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@ -121,4 +121,71 @@ return [
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Creating your own rule classes |
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------------------------------ |
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TBD |
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[[\yii\web\UrlRule]] class is used for both parsing URL into parameters and creating URL based on parameters. Despite |
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the fact that default implementation is flexible enough for majority of projects, there could be a situation when using |
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your own rule class is the best choice. For example, in a car dealer website, we may want to support the URL format like |
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`/Manufacturer/Model`, where `Manufacturer` and `Model` must both match some data in a database table. The default rule |
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class will not work because it mostly relies on statically declared regular expressions which have no database knowledge. |
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We can write a new URL rule class by extending from [[\yii\web\UrlRule]] and use it in one or multiple URL rules. Using |
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the above car dealer website as an example, we may declare the following URL rules in application config: |
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```php |
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// ... |
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'components' => [ |
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'urlManager' => [ |
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'rules' => [ |
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'<action:(login|logout|about)>' => 'site/<action>', |
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// ... |
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['class' => 'app\components\CarUrlRule', 'connectionID' => 'db', ...], |
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], |
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], |
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], |
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``` |
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In the above, we use the custom URL rule class `CarUrlRule` to handle |
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the URL format `/Manufacturer/Model`. The class can be written like the following: |
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```php |
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namespace \app\components; |
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use \yii\web\UrlRule; |
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class CarUrlRule extends UrlRule |
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{ |
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public $connectionID = 'db'; |
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public function createUrl($manager, $route, $params) |
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{ |
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if ($route === 'car/index') { |
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if (isset($params['manufacturer'], $params['model'])) { |
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return $params['manufacturer'] . '/' . $params['model']; |
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} elseif (isset($params['manufacturer'])) { |
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return $params['manufacturer']; |
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} |
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} |
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return false; // this rule does not apply |
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} |
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public function parseRequest($manager, $request) |
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{ |
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$pathInfo = $request->getPathInfo(); |
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if (preg_match('%^(\w+)(/(\w+))?$%', $pathInfo, $matches)) { |
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// check $matches[1] and $matches[3] to see |
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// if they match a manufacturer and a model in the database |
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// If so, set $_GET['manufacturer'] and/or $_GET['model'] |
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// and return 'car/index' |
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} |
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return false; // this rule does not apply |
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} |
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} |
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``` |
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Besides the above usage, custom URL rule classes can also be implemented |
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for many other purposes. For example, we can write a rule class to log the URL parsing |
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and creation requests. This may be useful during development stage. We can also |
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write a rule class to display a special 404 error page in case all other URL rules fail |
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to resolve the current request. Note that in this case, the rule of this special class |
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must be declared as the last rule. |
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