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NAME

       Mojolicious::Guides::Routing - Routing

OVERVIEW

       This document contains a simple and fun introduction to the Mojolicious router and its
       underlying concepts.

CONCEPTS

       Essentials every Mojolicious developer should know.

   Dispatcher
       The foundation of every web framework is a tiny black box connecting incoming requests
       with code generating the appropriate response.

         GET /user/show/1 -> $c->render(text => 'Sebastian');

       This black box is usually called a dispatcher. There are many implementations using
       different strategies to establish these connections, but pretty much all are based around
       mapping the path part of the request URL to some kind of response generator.

         /user/show/2 -> $c->render(text => 'Daniel');
         /user/show/3 -> $c->render(text => 'Sara');
         /user/show/4 -> $c->render(text => 'Baerbel');
         /user/show/5 -> $c->render(text => 'Wolfgang');

       While it is very well possible to make all these connections static, it is also rather
       inefficient. That's why regular expressions are commonly used to make the dispatch process
       more dynamic.

         qr!/user/show/(\d+)! -> $c->render(text => $users{$1});

       Modern dispatchers have pretty much everything HTTP has to offer at their disposal and can
       use many more variables than just the request path, such as request method and headers
       like "Host", "User-Agent" and "Accept".

         GET /user/show/23 HTTP/1.1
         Host: mojolicio.us
         User-Agent: Mojolicious (Perl)
         Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8

   Routes
       While regular expressions are quite powerful they also tend to be unpleasant to look at
       and are generally overkill for ordinary path matching.

         qr!/user/show/(\d+)! -> $c->render(text => $users{$1});

       This is where routes come into play, they have been designed from the ground up to
       represent paths with placeholders.

         /user/show/:id -> $c->render(text => $users{$id});

       The only difference between a static path and the route above is the ":id" placeholder.
       One or more placeholders can be anywhere in the route.

         /user/:action/:id

       A fundamental concept of the Mojolicious router is that extracted placeholder values are
       turned into a hash.

         /user/show/23 -> /user/:action/:id -> {action => 'show', id => 23}

       This hash is basically the center of every Mojolicious application, you will learn more
       about this later on. Internally routes get compiled to regular expressions, so you can get
       the best of both worlds with a little bit of experience.

         /user/show/:id -> qr/(?-xism:^\/user\/show/([^\/.]+))/

       A trailing slash in the path is always optional.

         /user/show/23/ -> /user/:action/:id -> {action => 'show', id => 23}

   Reversibility
       One more huge advantage routes have over regular expressions is that they are easily
       reversible, extracted placeholders can be turned back into a path at any time.

         /sebastian -> /:name -> {name => 'sebastian'}
         {name => 'sebastian'} -> /:name -> /sebastian

       Every placeholder has a name, even if it's just an empty string.

   Standard placeholders
       Standard placeholders are the simplest form of placeholders, they use a colon prefix and
       match all characters except "/" and ".", similar to the regular expression "([^/.]+)".

         /hello              -> /:name/hello -> undef
         /sebastian/23/hello -> /:name/hello -> undef
         /sebastian.23/hello -> /:name/hello -> undef
         /sebastian/hello    -> /:name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian'}
         /sebastian23/hello  -> /:name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian23'}
         /sebastian 23/hello -> /:name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian 23'}

       All placeholders can be surrounded by parentheses to separate them from the surrounding
       text.

         /hello             -> /(:name)hello -> undef
         /sebastian/23hello -> /(:name)hello -> undef
         /sebastian.23hello -> /(:name)hello -> undef
         /sebastianhello    -> /(:name)hello -> {name => 'sebastian'}
         /sebastian23hello  -> /(:name)hello -> {name => 'sebastian23'}
         /sebastian 23hello -> /(:name)hello -> {name => 'sebastian 23'}

       The colon prefix is optional for standard placeholders that are surrounded by parentheses.

         /i♥mojolicious -> /(one)♥(two) -> {one => 'i', two => 'mojolicious'}

   Relaxed placeholders
       Relaxed placeholders are just like standard placeholders, but use a hash prefix and match
       all characters except "/", similar to the regular expression "([^/]+)".

         /hello              -> /#name/hello -> undef
         /sebastian/23/hello -> /#name/hello -> undef
         /sebastian.23/hello -> /#name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian.23'}
         /sebastian/hello    -> /#name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian'}
         /sebastian23/hello  -> /#name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian23'}
         /sebastian 23/hello -> /#name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian 23'}

       They can be especially useful for manually matching file names with extensions, rather
       than using format detection.

         /music/song.mp3 -> /music/#filename -> {filename => 'song.mp3'}

   Wildcard placeholders
       Wildcard placeholders are just like the two types of placeholders above, but use an
       asterisk prefix and match absolutely everything, including "/" and ".", similar to the
       regular expression "(.+)".

         /hello              -> /*name/hello -> undef
         /sebastian/23/hello -> /*name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian/23'}
         /sebastian.23/hello -> /*name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian.23'}
         /sebastian/hello    -> /*name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian'}
         /sebastian23/hello  -> /*name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian23'}
         /sebastian 23/hello -> /*name/hello -> {name => 'sebastian 23'}

BASICS

       Most commonly used features every Mojolicious developer should know about.

   Minimal route
       The attribute "routes" in Mojolicious contains a router you can use to generate route
       structures, they match in the same order in which they were defined.

         # Application
         package MyApp;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

         sub startup {
           my $self = shift;

           # Router
           my $r = $self->routes;

           # Route
           $r->get('/welcome')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'welcome');
         }

         1;

       The minimal route above will load and instantiate the class "MyApp::Controller::Foo" and
       call its "welcome" method.

         # Controller
         package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Controller';

         # Action
         sub welcome {
           my $self = shift;

           # Render response
           $self->render(text => 'Hello there.');
         }

         1;

       Routes are usually configured in the "startup" method of the application class, but the
       router can be accessed from everywhere (even at runtime).

   Routing destination
       After you start a new route with methods like "get" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route, you can
       also give it a destination in the form of a hash using the chained method "to" in
       Mojolicious::Routes::Route.

         # /welcome -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'welcome'}
         $r->get('/welcome')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'welcome');

       Now if the route matches an incoming request it will use the content of this hash to try
       and find appropriate code to generate a response.

   HTTP methods
       There are already shortcuts for the most common HTTP request methods like "post" in
       Mojolicious::Routes::Route, and for more control "any" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route
       accepts an optional array reference with arbitrary request methods as first argument.

         # PUT /hello  -> undef
         # GET /hello  -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'hello'}
         $r->get('/hello')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'hello');

         # PUT /hello -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'hello'}
         $r->put('/hello')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'hello');

         # POST /hello -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'hello'}
         $r->post('/hello')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'hello');

         # GET|POST /bye  -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bye'}
         $r->any([qw(GET POST)] => '/bye')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'bye');

         # * /whatever -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'whatever'}
         $r->any('/whatever')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'whatever');

       There is one small exception, "HEAD" requests are considered equal to "GET", but content
       will not be sent with the response even if it is present.

         # GET /test  -> {controller => 'bar', action => 'test'}
         # HEAD /test -> {controller => 'bar', action => 'test'}
         $r->get('/test')->to(controller => 'bar', action => 'test');

       You can also use the "_method" query parameter to override the request method, this can be
       very useful when submitting forms with browsers that only support "GET" and "POST".

         # PUT  /stuff             -> {controller => 'baz', action => 'stuff'}
         # POST /stuff?_method=PUT -> {controller => 'baz', action => 'stuff'}
         $r->put('/stuff')->to(controller => 'baz', action => 'stuff');

   IRIs
       IRIs are handled transparently, that means paths are guaranteed to be unescaped and
       decoded from bytes to characters.

         # GET /☃ (Unicode snowman) -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'snowman'}
         $r->get('/☃')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'snowman');

   Stash
       The generated hash of a matching route is actually the center of the whole Mojolicious
       request cycle. We call it the stash, and it persists until a response has been generated.

         # /bye -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bye', mymessage => 'Bye'}
         $r->get('/bye')
           ->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'bye', mymessage => 'Bye');

       There are a few stash values with special meaning, such as "controller" and "action", but
       you can generally fill it with whatever data you need to generate a response. Once
       dispatched the whole stash content can be changed at any time.

         sub bye {
           my $self = shift;

           # Get message from stash
           my $msg = $self->stash('mymessage');

           # Change message in stash
           $self->stash(mymessage => 'Welcome');
         }

       For a full list of reserved stash values see "stash" in Mojolicious::Controller.

   Nested routes
       It is also possible to build tree structures from routes to remove repetitive code. A
       route with children can't match on its own though, only the actual endpoints of these
       nested routes can.

         # /foo     -> undef
         # /foo/bar -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar'}
         my $foo = $r->any('/foo')->to(controller => 'foo');
         $foo->get('/bar')->to(action => 'bar');

       The stash is simply inherited from route to route and newer values override old ones.

         # /cats      -> {controller => 'cats', action => 'index'}
         # /cats/nyan -> {controller => 'cats', action => 'nyan'}
         # /cats/lol  -> {controller => 'cats', action => 'default'}
         my $cats = $r->any('/cats')->to(controller => 'cats', action => 'default');
         $cats->get('/')->to(action => 'index');
         $cats->get('/nyan')->to(action => 'nyan');
         $cats->get('/lol');

   Special stash values
       When the dispatcher sees "controller" and "action" values in the stash it will always try
       to turn them into a class and method to dispatch to. The "controller" value gets converted
       from "snake_case" to "CamelCase" using "camelize" in Mojo::Util and appended to one or
       more namespaces, defaulting to a controller namespace based on the application class
       ("MyApp::Controller"), as well as the bare application class ("MyApp"), and these
       namespaces are searched in that order. The action value is not changed at all, so both
       values are case-sensitive.

         # Application
         package MyApp;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

         sub startup {
           my $self = shift;

           # /bye -> MyApp::Controller::Foo->bye
           $self->routes->get('/bye')->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'bye');
         }

         1;

         # Controller
         package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Controller';

         # Action
         sub bye {
           my $self = shift;

           # Render response
           $self->render(text => 'Good bye.');
         }

         1;

       Controller classes are perfect for organizing code in larger projects. There are more
       dispatch strategies, but because controllers are the most commonly used ones they also got
       a special shortcut in the form of "controller#action".

         # /bye -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bye', mymessage => 'Bye'}
         $r->get('/bye')->to('foo#bye', mymessage => 'Bye');

       During camelization "-" characters get replaced with "::", this allows multi-level
       "controller" hierarchies.

         # / -> MyApp::Controller::Foo::Bar->hi
         $r->get('/')->to('foo-bar#hi');

       You can also just specify the "controller" in CamelCase form instead of snake_case.

         # / -> MyApp::Controller::Foo::Bar->hi
         $r->get('/')->to('Foo::Bar#hi');

       For security reasons the dispatcher will always check if the "controller" is actually a
       subclass of Mojolicious::Controller or Mojo before dispatching to it.

   Namespaces
       You can use the "namespace" stash value to change the namespace of a whole route with all
       its children.

         # /bye -> MyApp::MyController::Foo::Bar->bye
         $r->get('/bye')
           ->to(namespace => 'MyApp::MyController::Foo::Bar', action => 'bye');

       The "controller" is always converted from "snake_case" to "CamelCase" with "camelize" in
       Mojo::Util, and then appended to this "namespace".

         # /bye -> MyApp::MyController::Foo::Bar->bye
         $r->get('/bye')->to('foo-bar#bye', namespace => 'MyApp::MyController');

         # /hey -> MyApp::MyController::Foo::Bar->hey
         $r->get('/hey')->to('Foo::Bar#hey', namespace => 'MyApp::MyController');

       You can also change the default namespaces for all routes in the application with the
       router attribute "namespaces" in Mojolicious::Routes, which usually defaults to a
       namespace based on the application class ("MyApp::Controller"), as well as the bare
       application class ("MyApp").

         $r->namespaces(['MyApp::MyController']);

   Route to callback
       The "cb" stash value, which won't be inherited by nested routes, can be used to bypass
       controllers and execute a callback instead.

         $r->get('/bye')->to(cb => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Good bye.');
         });

       But just like in Mojolicious::Lite you can also pass the callback directly, which usually
       looks much better.

         $r->get('/bye' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Good bye.');
         });

   Named routes
       Naming your routes will allow backreferencing in many methods and helpers throughout the
       whole framework, most of them internally rely on "url_for" in Mojolicious::Controller for
       this.

         # /foo/marcus -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', user => 'marcus'}
         $r->get('/foo/:user')->to('foo#bar')->name('baz');

         # Generate URL "/foo/marcus" for route "baz"
         my $url = $c->url_for('baz');

         # Generate URL "/foo/jan" for route "baz"
         my $url = $c->url_for('baz', user => 'jan');

         # Generate URL "http://127.0.0.1:3000/foo/jan" for route "baz"
         my $url = $c->url_for('baz', user => 'jan')->to_abs;

       You can assign a name with "name" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route, or let the router
       generate one automatically, which would be equal to the route itself without non-word
       characters, custom names have a higher precedence though.

         # /foo/bar ("foobar")
         $r->get('/foo/bar')->to('test#stuff');

         # Generate URL "/foo/bar"
         my $url = $c->url_for('foobar');

       To refer to the current route you can use the reserved name "current" or no name at all.

         # Generate URL for current route
         my $url = $c->url_for('current');
         my $url = $c->url_for;

       To check or get the name of the current route you can use the helper "current_route" in
       Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers.

         # Name for current route
         my $name = $c->current_route;

         # Check route name in code shared by multiple routes
         $c->stash(button => 'green') if $c->current_route('login');

   Optional placeholders
       Extracted placeholder values will simply redefine older stash values if they already
       exist.

         # /bye -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', mymessage => 'bye'}
         # /hey -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', mymessage => 'hey'}
         $r->get('/:mymessage')->to('foo#bar', mymessage => 'hi');

       One more interesting effect, a placeholder automatically becomes optional if there is
       already a stash value of the same name present, this works similar to the regular
       expression "([^/.]+)?".

         # / -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', mymessage => 'hi'}
         $r->get('/:mymessage')->to('foo#bar', mymessage => 'hi');

         # /test/123     -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', mymessage => 'hi'}
         # /test/bye/123 -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', mymessage => 'bye'}
         $r->get('/test/:mymessage/123')->to('foo#bar', mymessage => 'hi');

       And if two optional placeholders are only separated by a slash, that slash can become
       optional as well.

         # /           -> {controller => 'foo',   action => 'bar'}
         # /users      -> {controller => 'users', action => 'bar'}
         # /users/list -> {controller => 'users', action => 'list'}
         $r->get('/:controller/:action')->to('foo#bar');

       Special stash values like "controller" and "action" can also be placeholders, which is
       very convenient especially during development, but should only be used very carefully,
       because every controller method becomes a potential route. All uppercase methods as well
       as those starting with an underscore are automatically hidden from the router and you can
       use "hide" in Mojolicious::Routes to add additional ones.

         # Hide "create" method in all controllers
         $r->hide('create');

       This has already been done for all attributes and methods from Mojolicious::Controller.

   More restrictive placeholders
       A very easy way to make placeholders more restrictive are alternatives, you just make a
       list of possible values, which then work similar to the regular expression
       "(bender|leela)".

         # /fry    -> undef
         # /bender -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', name => 'bender'}
         # /leela  -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', name => 'leela'}
         $r->get('/:name' => [name => [qw(bender leela)]])->to('foo#bar');

       You can also adjust the regular expressions behind placeholders directly, just make sure
       not to use "^" and "$" or capturing groups "(...)", because placeholders become part of a
       larger regular expression internally, "(?:...)"  is fine though.

         # /23   -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', number => 23}
         # /test -> undef
         $r->get('/:number' => [number => qr/\d+/])->to('foo#bar');

         # /23   -> undef
         # /test -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', name => 'test'}
         $r->get('/:name' => [name => qr/[a-zA-Z]+/])->to('foo#bar');

       This way you get easily readable routes and the raw power of regular expressions.

   Under
       To share code with multiple nested routes you can use "under" in
       Mojolicious::Routes::Route, because unlike normal nested routes, the routes generated with
       it have their own intermediate destination and result in additional dispatch cycles when
       they match.

         # /foo     -> undef
         # /foo/bar -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'baz'}
         #             {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar'}
         my $foo = $r->under('/foo')->to('foo#baz');
         $foo->get('/bar')->to('#bar');

       The actual action code for this destination needs to return a true value or the dispatch
       chain will be broken, this can be a very powerful tool for authentication.

         # /blackjack -> {cb => sub {...}}
         #               {controller => 'hideout', action => 'blackjack'}
         my $auth = $r->under('/' => sub {
           my $c = shift;

           # Authenticated
           return 1 if $c->req->headers->header('X-Bender');

           # Not authenticated
           $c->render(text => "You're not Bender.");
           return undef;
         });
         $auth->get('/blackjack')->to('hideout#blackjack');

       Broken dispatch chains can be continued by calling the method "continue" in
       Mojolicious::Controller, this allows for example non-blocking operations to finish before
       reaching the next dispatch cycle.

         my $maybe = $r->under('/maybe' => sub {
           my $c = shift;

           # Wait 3 seconds and then give visitors a 50% chance to continue
           Mojo::IOLoop->timer(3 => sub {

             # Loser
             return $c->render(text => 'No luck.') unless int rand 2;

             # Winner
             $c->continue;
           });

           return undef;
         });
         $maybe->get('/')->to('maybe#winner');

       Every destination is just a snapshot of the stash at the time the route matched, and only
       the "format" value is shared by all of them. For a little more power you can introspect
       the preceding and succeeding destinations with "match" in Mojolicious::Controller.

         # Action of the fourth dispatch cycle
         my $action = $c->match->stack->[3]{action};

   Formats
       File extensions like ".html" and ".txt" at the end of a route are automatically detected
       and stored in the stash value "format".

         # /foo      -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar'}
         # /foo.html -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', format => 'html'}
         # /foo.txt  -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', format => 'txt'}
         $r->get('/foo')->to('foo#bar');

       This for example allows multiple templates in different formats to share the same action
       code. Restrictive placeholders can also be used to limit the allowed formats.

         # /foo.txt -> undef
         # /foo.rss -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', format => 'rss'}
         # /foo.xml -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar', format => 'xml'}
         $r->get('/foo' => [format => [qw(rss xml)]])->to('foo#bar');

       Or you can just disable format detection with a special type of restrictive placeholder,
       which gets inherited by nested routes, and then re-enable it on demand.

         # /foo      -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar'}
         # /foo.html -> undef
         $r->get('/foo' => [format => 0])->to('foo#bar');

         # /foo      -> {controller => 'foo', action => 'bar'}
         # /foo.html -> undef
         # /baz      -> undef
         # /baz.txt  -> {controller => 'baz', action => 'yada', format => 'txt'}
         # /baz.html -> {controller => 'baz', action => 'yada', format => 'html'}
         # /baz.xml  -> undef
         my $inactive = $r->under([format => 0]);
         $inactive->get('/foo')->to('foo#bar');
         $inactive->get('/baz' => [format => [qw(txt html)]])->to('baz#yada');

   WebSockets
       With the method "websocket" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route you can restrict access to
       WebSocket handshakes, which are normal "GET" requests with some additional information.

         # /echo (WebSocket handshake)
         $r->websocket('/echo')->to('foo#echo');

         # Controller
         package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Controller';

         # Action
         sub echo {
           my $self = shift;
           $self->on(message => sub {
             my ($self, $msg) = @_;
             $self->send("echo: $msg");
           });
         }

         1;

       The connection gets established when you respond to the WebSocket handshake request with a
       101 response status, which happens automatically if you subscribe to an event with "on" in
       Mojolicious::Controller or send a message with "send" in Mojolicious::Controller right
       away.

         GET /echo HTTP/1.1
         Host: mojolicio.us
         User-Agent: Mojolicious (Perl)
         Connection: Upgrade
         Upgrade: websocket
         Sec-WebSocket-Key: IDM3ODE4NDk2MjA1OTcxOQ==
         Sec-WebSocket-Version: 13

         HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols
         Server: Mojolicious (Perl)
         Date: Tue, 03 Feb 2015 17:08:24 GMT
         Connection: Upgrade
         Upgrade: websocket
         Sec-WebSocket-Accept: SWsp5N2iNxPbHlcOTIw8ERvyVPY=

   Catch-all route
       Since routes match in the order in which they were defined, you can catch all requests
       that did not match in your last route with an optional wildcard placeholder.

         # * /*
         $r->any('/*whatever' => {whatever => ''} => sub {
           my $c        = shift;
           my $whatever = $c->param('whatever');
           $c->render(text => "/$whatever did not match.", status => 404);
         });

   Conditions
       Conditions such as "headers", "agent" and "host" from Mojolicious::Plugin::HeaderCondition
       can be applied to any route with the method "over" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route, and
       allow even more powerful route constructs.

         # / (Origin: http://mojolicio.us)
         $r->get('/')->over(headers => {Origin => qr/mojolicio\.us/})->to('foo#bar');

         # / (Firefox)
         $r->get('/')->over(agent => qr/Firefox/)->to('browser-test#firefox');

         # / (Internet Explorer)
         $r->get('/')->over(agent => qr/Internet Explorer/)->to('browser-test#ie');

         # http://mojolicio.us/perldoc
         $r->get('/perldoc')->over(host => 'mojolicio.us')->to('perldoc#index');

       Just be aware that conditions are too complex for the routing cache, which normally speeds
       up recurring requests, and can therefore reduce performance.

   Hooks
       Hooks operate outside the routing system and allow you to extend the framework itself by
       sharing code with all requests indiscriminately through "hook" in Mojolicious, which makes
       them a very powerful tool especially for plugins.

         # Application
         package MyApp;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

         sub startup {
           my $self = shift;

           # Check all requests for a "/test" prefix
           $self->hook(before_dispatch => sub {
             my $c = shift;
             $c->render(text => 'This request did not reach the router.')
               if $c->req->url->path->contains('/test');
           });

           # These will not be reached if the hook above renders a response
           my $r = $self->routes;
           $r->get('/welcome')->to('foo#welcome');
           $r->post('/bye')->to('foo#bye');
         }

         1;

       Post-processing the response to add or remove headers is a very common use.

         # Make sure static files are cached
         $app->hook(after_static => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->res->headers->cache_control('max-age=3600, must-revalidate');
         });

         # Remove a default header
         $app->hook(after_dispatch => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->res->headers->remove('Server');
         });

       Same for pre-processing the request.

         # Choose template variant based on request headers
         $app->hook(before_dispatch => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           return unless my $agent = $c->req->headers->user_agent;
           $c->stash(variant => 'ie') if $agent =~ /Internet Explorer/;
         });

       Or more advanced extensions to add monitoring to your application.

         # Forward exceptions to a web service
         $app->hook(after_dispatch => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           return unless my $e = $c->stash('exception');
           $c->ua->post('https://example.com/bugs' => form => {exception => $e});
         });

       You can even extend much of the core functionality.

         # Make controller object available to actions as $_
         $app->hook(around_action => sub {
           my ($next, $c, $action, $last) = @_;
           local $_ = $c;
           return $next->();
         });

         # Pass route name as argument to actions
         $app->hook(around_action => sub {
           my ($next, $c, $action, $last) = @_;
           return $c->$action($c->current_route);
         });

       For a full list of available hooks see "HOOKS" in Mojolicious.

   Introspection
       The command Mojolicious::Command::routes can be used from the command line to list all
       available routes together with name and underlying regular expressions.

         $ ./myapp.pl routes -v
         /foo/:name  ....  POST  fooname  ^/foo/([^/\.]+)  ^/?(?:\.([^/]+))?$
         /bar        ..U.  *     bar      ^/bar
           +/baz     ...W  GET   baz      ^/baz            ^/?(?:\.([^/]+))?$
         /yada       ....  *     yada     ^/yada           ^/?(?:\.([^/]+))?$

ADVANCED

       Less commonly used and more powerful features.

   Shortcuts
       You can also add your own shortcuts with "add_shortcut" in Mojolicious::Routes to make
       route generation more expressive.

         # Simple "resource" shortcut
         $r->add_shortcut(resource => sub {
           my ($r, $name) = @_;

           # Prefix for resource
           my $resource = $r->any("/$name")->to("$name#");

           # Render a list of resources
           $resource->get->to('#index')->name($name);

           # Render a form to create a new resource (submitted to "store")
           $resource->get('/create')->to('#create')->name("create_$name");

           # Store newly created resource (submitted by "create")
           $resource->post->to('#store')->name("store_$name");

           # Render a specific resource
           $resource->get('/:id')->to('#show')->name("show_$name");

           # Render a form to edit a resource (submitted to "update")
           $resource->get('/:id/edit')->to('#edit')->name("edit_$name");

           # Store updated resource (submitted by "edit")
           $resource->put('/:id')->to('#update')->name("update_$name");

           # Remove a resource
           $resource->delete('/:id')->to('#remove')->name("remove_$name");

           return $resource;
         });

         # GET /users         -> {controller => 'users', action => 'index'}
         # GET /users/create  -> {controller => 'users', action => 'create'}
         # POST /users        -> {controller => 'users', action => 'store'}
         # GET /users/23      -> {controller => 'users', action => 'show', id => 23}
         # GET /users/23/edit -> {controller => 'users', action => 'edit', id => 23}
         # PUT /users/23      -> {controller => 'users', action => 'update', id => 23}
         # DELETE /users/23   -> {controller => 'users', action => 'remove', id => 23}
         $r->resource('users');

   Rearranging routes
       Until the first request has been handled, all routes can still be moved around or even
       removed with methods like "add_child" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route and "remove" in
       Mojolicious::Routes::Route.

         # GET /example/show -> {controller => 'example', action => 'show'}
         my $show = $r->get('/show')->to('example#show');
         $r->any('/example')->add_child($show);

         # Nothing
         $r->get('/secrets/show')->to('secrets#show')->name('show_secrets');
         $r->find('show_secrets')->remove;

       Especially for rearranging routes created by plugins this can be very useful, to find
       routes by their name you can use "find" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route.

   Adding conditions
       You can also add your own conditions with the method "add_condition" in
       Mojolicious::Routes. All conditions are basically router plugins that run every time a new
       request arrives, and which need to return a true value for the route to match.

         # A condition that randomly allows a route to match
         $r->add_condition(
           random => sub {
             my ($route, $c, $captures, $num) = @_;

             # Loser
             return undef unless int rand $num;

             # Winner
             return 1;
           }
         );

         # /maybe (25% chance)
         $r->get('/maybe')->over(random => 4)->to('foo#bar');

   Condition plugins
       You can also package your conditions as reusable plugins.

         # Plugin
         package Mojolicious::Plugin::WerewolfCondition;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';

         use Astro::MoonPhase;

         sub register {
           my ($self, $app) = @_;

           # Add "werewolf" condition
           $app->routes->add_condition(werewolf => sub {
             my ($route, $c, $captures, $days) = @_;

             # Keep the werewolves out!
             return undef if abs(14 - (phase(time))[2]) > ($days / 2);

             # It's ok, no werewolf
             return 1;
           });
         }

         1;

       Now just load the plugin and you are ready to use the condition in all your applications.

         # Application
         package MyApp;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

         sub startup {
           my $self = shift;

           # Plugin
           $self->plugin('WerewolfCondition');

           # /hideout (keep them out for 4 days after full moon)
           $self->routes->get('/hideout')->over(werewolf => 4)
             ->to(controller => 'foo', action => 'bar');
         }

         1;

   Mount applications
       The easiest way to embed one application into another is Mojolicious::Plugin::Mount, which
       allows you to mount whole self-contained applications under a domain and/or prefix.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Whole application mounted under "/prefix"
         plugin Mount => {'/prefix' => '/home/sri/myapp.pl'};

         # Mount application with subdomain
         plugin Mount => {'test.example.com' => '/home/sri/myapp2.pl'};

         # Normal route
         get '/' => sub { shift->render(text => 'Hello World!') };

         app->start;

   Embed applications
       For a litte more power you can also embed applications by using them instead of a
       controller. This allows for example the use of the Mojolicious::Lite domain specific
       language in normal Mojolicious controllers.

         # Controller
         package MyApp::Controller::Bar;
         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello
         get '/hello' => sub {
           my $c    = shift;
           my $name = $c->param('name');
           $c->render(text => "Hello $name.");
         };

         1;

       With the method "detour" in Mojolicious::Routes::Route which is very similar to "to" in
       Mojolicious::Routes::Route, you can allow the route to partially match and use only the
       remaining path in the embedded application, the base path will be passed along in the
       "path" stash value.

         # /foo/*
         $r->any('/foo')->detour('bar#', name => 'Mojo');

       A minimal embeddable application is nothing more than a subclass of Mojo, containing a
       "handler" method accepting Mojolicious::Controller objects.

         package MyApp::Controller::Bar;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojo';

         sub handler {
           my ($self, $c) = @_;
           $c->res->code(200);
           my $name = $c->param('name');
           $c->res->body("Hello $name.");
         }

         1;

   Application plugins
       You can even package applications as self-contained reusable plugins.

         # Plugin
         package Mojolicious::Plugin::MyEmbeddedApp;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';

         sub register {
           my ($self, $app) = @_;

           # Automatically add route
           $app->routes->any('/foo')->detour(app => EmbeddedApp::app());
         }

         package EmbeddedApp;
         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         get '/bar' => 'bar';

         1;
         __DATA__
         @@ bar.html.ep
         Hello World!

       The "app" stash value, which won't be inherited by nested routes, can be used for already
       instantiated applications. Now just load the plugin and you're done.

         # Application
         package MyApp;
         use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious';

         sub startup {
           my $self = shift;

           # Plugin
           $self->plugin('MyEmbeddedApp');
         }

         1;

MORE

       You can continue with Mojolicious::Guides now or take a look at the Mojolicious wiki
       <http://github.com/kraih/mojo/wiki>, which contains a lot more documentation and examples
       by many different authors.

SUPPORT

       If you have any questions the documentation might not yet answer, don't hesitate to ask on
       the mailing-list <http://groups.google.com/group/mojolicious> or the official IRC channel
       "#mojo" on "irc.perl.org".