The most basic feature of any web application is the ability to interpret a request sent to a URL, then send back a response. In order to do this, your application has to be able to distinguish one URL from another.
Like most web frameworks, Sails provides a router: a mechanism for mapping URLs to controllers and views. Routes are rules that tell Sails what to do when faced with an incoming request. There are two main types of routes in Sails: custom (or "explicit") and automatic (or "implicit").
Sails lets you design your app's URLs in any way you like- there are no framework restrictions.
Every Sails project comes with config/routes.js
, a simple Node.js module that exports an object of custom, or "explicit" routes. For example, this routes.js
file defines six routes; some of them point to a controller's action, while others route directly to a view.
// config/routes.js
module.exports.routes = {
'get /signup': { view: 'conversion/signup' },
'post /signup': 'AuthController.processSignup',
'get /login': { view: 'portal/login' },
'post /login': 'AuthController.processLogin',
'/logout': 'AuthController.logout',
'get /me': 'UserController.profile'
}
Each route consists of an address (on the left, e.g. 'get /me'
) and a target (on the right, e.g. 'UserController.profile'
) The address is a URL path and (optionally) a specific HTTP method. The target can be defined a number of different ways (see the expanded concepts section on the subject), but the two different syntaxes above are the most common. When Sails receives an incoming request, it checks the address of all custom routes for matches. If a matching route is found, the request is then passed to its target.
For example, we might read 'get /me': 'UserController.profile'
as:
"Hey Sails, when you receive a GET request to
http://mydomain.com/me
, run theprofile
action ofUserController
, would'ya?"
What if I want to change the view layout within the route itself? No problem we could:
'get /privacy': {
view: 'users/privacy',
locals: {
layout: 'users'
}
},
function (req, res, next) {}
). However, you should always use the conventional route target syntax when possible- it streamlines development, simplifies training, and makes your app more maintainable.In addition to your custom routes, Sails binds many routes for you automatically. If a URL doesn't match a custom route, it may match one of the automatic routes and still generate a response. The main types of automatic routes in Sails are:
The Sails router is "protocol-agnostic"; it knows how to handle both HTTP requests and messages sent via WebSockets. It accomplishes this by listening for Socket.io messages sent to reserved event handlers in a simple format, called JWR (JSON-WebSocket Request/Response). This specification is implemented and available out of the box in the client-side socket SDK.
onConnect
function (located in config/sockets.js
.) But bear in mind that, in most cases, you are better off leveraging the request interpreter for socket communication - maintaining consistent routes across HTTP and WebSockets helps keep your app maintainable.