Blog coding and discussion of coding about JavaScript, PHP, CGI, general web building etc.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Manage URL routes in own php framework

Manage URL routes in own php framework


I'm creating a PHP Framework and I have some doubts...

The framework takes the url in this way: http:/web.com/site/index

It takes the first parameter to load controller (site) and then loads the specific action (index).

If you've installed the framework in a base URL works ok, but if you install it in a subfolder like this: http://web.com/mysubfolder/controller/action

My script parses it as controller = mysubfolder and action = controller.

If you have more subfolders the results will be worst.

This is my Route code:

Class Route  {      private $_htaccess = TRUE;      private $_suffix = ".jsp";        public function params()      {          $url='';            //nombre del directorio actual del script ejecutandose.          //basename(dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']));            if($this->_htaccess !== FALSE):              //no est funcionando bien si est en un subdirectorio web, por ej stynat.dyndns.org/subdir/              // muestra el "subdir" como primer parmetro              $url = $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];              if(isset($_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']) && !empty($_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'])):                  $url = str_replace("?" . $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'], '',$url);              endif;          else:              if(isset($_SERVER['PATH_INFO'])):                  $url = $_SERVER['PATH_INFO'];              endif;          endif;            $url = explode('/',preg_replace('/^(\/)/','',$url));          var_dump($url);            var_dump($_GET);        }  }  

Thanks for any help you can give.

Answer by Kristian for Manage URL routes in own php framework


basically grab the url string after your first slash, and then explode it into an array (i use '/' as a delimiter).

then carefully array_shift off your elements and store them as variables

item 0: controller  item 1: the action / method in that controller  item 2 thru n: the remaining array is your params  

Answer by Diego for Manage URL routes in own php framework


At some point you will have to check the $_SERVER ['HTTP_HOST'] and a config var defined by the programmer/user wich indicates the subfolder(s) where the app is located, and remove the portion you are not interested in from the rest of the URL.

You can check this forum post on the codeigniter formus for some hints.

CodeIgniter uses another different way to route the controller/method internally. You do the routing by the $_SERVER['PATH_INFO'] value. You use the urls like this: myapp.com/index.php/controller/method .

To avoid showing index.php on the uri you must rely on an Apache rewrite rule, but even with that I think that the CI one is a nice solution, once you have your index file location, you can avoid all the hassle of parsing the URL.

Answer by David for Manage URL routes in own php framework


If I am understanding what you are after correctly, then one solution may be to carry on doing what you are doing, but also get the path of the main routing script (using realpath() for example).

If the last folder (or folder before that etc) matches the beginning URL item (or another section), you ignore it and go for the next one.

Just my 2 cents :-).

Answer by nik for Manage URL routes in own php framework


Within the application configuration script place a variable which will be set to the path the application runs at.

An alternative is to dynamically set that path.

Before the part

$url = explode('/',preg_replace('/^(\/)/','',$url));  

strip the location (sub-folder) path out of the $url string using the predefined application path.

Answer by Arun Killu for Manage URL routes in own php framework


This is how i implemented loader.php

   createUrl());          if(!empty($folder) && trim($folder['path'],DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR)!='')           {              $temp_path  = explode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR,trim($parse_res['path'],DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR));              $folder_path    = explode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR,trim($folder['path'],DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR));              $temp_path      = array_diff($temp_path,$folder_path);                    if(empty($temp_path))                  {                      $temp_path =    '';                  }           }else           {              if(trim($parse_res['path'],DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR)!='')              {               $temp_path = explode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR,trim($parse_res['path'],DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR));              }                   else               $temp_path ='';           }          if(is_array($temp_path))          {                 if(count($temp_path) ==1)              {                  array_push($temp_path,'index');              }              foreach($temp_path as $pathname)              {                     $this->request .= $pathname.':';              }          }          else $this->request = 'index'.':'.'index';        }     private function createUrl()   {        $pageURL  = (@$_SERVER["HTTPS"] == "on") ? "https://" : "http://";      $pageURL .= $_SERVER["SERVER_NAME"].$_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"];      return $pageURL;   }   public function autolLoad()   {      if($this->request)       {             $parsedPath = explode(':',rtrim($this->request,':'));          if(is_file(APPLICATION_PATH.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'controllers'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.$parsedPath[0].'_controller'.'.php'))          {              include_once(APPLICATION_PATH.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'controllers'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.$parsedPath[0].'_controller'.'.php');              if(class_exists($parsedPath[0].'_controller'))              {                  $class  = $parsedPath[0].'_controller';                  $obj    = new $class();                  //$config       = new config('localhost','Winkstore','nCdyQyEdqDbBFpay','mawinkcms');                  //$connect  =  connectdb::getinstance();                  //$connect->setConfig($config);                  //$connection_obj = $connect->connect();                  //$db               = $connect->getconnection();//mysql link object                  //$obj->setDb($db);                  $method = $parsedPath[1];                  if(method_exists ($obj ,$parsedPath[1] ))                  {                      $obj->$method();                  }else die('class method '.$method.' not defined');                }else die('class '.$parsedPath[0]. ' has not been defined' );            } else die('controller not found plz define one b4 u proceed'.APPLICATION_PATH.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'controllers'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.$parsedPath[0].'.php');         }else{ die('oops request not set,i know tis is not the correct way to error :)'); }   }    }  

Now in my index file

//include_once('config.php');  include_once('connectdb.php');  require_once('../../../includes/db_connect.php');  include_once('view.php');  include_once('abstractController.php');  include_once('controller.php');  include_once('loader.php');  $loader = new loader(array('path'=>DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'magsonwink'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'modules'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'admin'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR.'atom'.DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR));  $loader->autolLoad();  

I haven't used the concept of modules.only controller action and view are rendered.

Answer by Mahdi for Manage URL routes in own php framework


Are you sure you have your htaccess correctly?

I guess if you're placing your framework on subfolder, then you have to change your RewriteBase in htaccess file from / to /subfolder/. it would be something like this:

# on root  RewriteBase /    #on subfolder  RewriteBase /subfolder/  

that's only thing I could wonder of that in your case ...

Answer by Rum Verse for Manage URL routes in own php framework


You are missing a base path. The routing script must now where to start when detecting a pattern or route detected.

Pseudo code:

 //set the base URI  $base_uri = '/base';  //remove the base URI from the original uri. You can also REGEX or string match against it if you want  $route_uri = str_replace($base_uri,'',$uri);  //perform route matching $route_uri, in your code a simple explode    $url = explode('/',preg_replace('/^(\/)/','',$route_uri));  

You can use this with or without RewriteBase for your .htaccess so long as they use the same harness - index.php.

Additionally, you can improve your route match procedure using Regular Expressions function like preg_match and preg_match_all. They let you define a pattern to match against and results to an array of matching strings - see http://php.net/manual/en/function.preg-match.php.

Answer by ChocoDeveloper for Manage URL routes in own php framework


Even if you are creating your own framework, there is no reason not to reuse robust, well tested and documented components, like this Routing component.

Just use Composer, which has become the standard for dependency management in PHP, and you'll be fine. Add as many components as you want to your stack.

And here you have a must read guide on how to make your own framework.

Answer by Christoffer Bubach for Manage URL routes in own php framework


I don't use OOP, but could show you some snippets of how I do things to dynamically detect if I'm in a subdirectory. Too keep it short and to the point I'll only describe parts of it instead of posting all the code.

So I start out with a .htaccess that send every request to redirect.php in which I splice up the $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] variable. I use regex to decide what parts should be keys and what should be values (I do this by assigning anything beginning with 0-9 as a value, and anything beginning with a-z as key) and build the array $GET[].

I then check the path to redirect.php and compare that to my $GET array, to decide where the actual URL begins - or in your case, which key is the controller. Would look something like this for you:

$controller = keyname($GET, count(explode('/', dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']))));  

And that's it, I have the first part of the URL. The keyname() function looks like this:

/*************************************   *  get key name from array position   *************************************/  function keyname ($arr, $pos)  {      $pos--;      if ( ($pos < 0) || ( $pos >= count($arr) ) )            return "";  // set this any way you like        reset($arr);      for($i = 0;$i < $pos; $i++) next($arr);        return key($arr);  }  

To get the links pointing right I use a function called fixpath() like this:

print 'link';  

And this is how that function looks:

/*************************************   *   relative to absolute path   *************************************/  function fixpath ($path)  {      $root = dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']);      if ($root == "\\" || $root == ".") {          $root = "";      }      $newpath = explode('/', $path);      $newpath[0] .= $root;      return implode('/', $newpath);      }  

I hope that helps and can give you some inspiration.

Answer by Erdin orbac? for Manage URL routes in own php framework


Forget about "reinventing the wheel is wrong" claims. They don't have to use our wheels. I walked on the same road a while ago and i'm totally grateful what i get... i hope you will too

When it comes to the answer to your specific problem -which if faced too- there is a very easy solution. it's a new line in .htaccess at root folder...

Just add line below to your root .htaccess file ; (if your subfoler is "subfolder" )

RewriteRule subfolder/ - [L]  

This will leave apart this folder from rewriting directives

By using this way you can install as many instances of your framework as you wish. But if you want this to be framework driven then you have to create/change .htaccess within your framework.

Answer by Timo Huovinen for Manage URL routes in own php framework


Yes, I think I know how to fix that.

(Disclaimer: I know that you know most of this but I am going to explain everything for others who may not know some of the gotchas)

Using PATH_INFO and .htaccess

There is a trick in php where if you go to a path like:

http://web.com/mysubfolder/index.php/controller/action

you will get "/controller/action" in the $_SERVER['PATH_INFO'] variable

Now what you need to do is take a .htaccess file (or equivalent) and make it tell your php script the current folder depth.

To do this, put the .htaccess file into the "mysubfolder"

mysubfolder      .htaccess      index.php  

.htaccess should contain:

RewriteEngine on    # if a directory or a file exists, use it directly  RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f  RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d    # otherwise forward it to index.php  RewriteRule (.*) index.php/$1  

(I used the yii framework manual as reference, I also recommend using the html5 boilerplate)

Basically you set it up to redirect everything to index.php at a specific point in the url.

Now if you visit: http://web.com/mysubfolder/index.php/controller/action

Now you can get the right path "/controller/action" from $_SERVER['PATH_INFO']

Except it's not going to have any value if you visit http://web.com/mysubfolder/ because the .htaccess file will ignore the rewrite because the http://web.com/mysubfolder/ path requests the mysubfolder/index.php which actually exists and gets denied thank yo RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f.

ifsetor function

For this you can use this super handy function called ifsetor (I don't remember where I got it)

function ifsetor(&$variable, $default = null) {      return isset($variable)? $variable: $default;  }  

What it does is take a reference to a variable that might or might not exist and provide a default if it does not exist without throwing any notices or errors

Now you can use it to take the PATH_INFO variable safely like so

In your index.php

function ifsetor(&$variable, $default = null) {      return isset($variable)? $variable: $default;  }  $path = ifsetor($_SERVER['PATH_INFO'],'/');  var_dump($path);  

php 5.4 also has this new shorter ternary format which you can use if you don't care about notices (I do)

$path = $_SERVER['PATH_INFO']?:'/';  

Handling the QUERY_STRING

Now tecnically you are not getting a URL, it is merely its path part and will not contain the query_string, for example when visiting

http://web.com/mysubfolder/index.php/test?param=val

you will only get '/test' in the $path variable, to get the query string use the $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'] variable

index.php

function ifsetor(&$variable, $default = null) {      return isset($variable)? $variable: $default;  }  $path = ifsetor($_SERVER['PATH_INFO'],'/');  $fullpath = ($_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'])? $path.'?'.$_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']:$path;  var_dump($fullpath);  

But that might depend on your needs

$_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'] vs $_GET

Also keep in mind that the $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'] variable is different from the $_GET and $_REQUEST variables because it keeps duplicate parameters from the query string, for example:

Visiting this page

http://web.com/mysubfolder/controller/action?foo=1&foo=2&foo=3

if going to give you a $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'] that looks like

?foo=1&foo=2&foo=3  

While the $_GET variable is going to be an array like this:

array(      'foo'=>'3'  );  

If you don't have .htaccess

You can try using the SCRIPT_NAME to your advantage

list($url) = explode('?',$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);  list($basepath) = explode('index.php',$_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']);  $url = substr($url,strlen($basepath));  

If you like to blow up stuff like me :)

Your case

Class Route  {  private $_htaccess = TRUE;  private $_suffix = ".jsp";    public function params()  {      $url='';        //nombre del directorio actual del script ejecutandose.      //basename(dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']));        if($this->_htaccess !== FALSE):          //no est funcionando bien si est en un subdirectorio web, por ej stynat.dyndns.org/subdir/          // muestra el "subdir" como primer parmetro          list($url) = explode('?',$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);          $basepath = dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']);          $basepath = ($basepath==='/')? $basepath: $basepath.'/';          $url = substr($url,strlen($basepath));      else:          if(isset($_SERVER['PATH_INFO'])):              $url = $_SERVER['PATH_INFO'];              $url = preg_replace('|^/|','',$url);          endif;      endif;        $url = explode('/',$url);      var_dump($url);        var_dump($_GET);      }  }  

I hope this helps

P.S. Sorry for the late reply :(

Answer by Richard Rodriguez for Manage URL routes in own php framework


Create /myBaseDirectory/public directory and put your files there - like index.php.
This works because Apache sees this directory like base directory.


Fatal error: Call to a member function getElementsByTagName() on a non-object in D:\XAMPP INSTALLASTION\xampp\htdocs\endunpratama9i\www-stackoverflow-info-proses.php on line 72

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

Powered by Blogger.