This extension is part of the Sinatra::Contrib project. Run gem install sinatra-contrib to have it available.
Sinatra::Namespace¶ ↑
Sinatra::Namespace
is an extension that adds namespaces to an application. This namespaces will allow you to share a path prefix for the routes within the namespace, and define filters, conditions and error handlers exclusively for them. Besides that, you can also register helpers and extensions that will be used only within the namespace.
Usage¶ ↑
Once you have loaded the extension (see below), you can use the namespace
method to define namespaces in your application.
You can define a namespace by a path prefix:
namespace '/blog' do get { haml :blog } get '/:entry_permalink' do @entry = Entry.find_by_permalink!(params[:entry_permalink]) haml :entry end # More blog routes... end
by a condition:
namespace :host_name => 'localhost' do get('/admin/dashboard') { haml :dashboard } get('/admin/login') { haml :login } # More admin routes... end
or both:
namespace '/admin', :host_name => 'localhost' do get('/dashboard') { haml :dashboard } get('/login') { haml :login } post('/login') { login_user } # More admin routes... end
Regex is also accepted:
namespace /\/posts\/([^\/&?]+)\// do get { haml :blog } # More blog routes... end
When you define a filter or an error handler, or register an extension or a set of helpers within a namespace, they only affect the routes defined in it. For instance, lets define a before filter to prevent the access of unauthorized users to the admin section of the application:
namespace '/admin' do helpers AdminHelpers before { authenticate unless request.path_info == '/admin/login' } get '/dashboard' do # Only authenticated users can access here... haml :dashboard end # More admin routes... end get '/' do # Any user can access here... haml :index end
Well, they actually also affect the nested namespaces:
namespace '/admin' do helpers AdminHelpers before { authenticate unless request.path_info == '/admin/login' } namespace '/users' do get do # Only authenticated users can access here... @users = User.all haml :users end # More user admin routes... end # More admin routes... end
Redirecting within the namespace can be done using redirect_to:
namespace '/admin' do get '/foo' do redirect_to '/bar' # Redirects to /admin/bar end get '/foo' do redirect '/bar' # Redirects to /bar end end
Classic Application Setup¶ ↑
To be able to use namespaces in a classic application all you need to do is require the extension:
require "sinatra" require "sinatra/namespace" namespace '/users' do end
Modular Application Setup¶ ↑
To be able to use namespaces in a modular application all you need to do is require the extension, and then, register it:
require "sinatra/base" require "sinatra/namespace" class MyApp < Sinatra::Base register Sinatra::Namespace namespace '/users' do end end
Within an extension¶ ↑
To be able to use namespaces within an extension, you need to first create an extension. This includes defining the ‘registered(app)` method in the module.
require 'sinatra/base' # For creating Sinatra extensions require 'sinatra/namespace' # To create namespaces module Zomg # Keep everything under "Zomg" namespace for sanity module Routes # Define a new "Routes" module def self.registered(app) # First, register the Namespace extension app.register Sinatra::Namespace # This defines an `/api` namespace on the application app.namespace '/api' do get '/users' do # do something with `GET "/api/users"` end end end end # Lastly, register the extension to use in our app Sinatra.register Routes end
In order to use this extension, is the same as any other Sinatra extension:
module Zomg # Define our app class, we use modular app for this example class App < Sinatra::Base # this gives us all the namespaces we defined earlier register Routes get '/' do "Welcome to my application!" end end end Zomg::App.run! # Don't forget to start your app ;)
Phew! That was a mouthful.
I hope that helps you use ‘Sinatra::Namespace` in every way imaginable!