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app.get
, app.put
, app.post
, etc.OPTIONS
requests with allowed methods.405 Method Not Allowed
and 501 Not Implemented
.koa-router is available using npm:
npm install koa-router
Require the router and mount the middleware:
var koa = require('koa')
, router = require('koa-router')
, app = koa();
app.use(router(app));
After the router has been initialized you can register routes:
app.get('/users/:id', function *(next) {
var user = yield User.findOne(this.params.id);
this.body = user;
});
You can use multiple routers and sets of routes by omitting the app
argument. For example, separate routers for two versions of an API:
var koa = require('koa');
, mount = require('koa-mount')
, Router = require('koa-router');
var app = koa();
var APIv1 = new Router();
var APIv2 = new Router();
APIv1.get('/sign-in', function *() {
// ...
});
APIv2.get('/sign-in', function *() {
// ...
});
app
.use(mount('/v1', APIv1.middleware()))
.use(mount('/v2', APIv2.middleware()));
The http methods (get, post, etc) return their Router
instance,
so routes can be chained as you're used to with express:
var api = new Router();
api
.get('/foo', showFoo)
.get('/bar', showBar)
.post('/foo', createFoo);
Resource routing was separated into the koa-resource-router module.
Match URL patterns to callback functions or controller actions using router.verb()
,
where verb is one of the HTTP verbs such as router.get()
or router.post()
.
app
.get('/', function *(next) {
this.body = 'Hello World!';
})
.post('/users', function *(next) {
// ...
})
.put('/users/:id', function *(next) {
// ...
})
.del('/users/:id', function *(next) {
// ...
});
Route paths will be translated to regular expressions used to match requests.
Query strings will not be considered when matching requests.
Routes can optionally have names. This allows generation of URLs and easy renaming of URLs during development.
app.get('user', '/users/:id', function *(next) {
// ...
});
app.url('user', 3);
// => "/users/3"
Multiple middleware may be given and are composed using koa-compose:
app.get(
'/users/:id',
function *(next) {
this.user = yield User.findOne(this.params.id);
yield next;
},
function *(next) {
console.log(this.user);
// => { id: 17, name: "Alex" }
}
);
Named route parameters are captured and added to ctx.params
.
Capture groups from regular expression routes are also added to
ctx.params
, which is an array.
app.get('/:category/:title', function *(next) {
console.log(this.params);
// => [ category: 'programming', title: 'how-to-node' ]
});
Run middleware for named route parameters. Useful for auto-loading or validation.
app
.param('user', function *(id, next) {
this.user = users[id];
if (!this.user) return this.status = 404;
yield next;
})
.get('/users/:user', function *(next) {
this.body = this.user;
})
Control route matching exactly by specifying a regular expression instead of
a path string when creating the route. For example, it might be useful to match
date formats for a blog, such as /blog/2013-09-04
:
app.get(/^\/blog\/\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2}\/?$/i, function *(next) {
// ...
});
Create routes with multiple HTTP methods using router.register()
:
app.register('/', ['get', 'post'], function *(next) {
// ...
});
Create route for all methods using router.all()
:
app.all('/', function *(next) {
// ...
});
Redirect source
to destination
URL with optional 30x status code
.
Both source
and destination
can be route names.
app.redirect('/login', 'sign-in');
This is equivalent to:
app.all('/login', function *() {
this.redirect('/sign-in');
this.status = 301;
});
Lookup route with given name
. Returns the route or false
.
Generate URL for route. Takes either map of named params
or series of
arguments (for regular expression routes).
Returns Error
if no route is found with given name
.
app.get('user', '/users/:id', function *(next) {
// ...
});
app.url('user', 3);
// => "/users/3"
app.url('user', { id: 3 });
// => "/users/3"
Tests use mocha and can be run with npm:
npm test