The most basic Laravel routes accept a URI and a Closure
, providing a very simple and expressive method of defining routes:
Route::get('foo', function () { return 'Hello World'; });
All Laravel routes are defined in your route files, which are located in the routes
directory. These files are automatically loaded by the framework. The routes/web.php
file defines routes that are for your web interface. These routes are assigned the web
middleware group, which provides features like session state and CSRF protection. The routes in routes/api.php
are stateless and are assigned the api
middleware group.
For most applications, you will begin by defining routes in your routes/web.php
file. The routes defined in routes/web.php
may be accessed by entering the defined route's URL in your browser. For example, you may access the following route by navigating to http://your-app.test/user
in your browser:
Route::get('/user', 'UserController@index');
Routes defined in the routes/api.php
file are nested within a route group by the RouteServiceProvider
. Within this group, the /api
URI prefix is automatically applied so you do not need to manually apply it to every route in the file. You may modify the prefix and other route group options by modifying your RouteServiceProvider
class.
The router allows you to register routes that respond to any HTTP verb:
Route::get($uri, $callback); Route::post($uri, $callback); Route::put($uri, $callback); Route::patch($uri, $callback); Route::delete($uri, $callback); Route::options($uri, $callback);
Sometimes you may need to register a route that responds to multiple HTTP verbs. You may do so using the match
method. Or, you may even register a route that responds to all HTTP verbs using the any
method:
Route::match(['get', 'post'], '/', function () { // }); Route::any('/', function () { // });
Any HTML forms pointing to POST
, PUT
, or DELETE
routes that are defined in the web
routes file should include a CSRF token field. Otherwise, the request will be rejected. You can read more about CSRF protection in the CSRF documentation:
<form method="POST" action="/profile"> @csrf ... </form>
If you are defining a route that redirects to another URI, you may use the Route::redirect
method. This method provides a convenient shortcut so that you do not have to define a full route or controller for performing a simple redirect:
Route::redirect('/here', '/there');
By default, Route::redirect
returns a 302
status code. You may customize the status code using the optional third parameter:
Route::redirect('/here', '/there', 301);
You may use the Route::permanentRedirect
method to return a 301
status code:
Route::permanentRedirect('/here', '/there');
If your route only needs to return a view, you may use the Route::view
method. Like the redirect
method, this method provides a simple shortcut so that you do not have to define a full route or controller. The view
method accepts a URI as its first argument and a view name as its second argument. In addition, you may provide an array of data to pass to the view as an optional third argument:
Route::view('/welcome', 'welcome'); Route::view('/welcome', 'welcome', ['name' => 'Taylor']);
Sometimes you will need to capture segments of the URI within your route. For example, you may need to capture a user's ID from the URL. You may do so by defining route parameters:
Route::get('user/{id}', function ($id) { return 'User '.$id; });
You may define as many route parameters as required by your route:
Route::get('posts/{post}/comments/{comment}', function ($postId, $commentId) { // });
Route parameters are always encased within {}
braces and should consist of alphabetic characters, and may not contain a -
character. Instead of using the -
character, use an underscore (_
). Route parameters are injected into route callbacks / controllers based on their order - the names of the callback / controller arguments do not matter.
Occasionally you may need to specify a route parameter, but make the presence of that route parameter optional. You may do so by placing a ?
mark after the parameter name. Make sure to give the route's corresponding variable a default value:
Route::get('user/{name?}', function ($name = null) { return $name; }); Route::get('user/{name?}', function ($name = 'John') { return $name; });
You may constrain the format of your route parameters using the where
method on a route instance. The where
method accepts the name of the parameter and a regular expression defining how the parameter should be constrained:
Route::get('user/{name}', function ($name) { // })->where('name', '[A-Za-z]+'); Route::get('user/{id}', function ($id) { // })->where('id', '[0-9]+'); Route::get('user/{id}/{name}', function ($id, $name) { // })->where(['id' => '[0-9]+', 'name' => '[a-z]+']);
If you would like a route parameter to always be constrained by a given regular expression, you may use the pattern
method. You should define these patterns in the boot
method of your RouteServiceProvider
:
/** * Define your route model bindings, pattern filters, etc. * * @return void */ public function boot() { Route::pattern('id', '[0-9]+'); parent::boot(); }
Once the pattern has been defined, it is automatically applied to all routes using that parameter name:
Route::get('user/{id}', function ($id) { // Only executed if {id} is numeric... });
The Laravel routing component allows all characters except /
. You must explicitly allow /
to be part of your placeholder using a where
condition regular expression:
Route::get('search/{search}', function ($search) { return $search; })->where('search', '.*');
Encoded forward slashes are only supported within the last route segment.
Named routes allow the convenient generation of URLs or redirects for specific routes. You may specify a name for a route by chaining the name
method onto the route definition:
Route::get('user/profile', function () { // })->name('profile');
You may also specify route names for controller actions:
Route::get('user/profile', 'UserProfileController@show')->name('profile');
Once you have assigned a name to a given route, you may use the route's name when generating URLs or redirects via the global route
function:
// Generating URLs... $url = route('profile'); // Generating Redirects... return redirect()->route('profile');
If the named route defines parameters, you may pass the parameters as the second argument to the route
function. The given parameters will automatically be inserted into the URL in their correct positions:
Route::get('user/{id}/profile', function ($id) { // })->name('profile'); $url = route('profile', ['id' => 1]);
If you would like to determine if the current request was routed to a given named route, you may use the named
method on a Route instance. For example, you may check the current route name from a route middleware:
/** * Handle an incoming request. * * @param \Illuminate\Http\Request $request * @param \Closure $next * @return mixed */ public function handle($request, Closure $next) { if ($request->route()->named('profile')) { // } return $next($request); }
Route groups allow you to share route attributes, such as middleware or namespaces, across a large number of routes without needing to define those attributes on each individual route. Shared attributes are specified in an array format as the first parameter to the Route::group
method.
Nested groups attempt to intelligently "merge" attributes with their parent group. Middleware and where
conditions are merged while names, namespaces, and prefixes are appended. Namespace delimiters and slashes in URI prefixes are automatically added where appropriate.
To assign middleware to all routes within a group, you may use the middleware
method before defining the group. Middleware are executed in the order they are listed in the array:
Route::middleware(['first', 'second'])->group(function () { Route::get('/', function () { // Uses first & second Middleware }); Route::get('user/profile', function () { // Uses first & second Middleware }); });
Another common use-case for route groups is assigning the same PHP namespace to a group of controllers using the namespace
method:
Route::namespace('Admin')->group(function () { // Controllers Within The "App\Http\Controllers\Admin" Namespace });
Remember, by default, the RouteServiceProvider
includes your route files within a namespace group, allowing you to register controller routes without specifying the full App\Http\Controllers
namespace prefix. So, you only need to specify the portion of the namespace that comes after the base App\Http\Controllers
namespace.
Route groups may also be used to handle sub-domain routing. Sub-domains may be assigned route parameters just like route URIs, allowing you to capture a portion of the sub-domain for usage in your route or controller. The sub-domain may be specified by calling the domain
method before defining the group:
Route::domain('{account}.myapp.com')->group(function () { Route::get('user/{id}', function ($account, $id) { // }); });
In order to ensure your sub-domain routes are reachable, you should register sub-domain routes before registering root domain routes. This will prevent root domain routes from overwriting sub-domain routes which have the same URI path.
The prefix
method may be used to prefix each route in the group with a given URI. For example, you may want to prefix all route URIs within the group with admin
:
Route::prefix('admin')->group(function () { Route::get('users', function () { // Matches The "/admin/users" URL }); });
The name
method may be used to prefix each route name in the group with a given string. For example, you may want to prefix all of the grouped route's names with admin
. The given string is prefixed to the route name exactly as it is specified, so we will be sure to provide the trailing .
character in the prefix:
Route::name('admin.')->group(function () { Route::get('users', function () { // Route assigned name "admin.users"... })->name('users'); });
When injecting a model ID to a route or controller action, you will often query to retrieve the model that corresponds to that ID. Laravel route model binding provides a convenient way to automatically inject the model instances directly into your routes. For example, instead of injecting a user's ID, you can inject the entire User
model instance that matches the given ID.
Laravel automatically resolves Eloquent models defined in routes or controller actions whose type-hinted variable names match a route segment name. For example:
Route::get('api/users/{user}', function (App\User $user) { return $user->email; });
Since the $user
variable is type-hinted as the App\User
Eloquent model and the variable name matches the {user}
URI segment, Laravel will automatically inject the model instance that has an ID matching the corresponding value from the request URI. If a matching model instance is not found in the database, a 404 HTTP response will automatically be generated.
If you would like model binding to use a database column other than id
when retrieving a given model class, you may override the getRouteKeyName
method on the Eloquent model:
/** * Get the route key for the model. * * @return string */ public function getRouteKeyName() { return 'slug'; }
To register an explicit binding, use the router's model
method to specify the class for a given parameter. You should define your explicit model bindings in the boot
method of the RouteServiceProvider
class:
public function boot() { parent::boot(); Route::model('user', App\User::class); }
Next, define a route that contains a {user}
parameter:
Route::get('profile/{user}', function (App\User $user) { // });
Since we have bound all {user}
parameters to the App\User
model, a User
instance will be injected into the route. So, for example, a request to profile/1
will inject the User
instance from the database which has an ID of 1
.
If a matching model instance is not found in the database, a 404 HTTP response will be automatically generated.
If you wish to use your own resolution logic, you may use the Route::bind
method. The Closure
you pass to the bind
method will receive the value of the URI segment and should return the instance of the class that should be injected into the route:
/** * Bootstrap any application services. * * @return void */ public function boot() { parent::boot(); Route::bind('user', function ($value) { return App\User::where('name', $value)->first() ?? abort(404); }); }
Alternatively, you may override the resolveRouteBinding
method on your Eloquent model. This method will receive the value of the URI segment and should return the instance of the class that should be injected into the route:
/** * Retrieve the model for a bound value. * * @param mixed $value * @return \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model|null */ public function resolveRouteBinding($value) { return $this->where('name', $value)->first() ?? abort(404); }
Using the Route::fallback
method, you may define a route that will be executed when no other route matches the incoming request. Typically, unhandled requests will automatically render a "404" page via your application's exception handler. However, since you may define the fallback
route within your routes/web.php
file, all middleware in the web
middleware group will apply to the route. You are free to add additional middleware to this route as needed:
Route::fallback(function () { // });
The fallback route should always be the last route registered by your application.
Laravel includes a middleware to rate limit access to routes within your application. To get started, assign the throttle
middleware to a route or a group of routes. The throttle
middleware accepts two parameters that determine the maximum number of requests that can be made in a given number of minutes. For example, let's specify that an authenticated user may access the following group of routes 60 times per minute:
Route::middleware('auth:api', 'throttle:60,1')->group(function () { Route::get('/user', function () { // }); });
You may specify a dynamic request maximum based on an attribute of the authenticated User
model. For example, if your User
model contains a rate_limit
attribute, you may pass the name of the attribute to the throttle
middleware so that it is used to calculate the maximum request count:
Route::middleware('auth:api', 'throttle:rate_limit,1')->group(function () { Route::get('/user', function () { // }); });
HTML forms do not support PUT
, PATCH
or DELETE
actions. So, when defining PUT
, PATCH
or DELETE
routes that are called from an HTML form, you will need to add a hidden _method
field to the form. The value sent with the _method
field will be used as the HTTP request method:
<form action="/foo/bar" method="POST"> <input type="hidden" name="_method" value="PUT"> <input type="hidden" name="_token" value="{{ csrf_token() }}"> </form>
You may use the @method
Blade directive to generate the _method
input:
<form action="/foo/bar" method="POST"> @method('PUT') @csrf </form>
You may use the current
, currentRouteName
, and currentRouteAction
methods on the Route
facade to access information about the route handling the incoming request:
$route = Route::current(); $name = Route::currentRouteName(); $action = Route::currentRouteAction();
Refer to the API documentation for both the underlying class of the Route facade and Route instance to review all accessible methods.
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Licensed under the MIT License.
Laravel is a trademark of Taylor Otwell.
https://laravel.com/docs/5.8/routing