Provided by: librouter-simple-perl_0.15-1_all bug

NAME

       Router::Simple - simple HTTP router

SYNOPSIS

           use Router::Simple;

           my $router = Router::Simple->new();
           $router->connect('/', {controller => 'Root', action => 'show'});
           $router->connect('/blog/{year}/{month}', {controller => 'Blog', action => 'monthly'});

           my $app = sub {
               my $env = shift;
               if (my $p = $router->match($env)) {
                   # $p = { controller => 'Blog', action => 'monthly', ... }
               } else {
                   [404, [], ['not found']];
               }
           };

DESCRIPTION

       Router::Simple is a simple router class.

       Its main purpose is to serve as a dispatcher for web applications.

       Router::Simple can match against PSGI $env directly, which means it's easy to use with
       PSGI supporting web frameworks.

HOW TO WRITE A ROUTING RULE

   plain string
           $router->connect( '/foo', { controller => 'Root', action => 'foo' } );

   :name notation
           $router->connect( '/wiki/:page', { controller => 'WikiPage', action => 'show' } );
           ...
           $router->match('/wiki/john');
           # => {controller => 'WikiPage', action => 'show', page => 'john' }

       ':name' notation matches "qr{([^/]+)}".

   '*' notation
           $router->connect( '/download/*.*', { controller => 'Download', action => 'file' } );
           ...
           $router->match('/download/path/to/file.xml');
           # => {controller => 'Download', action => 'file', splat => ['path/to/file', 'xml'] }

       '*' notation matches "qr{(.+)}". You will get the captured argument as an array ref for
       the special key "splat".

   '{year}' notation
           $router->connect( '/blog/{year}', { controller => 'Blog', action => 'yearly' } );
           ...
           $router->match('/blog/2010');
           # => {controller => 'Blog', action => 'yearly', year => 2010 }

       '{year}' notation matches "qr{([^/]+)}", and it will be captured.

   '{year:[0-9]+}' notation
           $router->connect( '/blog/{year:[0-9]+}/{month:[0-9]{2}}', { controller => 'Blog', action => 'monthly' } );
           ...
           $router->match('/blog/2010/04');
           # => {controller => 'Blog', action => 'monthly', year => 2010, month => '04' }

       You can specify regular expressions in named captures.

   regexp
           $router->connect( qr{/blog/(\d+)/([0-9]{2})', { controller => 'Blog', action => 'monthly' } );
           ...
           $router->match('/blog/2010/04');
           # => {controller => 'Blog', action => 'monthly', splat => [2010, '04'] }

       You can use Perl5's powerful regexp directly, and the captured values are stored in the
       special key "splat".

METHODS

       my $router = Router::Simple->new();
           Creates a new instance of Router::Simple.

       $router->method_not_allowed() : Boolean
           This method returns last "$router->match()" call is rejected by HTTP method or not.

       $router->connect([$name, ] $pattern, \%destination[, \%options])
           Adds a new rule to $router.

               $router->connect( '/', { controller => 'Root', action => 'index' } );
               $router->connect( 'show_entry', '/blog/:id',
                   { controller => 'Blog', action => 'show' } );
               $router->connect( '/blog/:id', { controller => 'Blog', action => 'show' } );
               $router->connect( '/comment', { controller => 'Comment', action => 'new_comment' }, {method => 'POST'} );

           "\%destination" will be used by match method.

           You can specify some optional things to "\%options". The current version supports
           'method', 'host', and 'on_match'.

           method
               'method' is an ArrayRef[String] or String that matches REQUEST_METHOD in $req.

           host
               'host' is a String or Regexp that matches HTTP_HOST in $req.

           on_match
                   $r->connect(
                       '/{controller}/{action}/{id}',
                       {},
                       {
                           on_match => sub {
                               my($env, $match) = @_;
                               $match->{referer} = $env->{HTTP_REFERER};
                               return 1;
                           }
                       }
                   );

               A function that evaluates the request. Its signature must be "($environ, $match)
               => bool". It should return true if the match is successful or false otherwise. The
               first argument is $env which is either a PSGI environment or a request path,
               depending on what you pass to "match" method; the second is the routing variables
               that would be returned if the match succeeds.

               The function can modify $env (in case it's a reference) and $match in place to
               affect which variables are returned. This allows a wide range of transformations.

       "$router->submapper($path, [\%dest, [\%opt]])"
               $router->submapper('/entry/', {controller => 'Entry'})

           This method is shorthand for creating new instance of Router::Simple::Submapper.

           The arguments will be passed to "Router::Simple::SubMapper->new(%args)".

       "$match = $router->match($env|$path)"
           Matches a URL against one of the contained routes.

           The parameter is either a PSGI $env or a plain string that represents a path.

           This method returns a plain hashref that would look like:

               {
                   controller => 'Blog',
                   action     => 'daily',
                   year => 2010, month => '03', day => '04',
               }

           It returns undef if no valid match is found.

       "my ($match, $route) = $router->routematch($env|$path);"
           Match a URL against one of the routes contained.

           Will return undef if no valid match is found, otherwise a result hashref and a
           Router::Simple::Route object is returned.

       "$router->as_string()"
           Dumps $router as string.

           Example output:

               home         GET  /
               blog_monthly GET  /blog/{year}/{month}
                            GET  /blog/{year:\d{1,4}}/{month:\d{2}}/{day:\d\d}
                            POST /comment
                            GET  /

AUTHOR

       Tokuhiro Matsuno <tokuhirom AAJKLFJEF@ GMAIL COM>

THANKS TO

       Tatsuhiko Miyagawa

       Shawn M Moore

       routes.py <http://routes.groovie.org/>.

SEE ALSO

       Router::Simple is inspired by routes.py <http://routes.groovie.org/>.

       Path::Dispatcher is similar, but so complex.

       Path::Router is heavy. It depends on Moose.

       HTTP::Router has many dependencies. It is not well documented.

       HTTPx::Dispatcher is my old one. It does not provide an OO-ish interface.

THANKS TO

       DeNA

LICENSE

       Copyright (C) Tokuhiro Matsuno

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.