dmeltzer / ziggy

Use your Laravel named routes in JavaScript

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Ziggy - Use your Laravel Named Routes inside JavaScript

Ziggy - Use your Laravel Named Routes inside JavaScript

TravisCi Status for tightenco/ziggy

Ziggy creates a Blade directive which you can include in your views. This will export a JavaScript object of your application's named routes, keyed by their names (aliases), as well as a global route() helper function which you can use to access your routes in your JavaScript.

Installation

  1. Add Ziggy to your Composer file: composer require tightenco/ziggy

  2. (if Laravel 5.4) Add Tightenco\Ziggy\ZiggyServiceProvider::class to the providers array in your config/app.php.

  3. Include our Blade Directive (@routes) somewhere in your template before your main application JavaScript is loaded—likely in the header somewhere.

Usage

This package replaces the @routes directive with a collection of all of your application's routes, keyed by their names. This collection is available at window.namedRoutes.

The package also creates an optional route() JavaScript helper which functions like Laravel's route() PHP helper, which can be used to retrieve URLs by name and (optionally) parameters.

Examples:

Without parameters:

route('posts.index') // Returns '/posts'

With required parameter:

route('posts.show', {id: 1}) // Returns '/posts/1'
route('posts.show', [1]) // Returns '/posts/1'
route('posts.show', 1) // Returns '/posts/1'

With multiple required parameters:

route('events.venues.show', {event: 1, venue: 2}) // Returns '/events/1/venues/2'
route('events.venues.show', [1, 2]) // Returns '/events/1/venues/2'

If whole objects are passed, Ziggy will automatically look for id primary key:

var event = {id: 1, name: 'World Series'};
var venue = {id: 2, name: 'Rogers Centre'};

route('events.venues.show', [event, venue]) // Returns '/events/1/venues/2'

Practical AJAX example:

var post = {id: 1, title: 'Ziggy Stardust'};

return axios.get(route('posts.show', post))
    .then((response) => {
        return response.data;
    });

Filtering Routes

Filtering routes is completely optional. If you want to pass all of your routes to JavaScript by default, you can carry on using Ziggy as described above.

Basic Whitelisting & Blacklisting

To take advantage of basic whitelisting or blacklisting of routes, you will first need to create a standard config file called ziggy.php in the config/ directory of your Laravel app and set either the whitelist or blacklist setting to an array of route names.

Note: You've got to choose one or the other. Setting whitelist and blacklist will disable filtering altogether and simply return the default list of routes.

Example config/ziggy.php:

<?php
return [
    // 'whitelist' => ['home', 'api.*'],
    'blacklist' => ['admin.*', 'vulnerabilities.*'],
];

As shown in the example above, Ziggy the use of asterisks as wildcards in filters. home will only match the route named home whereas api.* will match any route whose name begins with api., such as api.posts.index and api.users.show.

Advanced Whitelisting Using Groups

You may also optionally define multiple whitelists by defining groups in your config/ziggy.php:

<?php
return [
    'groups' => [
        'admin' => [
            'admin.*',
            'posts.*',
        ],
        'author' => [
            'posts.*',
        ]
    ],
];

In the above example, you can see we have configured multiple whitelists for different user roles. You may expose a specific whitelist group by passing the group key into @routes within your blade view. Example:

@routes('author')

Note: Using a group will always take precedence over the above mentioned whitelist and blacklist settings.

Contributions & Credits

To get started contributing to Ziggy, check out the contribution guide.

Thanks to Caleb Porzio, Adam Wathan, and Jeffrey Way for help solidifying the idea.

Thanks to the following feature contributors:

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Use your Laravel named routes in JavaScript

License:MIT License


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