spiffy/spiffy-routes

This package is abandoned and no longer maintained. No replacement package was suggested.
There is no license information available for the latest version (dev-master) of this package.

ZF2 module that provides route annotations directly in controllers.

dev-master 2013-06-18 03:34 UTC

This package is not auto-updated.

Last update: 2019-02-20 17:28:56 UTC


README

SpiffyRoutes is a module intended to make setting up routes quicker by providing annotations that can be used directly on the controllers/actions themselves. SpiffyRoutes comes feature complete with caching and a CLI tool to warm/clear the cache as required.

Project Status

Master Branch Build Status Coverage Status

Installation

Installation of SpiffyRoutes uses composer. For composer documentation, please refer to getcomposer.org.

php composer.phar require spiffy/spiffy-routes:dev-master

Then add SpiffyRoutes to your config/application.config.php

Installation without composer is not officially supported, and requires you to install and autoload the dependencies specified in the composer.json.

Supported Annotations

Below is a list of currently supported annotations. This list will be updated as more annotations are supported. In order to use the annotations you must important them first. Do this by putting the following at the top of your code,

<?php

use SpiffyRoutes\Annotation as Route;

This will let you use SpiffyRoute's annotations using @Route in your docblock.

Root

The root annotation is used on the controller level and specifies the prefix to apply to all routes on actions inside the controller.

<?php

use SpiffyRoutes\Annotation as Route;

/**
 * @Route\Root("/my")
 */
class MyController
{
    /**
     * @Route\Literal("/home")
     */
    public function indexAction()
    {
        // ... I resolve to /my/home
    }
}

Literal

The literal annotation maps to the literal route type.

<?php

use SpiffyRoutes\Annotation as Route;

class MyController
{
    /**
     * @Route\Literal("/home", name="index")
     */
    public function indexAction()
    {
        // ... I resolve to "/home", with name "index"
    }
}

Regex

The literal annotation maps to the literal route type.

<?php

use SpiffyRoutes\Annotation as Route;

class MyController
{
    /**
     * @Route\Regex("/regex/(?<id>\d+)", spec="/regex/%id%")
     */
    public function indexAction()
    {
        // ... I resolve to "/regex/<someid>"
    }
}

Segment

The literal annotation maps to the literal route type.

<?php

use SpiffyRoutes\Annotation as Route;

class MyController
{
    /**
     * @Route\Segment("/segment[/:id]", constraints={"id"="\d+"})
     */
    public function indexAction()
    {
        // ... I resolve to "/segment/<someid>", or /segment
    }
}

Caching

Caching is extremely important due to the amount of reflection required to parse the annotations. It's so important, in fact, that caching is not optional. You can, however, set the cache adapter to Zend\Cache\Storage\Adapter\Memory during development if you wish to rebuild the router configuration on every request.

By default, caching is enabled using the SpiffyRoutes\Cache service which is a Zend\Cache\Storage\AdapterFilesystem with the cache path set to data/spiffy-routes.

Multiple Routes

SpiffyRoutes supports multiple routes per index. To use them, simply add more annotations to your actions.

<?php

use SpiffyRoutes\Annotation as Route;

class MyController
{
    /**
     * @Route\Regex("/regex/(?<id>\d+)", spec="/regex/%id%")
     * @Route\Segment("/segment[/:id]", constraints={"id"="\d+"})
     */
    public function indexAction()
    {
        // ... I resolve to "/segment/<someid>", or /segment, or /regex/<someid>
    }
}

CLI Tool

A CLI tool is provided to build and clear the cache. Run your public/index.php from a console to see the relevent information.

Automatic Route Names

It's recommended that you specify a name for all routes e.g., @Route\Literal("/", name="home"). Failure to do so will cause an automated route name to be generated based on a canonicalized version of the controller and action name.

For example, if you have a controller registered with the ControllerManager as My\Controller and are a adding a route to the indexAction the auto-generated route name would be my_controller_index.