§HTTP routing
§The built-in HTTP router
The router is the component that translates each incoming HTTP request to an action call (a public method in a controller class).
An HTTP request is seen as an event by the MVC framework. This event contains two major pieces of information:
- the request path (such as
/clients/1542
,/photos/list
), including the query string. - the HTTP method (GET, POST, …).
Routes are defined in the conf/routes
file, which is compiled. This means that you’ll see route errors directly in your browser:
§Dependency Injection
Play supports generating two types of routers, one is a dependency injected router, the other is a static router. The default is the dependency injected router, and that is also the case in the Play seed Activator templates, since we recommend you use dependency-injected controllers. If you need to use static controllers you can switch to the static routes generator by adding the following configuration to your build.sbt
:
routesGenerator := StaticRoutesGenerator
The code samples in Play’s documentation assumes that you are using the injected routes generator. If you are not using this, you can trivially adapt the code samples for the static routes generator, either by prefixing the controller invocation part of the route with an @
symbol, or by declaring each of your action methods as static
.
§The routes file syntax
conf/routes
is the configuration file used by the router. This file lists all of the routes needed by the application. Each route consists of an HTTP method and URI pattern associated with a call to an action method.
Let’s see what a route definition looks like:
GET /clients/:id controllers.Clients.show(id: Long)
Note: in the action call, the parameter type comes after the parameter name, like in Scala.
Each route starts with the HTTP method, followed by the URI pattern. The last element of a route is the call definition.
You can also add comments to the route file, with the #
character:
# Display a client.
GET /clients/:id controllers.Clients.show(id: Long)
§The HTTP method
The HTTP method can be any of the valid methods supported by HTTP (GET
, PATCH
, POST
, PUT
, DELETE
, HEAD
, OPTIONS
).
§The URI pattern
The URI pattern defines the route’s request path. Some parts of the request path can be dynamic.
§Static path
For example, to exactly match GET /clients/all
incoming requests, you can define this route:
GET /clients/all controllers.Clients.list()
§Dynamic parts
If you want to define a route that, say, retrieves a client by id, you need to add a dynamic part:
GET /clients/:id controllers.Clients.show(id: Long)
Note: A URI pattern may have more than one dynamic part.
The default matching strategy for a dynamic part is defined by the regular expression [^/]+
, meaning that any dynamic part defined as :id
will match exactly one URI path segment.
§Dynamic parts spanning several /
If you want a dynamic part to capture more than one URI path segment, separated by forward slashes, you can define a dynamic part using the *id
syntax, which uses the .*
regular expression:
GET /files/*name controllers.Application.download(name)
Here, for a request like GET /files/images/logo.png
, the name
dynamic part will capture the images/logo.png
value.
§Dynamic parts with custom regular expressions
You can also define your own regular expression for a dynamic part, using the $id<regex>
syntax:
GET /items/$id<[0-9]+> controllers.Items.show(id: Long)
§Call to action generator method
The last part of a route definition is the call. This part must define a valid call to an action method.
If the method does not define any parameters, just give the fully-qualified method name:
GET / controllers.Application.homePage()
If the action method defines parameters, the corresponding parameter values will be searched for in the request URI, either extracted from the URI path itself, or from the query string.
# Extract the page parameter from the path.
# i.e. http://myserver.com/index
GET /:page controllers.Application.show(page)
Or:
# Extract the page parameter from the query string.
# i.e. http://myserver.com/?page=index
GET / controllers.Application.show(page)
Here is the corresponding show
method definition in the controllers.Application
controller:
public Result show(String page) {
String content = Page.getContentOf(page);
response().setContentType("text/html");
return ok(content);
}
§Parameter types
For parameters of type String
, the parameter type is optional. If you want Play to transform the incoming parameter into a specific Scala type, you can add an explicit type:
GET /clients/:id controllers.Clients.show(id: Long)
Then use the same type for the corresponding action method parameter in the controller:
public Result show(Long id) {
Client client = clientService.findById(id);
return ok(views.html.Client.show(client));
}
Note: The parameter types are specified using a suffix syntax. Also, the generic types are specified using the
[]
symbols instead of<>
, as in Java. For example,List[String]
is the same type as the JavaList<String>
.
§Parameters with fixed values
Sometimes you’ll want to use a fixed value for a parameter:
# Extract the page parameter from the path, or fix the value for /
GET / controllers.Application.show(page = "home")
GET /:page controllers.Application.show(page)
§Parameters with default values
You can also provide a default value that will be used if no value is found in the incoming request:
# Pagination links, like /clients?page=3
GET /clients controllers.Clients.list(page: Int ?= 1)
§Optional parameters
You can also specify an optional parameter that does not need to be present in all requests:
# The version parameter is optional. E.g. /api/list-all?version=3.0
GET /api/list-all controllers.Api.list(version ?= null)
§Routing priority
Many routes can match the same request. If there is a conflict, the first route (in declaration order) is used.
§Reverse routing
The router can be used to generate a URL from within a Java call. This makes it possible to centralize all your URI patterns in a single configuration file, so you can be more confident when refactoring your application.
For each controller used in the routes file, the router will generate a ‘reverse controller’ in the routes
package, having the same action methods, with the same signature, but returning a play.mvc.Call
instead of a play.mvc.Result
.
The play.mvc.Call
defines an HTTP call, and provides both the HTTP method and the URI.
For example, if you create a controller like:
package controllers;
import play.*;
import play.mvc.*;
public class Application extends Controller {
public Result hello(String name) {
return ok("Hello " + name + "!");
}
}
And if you map it in the conf/routes
file:
# Hello action
GET /hello/:name controllers.Application.hello(name)
You can then reverse the URL to the hello
action method, by using the controllers.routes.Application
reverse controller:
// Redirect to /hello/Bob
public Result index() {
return redirect(controllers.routes.Application.hello("Bob"));
}
Note: There is a
routes
subpackage for each controller package. So the actioncontrollers.admin.Application.hello
can be reversed viacontrollers.admin.routes.Application.hello
.
§Advanced Routing
See Routing DSL.