Lepozepo / iron-router

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Iron Router

A client and server side router designed specifically for Meteor.

Table of Contents

History

Latest Version: 0.6.1

See the History.md file for changes (including breaking changes) across versions.

Quick Start

$ mrt add iron-router

app.js

Router.configure({
  layoutTemplate: 'layout'
});

Router.map(function () {
  /**
   * The route's name is "home"
   * The route's template is also "home"
   * The default action will render the home template
   */
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'home'
  });

  /**
   * The route's name is "posts"
   * The route's path is "/posts"
   * The route's template is inferred to be "posts"
   */
  this.route('posts', {
    path: '/posts'
  });

  this.route('post', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',

    load: function () {
      // called on first load
    },

    // before hooks are run before your action
    before: [
      function () {
        this.subscribe('post', this.params._id).wait();
        this.subscribe('posts'); // don't wait
      },

      function () {
        // we're done waiting on all subs
        if (this.ready()) {
          NProgress.done(); 
        } else {
          NProgress.start();
          this.stop(); // stop downstream funcs from running
        }
      }
    ],

    action: function () {
      var params = this.params; // including query params
      var hash = this.hash;
      var isFirstRun = this.isFirstRun;

      this.render(); // render all
      this.render('specificTemplate', {to: 'namedYield'});
    },

    unload: function () {
      // before a new route is run
    }
  });
});

app.html

<template name="layout">
  {{yield}}
</template>

<template name="posts">
  Posts
</template>

<template name="post">
  Post
</template>

Installation

  1. Using Meteorite

The latest version is on Atmosphere.

$ mrt add iron-router
  1. Using a Local Repository

This is useful if you're working off of the dev branch or contributing.

  1. Set up a local packages folder
  2. Add the PACKAGE_DIRS environment variable to your .bashrc file - Example: export PACKAGE_DIRS="/Users/cmather/code/packages" - Screencast: https://www.eventedmind.com/posts/meteor-versioning-and-packages
  3. Clone the repository into your local packages directory
  4. Add iron-router just like any other meteor core package like this: meteor add iron-router
$ git clone https://github.com/EventedMind/iron-router.git /Users/cmather/code/packages
$ cd my-project
$ meteor add iron-router

Key Concepts

Once you add the iron-router package the global Router object is available on the client and on the server. So you can create your routes and configure the router outside of your Meteor.isClient and Meteor.isServer blocks. Or, if you are only going to be using client side routes, it's okay to put the routing code in your client/ folder.

Named Routes

You can declare a named route like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home');
});

This creates a route with the name "home." The route is named so that you can quickly get the route by name like this: Router.routes['home'].

By default, routes are created as client routes. This means, the route will only be run on the client, and not the server. When you click a link that maps to a client side route, the route will be completely run in the browser without making a trip to the server. If you click a link that maps to a server route, the browser will make a server request and the server side router will handle the link. More information on server side routes is provided below.

Route Options

You'll typically provide options to your route. At the very least, you'll tell the route what path it should match. You provide options to the route by passing an object as the second parameter to this.route like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    /* options will go here */
  });
});

Route Paths and Parameters

The first option you will almost always provide to the route is a path. By default, the route will use its own name for the path. For example given the following route:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home');
});

The route will map to the path /home. But you'll likely want to provide a custom path. You can provide a custom path like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/' // match the root path
  });
});

When the url changes, the Router looks for the first Route that matches the given url path. In this example, when the application first loads, the url will be: http://localhost:3000/ and the home route will match this path.

Dynamic Path Segments

Paths get compiled into a regular expression and can support dynamic segments. You can even use a regular expression as your path value. The values of these params are made available inside of any route functions using this.params. You'll see examples of different route functions below. But to get us started, here are a few examples of dynamic paths:

Router.map(function () {
  // No Parameters
  this.route('posts', {
    // matches: '/posts'
    // redundant since the name of the route is posts
    path: '/posts' 
  }); 

  // One Required Parameter
  this.route('postShow', {
    // matches: '/posts/1'
    path: '/posts/:_id' 
  });

  // Multiple Parameters
  this.route('twoSegments', {
    // matches: '/posts/1/2'
    // matches: '/posts/3/4'
    path: '/posts/:paramOne/:paramTwo'
  });

  // Optional Parameters
  this.route('optional', {
    // matches: '/posts/1'
    // matches: '/posts/1/2'
    path: '/posts/:paramOne/:optionalParam?'
  });

  // Anonymous Parameter Globbing 
  this.route('globbing', {
    // matches: '/posts/some/arbitrary/path'
    // matches: '/posts/5'
    // route globs are available
    path: '/posts/*'
  });

  // Named Parameter Globbing
  this.route('namedGlobbing', {
    // matches: '/posts/some/arbitrary/path'
    // matches: '/posts/5'
    // stores result in this.params.file
    path: '/posts/:file(*)'
  });

  // Regular Expressions
  this.route('regularExpressions', {
    // matches: '/commits/123..456'
    // matches: '/commits/789..101112'
    path: /^\/commits\/(\d+)\.\.(\d+)/
  });
});

Query Strings and Hash Segments

Query strings and hashes aren't used to match routes. But they are made available as properties of this.params inside of your route functions. We haven't talked about the various route functions yet, but here is an example:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',
    data: function () {
      // the data function is an example where this.params is available

      // we can access params using this.params
      // see the below paths that would match this route
      var params = this.params;

      // query params are added as normal properties to this.params.
      // given a browser path of: '/posts/5?sort_by=created_at
      // this.params.sort_by => 'created_at'

      // the hash fragment is available on the hash property
      // given a browser path of: '/posts/5?sort_by=created_at#someAnchorTag
      // this.params.hash => 'someAnchorTag'
    }
  });
});

Client Side Routing

Rendering the Router

By default, the Router is rendered (appended) automatically to the document body when the DOM is ready. You can override this behavior and render the Router whever you'd like by setting a configuration option and using a Handlebars helper like this:

Router.configure({
  autoRender: false
});
<body>
  <div>
    Some static content goes here
  </div>

  <div>
    {{renderRouter}}
  </div>
</body>

Path Functions and Helpers

Once your application becomes large enough, it becomes a pain to hard code urls everywhere. If you end up changing your route path a little, you need to find all of the href tags in your application and change those as well. It's much better if we can call a function to return a url given a parameters object. There are a few Handlebars helpers you can use directly in your HTML. You can also call the path and url methods on a route itself.

Let's say we have a route named "postShow" defined like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id'
  });
});

You can call the Route's path function to get a path for a given parameter object. For example:

Router.routes['postShow'].path({_id: 1}) => '/posts/1'

You can pass query params and a hash value as an option like this:

Router.routes['postShow'].path({_id: 1}, {
  query: 'sort_by=created_at',
  hash: 'someAnchorTag'
});

The query option can also be a regular JavaScript object. It will automatically be turned into a query string. The above example would also work here:

Router.routes['postShow'].path({_id: 1}, {
  query: {
    sort_by: 'created_at'
  },

  hash: 'someAnchorTag'
});

You can get paths and urls for named routes directly in your html using a global Handlebars helper. The Handlebars helper uses the current data context as the first parameter to the path function shown above.

<!-- given a context of {_id: 1} this will render '/posts/1' -->
<a href="{{pathFor 'postShow'}}">Post Show</a>

You can change the data context before using the pathFor helper using the Handlebars {{#with ...}} helper like this:

{{#with someOtherPost}}
  <!-- someOtherPost now sets the data context -->
  <!-- so say someOtherPost = { _id: 5 } then this renders '/posts/5' -->
  <a href="{{pathFor 'postShow'}}">Post Show</a>
{{/with}}

You can pass query params using the Handlebars helper like this:

<!-- given a context of {_id: 1} this will render '/posts/1?sort_by=created_at' -->
<a href="{{pathFor 'postShow' sort_by=created_at}}">Post Show</a>

And you can pass a hash value using the Handlbars helper like this:

<!-- given a context of {_id: 1} this will render '/posts/1?sort_by=created_at#someAnchorTag' -->
<a href="{{pathFor 'postShow' sort_by=created_at hash=someAnchorTag}}">Post Show</a>

Changing routes programmatically

Sometimes you'll need to change the route without the user clicking a link. For this you can use Router.go:

// you can pass a fully formed URL path in
Router.go('/posts/7');

// but more likely, you'll want to use a route name and pass in arguments,
// as you would in `pathFor`
Router.go('postShow', {_id: 7});

Rendering Templates

The default action for a route is to render a template. You can specify a template as an option to the route. If you don't provide a template, the route will assume the template name is the same as the route name. For example:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/'
  });
});

When you navigate to 'http://localhost:3000/' the above route will automatically render the template named home.

You can change the template that is automatically rendered by providing a template option.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'myHomeTemplate'
  });
});

The above example will map the http://localhost:3000/ url (the / path) and automatically render the template named myHomeTemplate.

Using a Layout with Yields

Often times it's useful to have a layout template for a route. Then your route template renders into the layout. You can actually render multiple templates into the layout. You can specify a layout template by providing the layoutTemplate option to your route.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'myHomeTemplate',
    layoutTemplate: 'layout'
  });
});

The layout template must declare where it wants various child templates to render. You can do this by using the {{yield}} helper. A basic layout would look like this:

<template name="layout">
  <div>
    {{yield}}
  </div>
</template>

But you can also specify "named" yields. This allows you to render templates into any number of areas in the layout. For example:

<template name="layout">
  <aside>
    {{yield 'aside'}}
  </aside>

  <div>
    {{yield}}
  </div>

  <footer>
    {{yield 'footer'}}
  </footer>
</template>

You can specify which templates to render into the named yields using the yieldTemplates option of your route. For example:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'myHomeTemplate',
    layoutTemplate: 'layout',
    yieldTemplates: {
      'myAsideTemplate': {to: 'aside'},
      'myFooter': {to: 'footer'}
    }
  });
});

The above example will render the template named myAsideTemplate to the yield named aside and the template named myFooter to the yield named footer. The main template myHomeTemplate specified by the template option will be rendered into the main yield. This is the yield without a name in the center that looks like this: {{yield}}.

Data

You can provide a data context for the current route by providing a data option to your route. The data value can either be an object or a function that gets evaluated later (when your route is run). For example:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'myHomeTemplate',
    layoutTemplate: 'layout',
    yieldTemplates: {
      'myAsideTemplate': {to: 'aside'},
      'myFooter': {to: 'footer'}
    },

    data: {
      title: 'Some Title',
      description: 'Some Description'
    }
  });
});

Given the above data context, our templates could use the data context like this:

<template name="myHomeTemplate">
  {{title}} - {{description}}
</template>

The data property can also be a function which is evaluated when the route is actually run.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'myHomeTemplate',
    layoutTemplate: 'layout',
    yieldTemplates: {
      'myAsideTemplate': {to: 'aside'},
      'myFooter': {to: 'footer'}
    },

    data: function () {
      // this.params is available inside the data function
      var params = this.params;

      return {
        title: 'Some Title',
        description: 'Some Description'
      }
    }
  });
});

You can set the global data context of the Router by calling the setData function of the Router or a RouteController. The data context only invalidates computations if the data has actually changed from the last time it was set.

You can access the current data context using the getData function inside of any of your route functions (or RouteController functions). For example:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('post', {
    path: '/posts/:slug',

    waitOn: function () {
      return Meteor.subscribe('posts');
    },

    data: function () {
      return Posts.findOne({slug: this.params.slug});
    },

    before: function () {
      var post = this.getData();
    }
  });
});

If your data value or function returns null or undefined, the Router can automatically render a not found template. This is useful if you want to render a not found template for data that doesn't exist. The only thing you need to do is provide a notFoundTemplate option to your route.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('home', {
    path: '/',
    template: 'myHomeTemplate',
    layoutTemplate: 'layout',
    yieldTemplates: {
      'myAsideTemplate': {to: 'aside'},
      'myFooter': {to: 'footer'}
    },

    // render notFound template when data is null or undefined
    notFoundTemplate: 'notFound', 
    data: function () {

      // return Posts.findOne({_id: this.params._id});
      // if the post isn't found then render the notFound template

      // if data function returns null then notFound template is rendered.
      return null;
    }
  });
});

If you provide a global notFoundTemplate, it will get rendered automatically if a user visits a un-matched path, assuming it's not already handled on the server-side:

// given a browser url of: http://localhost:3000/boguspath

Router.configure({
  notFoundTemplate: 'notFound' // this will render
});

Waiting on Subscriptions (waitOn)

Sometimes it's useful to wait until you have data before rendering a page. For example, let's say you want to show a not found template if the user navigates to a good url (say, /posts/5) but there is no post with an id of 5. You can't make this determination until the data from the server has been sent.

To solve this problem, you can wait on a subscription, or anything with a reactive ready() method. To do this, you can provide a waitOn option to your route like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',

    waitOn: function () {
      return Meteor.subscribe('posts');
    }
  });
});

The waitOn function can return any object that has a ready method. It can also return an array of these objects if you'd like to wait on multiple subscriptions.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:slug',

    waitOn: function () {
      // NOTE: this.params is available inside the waitOn function.
      var slug = this.params.slug;
      return [Meteor.subscribe('posts'), Meteor.subscribe('comments', slug)];
    }
  });
});

When your route is run, it will wait on any subscriptions you've provided in your waitOn function before running your before hooks, action method, and after hooks. Under the hood, the waitOn function calls the wait(handles, onReady, onWaiting) method of a RouteController (more on RouteControllers below). If you need to customize this behavior you can skip providing a waitOn property and just use the wait method directly in a custom action function or a before hook.

Waiting on Subscriptions (wait())

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',
    before: function() {
      // wait on post
      this.subscribe('post', this.params._id).wait(); // wait

      // don't wait on posts
      this.subscribe('posts');
    }
  });
});

Callin wait on a subscription handle doesn't actually block anything. It just adds the subscription handle to a list of handles we are reactively waiting on. When all of these handles are ready this.ready() on the RouteController will be true.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',
    
    // this is equivalent to 
    // waitOn: function() { 
    //   return Meteor.subscribe('posts', this.params.:id); }
    // }
    
    before: function() {
      this.subscribe('posts', this.params._id).wait();
    }
  });
});

Using a Custom Action Function

So far, we haven't had to write much code to get our routes to work. We've just provided configuration options to the route. Under the hood, when a route is run, a RouteController gets created and an action method gets called on that RouteController. On the client, the default action function just renders the main template and then all of the yield templates. We can provide our own action function like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',

    action: function () {
      // this => instance of RouteController
      // access to:
      //  this.params
      //  this.wait
      //  this.render
      //  this.stop
      //  this.redirect
    }
  });
});

Using hooks

There are four types of hooks that a route provides. All can be added at the global level, in a route definition, or defined for a controller.

  • before - runs before the action function (possibly many times if reactivity is involved).
  • after - runs after the action function (also reactively)
  • load - runs just once when the route is first loaded. NOTE that this doesn't run again if your page reloads via hot-code-reload, so make sure any variables you set will persist over HCR (for example Session variables).
  • unload - runs just once when you leave the route for a new route.

You can also define global hooks which apply to a set of named routes:

// this hook will run on almost all routes
Router.before(mustBeSignedIn, {except: ['login', 'signup', 'forgotPassword']});

Custom Rendering

You can render manually by calling the render function. There are three ways to call the render method:

  1. this.render(): Render all of the templates for the Route or RouteController. This renders the main template into the main yield region, and all of the yieldTemplates into their associated {{yield 'name'}} regions.
  2. this.render('templateName'): Render the template named 'templateName' into the main yield {{yield}}.
  3. this.render('templateName', {to: 'region'}): Render the template named 'templateName' into the region named 'region' {{yield 'region'}}.

Note: layouts are at the route level, not the template level and you have one layout per route or a globally defined layout.

Before and After Hooks

Sometimes you want to execute some code before or after your action function is called. This is particularly useful for things like showing a login page anytime a user is not logged in. You can declare before and after hooks by providing before and after options to the route. The value can be a function or an array of functions which will be executed in the order they are defined.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/posts/:_id',

    before: function () {
      if (!Meteor.user()) {
        // render the login template but keep the url in the browser the same
        this.render('login');

        // stop the rest of the before hooks and the action function 
        this.stop();
      }
    },

    action: function () {
      // render the main template
      this.render();

      // combine render calls
      this.render({
        'myCustomFooter': { to: 'footer' },
        'myCustomAside': { to: 'aside' }
      });
    },

    after: function () {
      // this is run after our action function
    }
  });
});

Hooks and your action function are reactive by default. This means that if you use a reactive data source inside of one of these functions, and that reactive data source invalidates the computation, these functions will be run again.

Unload Hook

Unload hooks will be called before a RouteController is unloaded and a new RouteController is run. This hooks is useful for cleaning up Session data for example.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('postShow', {
    path: '/login',

    unload: function () {
      // This is called when you navigate to a new route
      Session.set('postId', null);
    }
  });
});

Non Reactive Routes

You can make your route non-reactive by providing the reactive: false option to the route.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('nonReactiveRoute', {
    reactive: false,

    action: function () {
      // this function will not be re-run because of reactive data
      // changes.
    }
  });
});

Global Router Configuration

So far we've been defining all of our route options on the routes themselves. But sometimes it makes sense to define global options that apply to all routes. This is most often used for the layoutTemplate, notFoundTemplate, and loadingTemplate options. You can globally configure the Router like this:

Router.configure({
  layoutTemplate: 'layout',
  notFoundTemplate: 'notFound',
  loadingTemplate: 'loading'
});

Server Side Routing

Defining routes and configuring the Router is almost identical on the server and the client. By default, routes are created as client routes. You can specify that a route is intended for the server by providing a where property to the route like this:

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('serverRoute', {
    where: 'server',

    action: function () {
      // some special server side properties are available here
    }
  });
});

Server action functions (RouteControllers) have different properties and methods available. Namely, there is no rendering on the server yet. So the render method is not available. Also, you cannot waitOn subscriptions or call the wait method on the server. Server routes get the bare request, response, and next properties of the Connect request, as well as the params object just like in the client.

Router.map(function () {
  this.route('serverFile', {
    path: '/files/:filename',

    action: function () {
      var filename = this.params.filename;

      this.response.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/html'});
      this.response.end('hello from server');
    }
  });
});

Route Controllers

Most of the time, you can define how you want your routes to behave by simply providing configuration options to the route. But as your application gets larger, you may want to separate the logic for handling a particular route into a separate class. This is useful for putting route handling logic into separate files, but also for utilizing features like inheritance. You can do this by inheriting from RouteController. This works on both the client and the server, but each has slightly different methods as described above.

Although we haven't been working with RouteControllers directly, under the hood they were getting creating automatically for us when our routes were run. These are called "anonymous" RouteControllers. But we can create our own like this:

PostShowController = RouteController.extend({
  /* most of the options we've been using in our routes can be used here */
});

How does a route know about our custom RouteController? Let's say we have a route named "postShow." When the route is run, it will look for a global object named "PostShowController," after the name of the route. We can change this behavior by providing a controller option to the route like so:

Router.map(function () {

  // provide a String to evaluate later
  this.route('postShow', {
    controller: 'CustomController'
  });

  // provide the actual controller symbol if it's already defined
  this.route('postShow', {
    controller: CustomController
  });
});

We can define almost all of the same options on our RouteController as we have for our routes. For example:

PostShowController = RouteController.extend({
  template: 'postShow',

  layoutTemplate: 'postLayout',

  before: function () {
  },

  after: function () {
  },

  waitOn: function () {
    return Meteor.subscribe('post', this.params._id);
  },

  data: function () {
    return Posts.findOne({_id: this.params._id});
  },

  action: function () {
    /* if we want to override default behavior */
  }
});

Note that before and after are class level methods of our new controller. We can pass them as properties to the extend method for convenience. But we can also do this:

PostShowController.before(function () {});
PostShowController.after(function () {});

In Coffeescript we can use the language's native inheritance.

class @PostShowController extends RouteController
  @before ->
    # do some before stuff and note this is a class level method call '@'

  @after ->
    # call the class level after method using '@'

  layout: 'layout'

  template: 'myTemplate'

Filing Issues and Contributing

Contributors are very welcome. There are many things you can help with, including finding and fixing bugs, creating examples for the examples folder, contributing to improved design or adding features. Some guidelines below:

  • Questions: For now, it's okay to ask a question on Github Issues if you're having trouble since the volume is manageable. This might change if it starts to overshadow development! Just prefix your Github Issue with 'Question: ' so we can differentiate easily. Also, please make sure you've read through this document and tried a few things before asking. This way you can be very specific in your question. Also, please provide a cloneable Github repository if the issue is complex. For more complex questions sometimes it's hard to get all of the context required to solve a problem by just looking at text.

  • New Features: If you'd like to work on a feature for the iron-router, start by creating a 'Feature Design: Title' issue. This will let people bat it around a bit before you send a full blown pull request. Also, you can create an issue to discuss a design even if you won't be working on it. Any collaboration is good! But please be patient :-).

  • Bugs: If you find a bug and it's non-obvious what's causing it (almost always) please provide a reproduction Github project and give some context around the bug. Pasting in a snippet of JavaScript probably won't be enough.

  • Answer Questions!: If you can help another user please do!

Examples

Parsing Url Parameters (OAuth Example)

Iron Router will automatically parse a parameterized URL request, and separate out the parameters into an object. However, accessing those parameters requires extending a RouteController. Consider the following scenario:

# OAuth Configuration Scenario

# OAuth requires a redirect URL as part of it's configuration.
http://localhost:3600/stripe

# the oauth authentication process will redirect users to that URL with parameterized tokens
http://localhost:3600/stripe?scope=read_only&code=ac_2QGZP0nOBmb0Lxk9q3pMzaRvOi4fMU8j

# so the Router needs to parse the following line of code
?scope=read_only&code=ac_2QGZP0nOBmb0Lxk9q3pMzaRvOi4fMU8j

# in order to obtain the following parameters
scope = read_only
code = ac_2QGZP0nOBmb0Lxk9q3pMzaRvOi4fMU8j

To parse the scope and code parameters correctly, we need to set up something like the following:

//---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Iron Router Configuration

Session.setDefault('oauth_scope', '');
Session.setDefault('oauth_code', '');

// create the route like normal; the parameters will be automatically parsed
Router.map(function() {
    this.route('stripeRedirect', { path: '/stripe'});
});

// and extend the controller, so you can access the this.params object
StripeRedirectController = RouteController.extend({
    run: function () {
        // the code parameter has been automatically parsed and is available for use
        console.log('stripe.code: ' + this.params.code);
        Session.set('oauth_code', this.params.code);

        // as is the scope parameter
        console.log('stripe.scope: ' + this.params.scope);
        Session.set('oauth_scope', this.params.scope);

        // when all this is done, be sure to render the template specified in the router map
        this.render('stripeRedirect');
    }
});

Once you have access to the parameters, there are numerous ways to pass those variables throughout your app. Session.set() is just one method. You'll need to choose whether you want to use reactive Session variable or not.

License

MIT

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License:MIT License


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