.. index:: single: Routing
Beautiful URLs are a must for any serious web application. This means leaving behind
ugly URLs like index.php?article_id=57
in favor of something like /read/intro-to-symfony
.
Having flexibility is even more important. What if you need to change the
URL of a page from /blog
to /news
? How many links would you need to
hunt down and update to make the change? If you're using Symfony's router,
the change is simple.
.. index:: single: Routing; Basics
First, install the annotations package:
$ composer require annotations
A route is a map from a URL path to a controller. Suppose you want one route that
matches /blog
exactly and another more dynamic route that can match any URL
like /blog/my-post
or /blog/all-about-symfony
:
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php-annotations // src/Controller/BlogController.php namespace App\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route; class BlogController extends Controller { /** * Matches /blog exactly * * @Route("/blog", name="blog_list") */ public function list() { // ... } /** * Matches /blog/* * * @Route("/blog/{slug}", name="blog_show") */ public function show($slug) { // $slug will equal the dynamic part of the URL // e.g. at /blog/yay-routing, then $slug='yay-routing' // ... } } .. code-block:: yaml # config/routes.yaml blog_list: path: /blog controller: App\Controller\BlogController::list blog_show: path: /blog/{slug} controller: App\Controller\BlogController::show .. code-block:: xml <!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing http://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <route id="blog_list" controller="App\Controller\BlogController::list" path="/blog" > <!-- settings --> </route> <route id="blog_show" controller="App\Controller\BlogController::show" path="/blog/{slug}"> <!-- settings --> </route> </routes> .. code-block:: php // config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouteCollection; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Route; use App\Controller\BlogController; $routes = new RouteCollection(); $routes->add('blog_list', new Route('/blog', array( '_controller' => [BlogController::class, 'list'] ))); $routes->add('blog_show', new Route('/blog/{slug}', array( '_controller' => [BlogController::class, 'show'] ))); return $routes;
Thanks to these two routes:
- If the user goes to
/blog
, the first route is matched andlist()
is executed; - If the user goes to
/blog/*
, the second route is matched andshow()
is executed. Because the route path is/blog/{slug}
, a$slug
variable is passed toshow()
matching that value. For example, if the user goes to/blog/yay-routing
, then$slug
will equalyay-routing
.
Whenever you have a {placeholder}
in your route path, that portion becomes a
wildcard: it matches any value. Your controller can now also have an argument
called $placeholder
(the wildcard and argument names must match).
Each route also has an internal name: blog_list
and blog_show
. These can
be anything (as long as each is unique) and don't have any meaning yet. You'll
use them later to :ref:`generate URLs <routing-generate>`.
Routing in Other Formats
The @Route
above each method is called an annotation. If you'd rather
configure your routes in YAML, XML or PHP, that's no problem! Just create a
new routing file (e.g. routes.xml
) and Symfony will automatically use it.
Imagine the blog_list
route will contain a paginated list of blog posts, with
URLs like /blog/2
and /blog/3
for pages 2 and 3. If you change the route's
path to /blog/{page}
, you'll have a problem:
- blog_list:
/blog/{page}
will match/blog/*
; - blog_show:
/blog/{slug}
will also match/blog/*
.
When two routes match the same URL, the first route that's loaded wins. Unfortunately,
that means that /blog/yay-routing
will match the blog_list
. No good!
To fix this, add a requirement that the {page}
wildcard can only match numbers
(digits):
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php-annotations // src/Controller/BlogController.php namespace App\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route; class BlogController extends Controller { /** * @Route("/blog/{page}", name="blog_list", requirements={"page"="\d+"}) */ public function list($page) { // ... } /** * @Route("/blog/{slug}", name="blog_show") */ public function show($slug) { // ... } } .. code-block:: yaml # config/routes.yaml blog_list: path: /blog/{page} controller: App\Controller\BlogController::list requirements: page: '\d+' blog_show: # ... .. code-block:: xml <!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing http://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <route id="blog_list" path="/blog/{page}" controller="App\Controller\BlogController::list"> <requirement key="page">\d+</requirement> </route> <!-- ... --> </routes> .. code-block:: php // config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouteCollection; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Route; use App\Controller\BlogController; $routes = new RouteCollection(); $routes->add('blog_list', new Route('/blog/{page}', array( '_controller' => [BlogController::class, 'list'], ), array( 'page' => '\d+' ))); // ... return $routes;
The \d+
is a regular expression that matches a digit of any length. Now:
URL | Route | Parameters |
---|---|---|
/blog/2 |
blog_list |
$page = 2 |
/blog/yay-routing |
blog_show |
$slug = yay-routing |
To learn about other route requirements - like HTTP method, hostname and dynamic expressions - see :doc:`/routing/requirements`.
In the previous example, the blog_list
has a path of /blog/{page}
. If
the user visits /blog/1
, it will match. But if they visit /blog
, it
will not match. As soon as you add a {placeholder}
to a route, it
must have a value.
So how can you make blog_list
once again match when the user visits
/blog
? By adding a default value:
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php-annotations // src/Controller/BlogController.php namespace App\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Annotation\Route; class BlogController extends Controller { /** * @Route("/blog/{page}", name="blog_list", requirements={"page"="\d+"}) */ public function list($page = 1) { // ... } } .. code-block:: yaml # config/routes.yaml blog_list: path: /blog/{page} controller: App\Controller\BlogController::list defaults: page: 1 requirements: page: '\d+' blog_show: # ... .. code-block:: xml <!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing http://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <route id="blog_list" path="/blog/{page}" controller="App\Controller\BlogController::list"> <default key="page">1</default> <requirement key="page">\d+</requirement> </route> <!-- ... --> </routes> .. code-block:: php // config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouteCollection; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Route; use App\Controller\BlogController; $routes = new RouteCollection(); $routes->add('blog_list', new Route( '/blog/{page}', array( '_controller' => [BlogController::class, 'list'], 'page' => 1, ), array( 'page' => '\d+' ) )); // ... return $routes;
Now, when the user visits /blog
, the blog_list
route will match and
$page
will default to a value of 1
.
As your app grows, you'll eventually have a lot of routes! To see them all, run:
$ php bin/console debug:router
------------------------------ -------- -------------------------------------
Name Method Path
------------------------------ -------- -------------------------------------
app_lucky_number ANY /lucky/number/{max}
...
------------------------------ -------- -------------------------------------
.. index:: single: Routing; Advanced example single: Routing; _format parameter
With all of this in mind, check out this advanced example:
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: php-annotations // src/Controller/ArticleController.php // ... class ArticleController extends Controller { /** * @Route( * "/articles/{_locale}/{year}/{slug}.{_format}", * defaults={"_format": "html"}, * requirements={ * "_locale": "en|fr", * "_format": "html|rss", * "year": "\d+" * } * ) */ public function show($_locale, $year, $slug) { } } .. code-block:: yaml # config/routes.yaml article_show: path: /articles/{_locale}/{year}/{slug}.{_format} controller: App\Controller\ArticleController::show defaults: _format: html requirements: _locale: en|fr _format: html|rss year: \d+ .. code-block:: xml <!-- config/routes.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <routes xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/routing" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/routing http://symfony.com/schema/routing/routing-1.0.xsd"> <route id="article_show" path="/articles/{_locale}/{year}/{slug}.{_format}" controller="App\Controller\ArticleController::show"> <default key="_format">html</default> <requirement key="_locale">en|fr</requirement> <requirement key="_format">html|rss</requirement> <requirement key="year">\d+</requirement> </route> </routes> .. code-block:: php // config/routes.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\RouteCollection; use Symfony\Component\Routing\Route; use App\Controller\ArticleController; $routes = new RouteCollection(); $routes->add( 'article_show', new Route('/articles/{_locale}/{year}/{slug}.{_format}', array( '_controller' => [ArticleController::class, 'show'], '_format' => 'html', ), array( '_locale' => 'en|fr', '_format' => 'html|rss', 'year' => '\d+', )) ); return $routes;
As you've seen, this route will only match if the {_locale}
portion of
the URL is either en
or fr
and if the {year}
is a number. This
route also shows how you can use a dot between placeholders instead of
a slash. URLs matching this route might look like:
/articles/en/2010/my-post
/articles/fr/2010/my-post.rss
/articles/en/2013/my-latest-post.html
The Special _format
Routing Parameter
This example also highlights the special _format
routing parameter.
When using this parameter, the matched value becomes the "request format"
of the Request
object.
Ultimately, the request format is used for such things as setting the
Content-Type
of the response (e.g. a json
request format translates
into a Content-Type
of application/json
).
Note
Sometimes you want to make certain parts of your routes globally configurable. Symfony provides you with a way to do this by leveraging service container parameters. Read more about this in ":doc:`/routing/service_container_parameters`".
Caution!
A route placeholder name cannot start with a digit and cannot be longer than 32 characters.
As you've seen, each routing parameter or default value is eventually available as an argument in the controller method. Additionally, there are four parameters that are special: each adds a unique piece of functionality inside your application:
_controller
- As you've seen, this parameter is used to determine which controller is executed when the route is matched.
_format
- Used to set the request format (:ref:`read more <routing-format-param>`).
_fragment
- Used to set the fragment identifier, the optional last part of a URL that
starts with a
#
character and is used to identify a portion of a document. _locale
- Used to set the locale on the request (:ref:`read more <translation-locale-url>`).
.. index:: single: Routing; Controllers single: Controller; String naming format
The controller
value in your routes has a very simple format CONTROLLER_CLASS::METHOD
.
If your controller is registered as a service, you can also use just one colon separator
(e.g. service_name:index
).
Tip
To refer to an action that is implemented as the __invoke()
method of a controller class,
you do not have to pass the method name, but can just use the fully qualified class name (e.g.
App\Controller\BlogController
).
.. index:: single: Routing; Generating URLs
The routing system can also generate URLs. In reality, routing is a bidirectional system: mapping the URL to a controller and also a route back to a URL.
To generate a URL, you need to specify the name of the route (e.g. blog_show
)
and any wildcards (e.g. slug = my-blog-post
) used in the path for that
route. With this information, any URL can easily be generated:
class MainController extends Controller { public function show($slug) { // ... // /blog/my-blog-post $url = $this->generateUrl( 'blog_show', array('slug' => 'my-blog-post') ); } }
If you need to generate a URL from a service, type-hint the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Routing\\Generator\\UrlGeneratorInterface` service:
// src/Service/SomeService.php use Symfony\Component\Routing\Generator\UrlGeneratorInterface; class SomeService { private $router; public function __construct(UrlGeneratorInterface $router) { $this->router = $router; } public function someMethod() { $url = $this->router->generate( 'blog_show', array('slug' => 'my-blog-post') ); // ... } }
.. index:: single: Routing; Generating URLs in a template
The generate()
method takes an array of wildcard values to generate the URI.
But if you pass extra ones, they will be added to the URI as a query string:
$this->router->generate('blog', array( 'page' => 2, 'category' => 'Symfony', )); // /blog/2?category=Symfony
To generate URLs inside Twig, see the templating article: :ref:`templating-pages`. If you also need to generate URLs in JavaScript, see :doc:`/routing/generate_url_javascript`.
.. index:: single: Routing; Absolute URLs
By default, the router will generate relative URLs (e.g. /blog
). From
a controller, pass UrlGeneratorInterface::ABSOLUTE_URL
to the third argument of the generateUrl()
method:
use Symfony\Component\Routing\Generator\UrlGeneratorInterface; $this->generateUrl('blog_show', array('slug' => 'my-blog-post'), UrlGeneratorInterface::ABSOLUTE_URL); // http://www.example.com/blog/my-blog-post
Note
The host that's used when generating an absolute URL is automatically
detected using the current Request
object. When generating absolute
URLs from outside the web context (for instance in a console command) this
doesn't work. See :doc:`/console/request_context` to learn how to
solve this problem.
Here are some common errors you might see while working with routing:
Controller "App\Controller\BlogController::show()" requires that you provide a value for the "$slug" argument.
This happens when your controller method has an argument (e.g. $slug
):
public function show($slug) { // .. }
But your route path does not have a {slug}
wildcard (e.g. it is /blog/show
).
Add a {slug}
to your route path: /blog/show/{slug}
or give the argument
a default value (i.e. $slug = null
).
Some mandatory parameters are missing ("slug") to generate a URL for route "blog_show".
This means that you're trying to generate a URL to the blog_show
route but you
are not passing a slug
value (which is required, because it has a {slug}
)
wildcard in the route path. To fix this, pass a slug
value when generating the
route:
$this->generateUrl('blog_show', array('slug' => 'slug-value')); // or, in Twig // {{ path('blog_show', {'slug': 'slug-value'}) }}
Symfony doesn't support defining routes with different contents depending on the user language. In those cases, you can define multiple routes per controller, one for each supported language; or use any of the bundles created by the community to implement this feature, such as JMSI18nRoutingBundle and BeSimpleI18nRoutingBundle.
Routing, check! Now, uncover the power of :doc:`controllers </controller>`.
.. toctree:: :hidden: controller
.. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 :glob: routing/*