namespace] raise RodaError, "unsupported named_routes namespace used: #{namespace.inspect}" end routes.keys end # Return the named route with the given name. def named_route(name, namespace=nil) opts[:namespaced_routes][namespace][name] end # If the given route has a name, treat it as a named route and # store the route block. Otherwise, this is the main route, so # call super. def route(name=nil, namespace=nil, &block) if name routes = opts[:namespaced_routes][namespace] ||= {} if block routes[name] = define_roda_method(routes[name] || "named_routes_#{namespace}_#{name}", 1, &convert_route_block(block)) elsif meth = routes.delete(name) remove_method(meth) end else super(&block) end end end module RequestMethods # Dispatch to the named route with the given name. def route(name, namespace=nil) scope.send(roda_class.named_route(name, namespace), self) end end end register_plugin(:named_routes, NamedRoutes) end end