Generates javascript file that defines all Rails named routes as javascript helpers:
import { root_path, api_user_path } from './routes';
root_path() # => /
api_user_path(25, include_profile: true, format: 'json') // => /api/users/25.json?include_profile=true
Your Rails Gemfile:
gem "js-routes"
There are several possible ways to setup JsRoutes:
- Quick and easy - Recommended
- Uses Rack Middleware to automatically update routes locally
- Automatically generates routes files on javascript build
- Works great for a simple Rails application
- Allows very custom setups
- Automatic updates need to be customized
- Webpacker ERB Loader - Legacy
- Requires ESM module system (the default)
- Doesn't support typescript definitions
- Sprockets - Legacy
- Deprecated and not recommended for modern apps
Setup Rack Middleware
to automatically generate and maintain routes.js
file and corresponding
Typescript definitions routes.d.ts
:
Run a command:
rails generate js_routes:middleware
Add the following to config/environments/development.rb
:
config.middleware.use(JsRoutes::Middleware)
Use it in any JS file:
import {post_path} from '../routes';
alert(post_path(1))
Upgrade js building process to update js-routes files in Rakefile
:
task "javascript:build" => "js:routes"
# For setups without jsbundling-rails
task "assets:precompile" => "js:routes"
Add js-routes files to .gitignore
:
/app/javascript/routes.js
/app/javascript/routes.d.ts
IMPORTANT: the setup doesn't support IDE autocompletion with Typescript
Run a command:
./bin/rails generate js_routes:webpacker
The routes files can be automatically updated without rake
task being called manually.
It requires rails-erb-loader npm package to work.
Add erb
loader to webpacker:
yarn add rails-erb-loader
rm -f app/javascript/routes.js # delete static file if any
Create webpack ERB config config/webpack/loaders/erb.js
:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.erb$/,
enforce: 'pre',
loader: 'rails-erb-loader'
},
]
}
};
Enable erb
extension in config/webpack/environment.js
:
const erb = require('./loaders/erb')
environment.loaders.append('erb', erb)
Create routes file app/javascript/routes.js.erb
:
<%= JsRoutes.generate() %>
Use routes wherever you need them:
import {post_path} from 'routes.js.erb';
alert(post_path(2));
In case you need multiple route files for different parts of your application, there are low level methods:
# Returns a routes file as a string
JsRoutes.generate(options)
# Writes routes to specific file location
JsRoutes.generate!(file_name, options)
# Writes Typescript definitions file for routes
JsRoutes.definitions!(file_name, options)
They can also be used in ERB context
<script>
var AdminRoutes = <%= JsRoutes.generate(
include: /admin/, module_type: nil, namespace: nil
) %>;
</script>
Routes can be returns via API:
class Api::RoutesController < Api::BaseController
def index
options = {
include: /\Aapi_/,
default_url_options: { format: 'json' },
}
render json: {
routes: {
source: JsRoutes.generate(options),
definitions: JsRoutes.definitions(options),
}
}
end
end
Default auto-update middleware for development doesn't support configuration out of the box, but it can be extended through inheritence:
class AdvancedJsRoutesMiddleware < JsRoutes::Middleware
def regenerate
path = Rails.root.join("app/javascript")
JsRoutes.generate!(
"#{path}/app_routes.js", exclude: [/^admin_/, /^api_/]
)
JsRoutes.generate!(
"#{path}/adm_routes.js", include: /^admin_/
)
JsRoutes.generate!(
"#{path}/api_routes.js", include: /^api_/, default_url_options: {format: "json"}
)
end
end
JsRoutes has typescript support out of the box.
Restrictions:
- Only available if
module_type
is set toESM
(strongly recommended and default). - Webpacker Automatic Updates are not available because typescript compiler can not be configured to understand
.erb
extensions.
For the basic setup of typscript definitions see Quick Start setup. More advanced setup would involve calling manually:
JsRoutes.definitions! # to output to file
# or
JsRoutes.definitions # to output to string
Even more advanced setups can be achieved by setting module_type
to DTS
inside configuration
which will cause any JsRoutes
instance to generate defintions instead of routes themselves.
If you are using Sprockets you may configure js-routes in the following way.
Setup the initializer (e.g. config/initializers/js_routes.rb
):
JsRoutes.setup do |config|
config.module_type = nil
config.namespace = 'Routes'
end
Require JsRoutes in app/assets/javascripts/application.js
or other bundle
//= require js-routes
Also in order to flush asset pipeline cache sometimes you might need to run:
rake tmp:cache:clear
This cache is not flushed on server restart in development environment.
Important: If routes.js file is not updated after some configuration change you need to run this rake task again.
You can configure JsRoutes in two main ways. Either with an initializer (e.g. config/initializers/js_routes.rb
):
JsRoutes.setup do |config|
config.option = value
end
Or dynamically in JavaScript, although only Formatter Options are supported:
import {configure, config} from 'routes'
configure({
option: value
});
config(); // current config
Options to configure JavaScript file generator. These options are only available in Ruby context but not JavaScript.
module_type
- JavaScript module type for generated code. Article- Options:
ESM
,UMD
,CJS
,AMD
,DTS
,nil
. - Default:
ESM
nil
option can be used in case you don't want generated code to export anything.
- Options:
documentation
- specifies if each route should be annotated with JSDoc comment- Default:
true
- Default:
exclude
- Array of regexps to exclude from routes.- Default:
[]
- The regexp applies only to the name before the
_path
suffix, eg: you want to match exactlysettings_path
, the regexp should be/^settings$/
- Default:
include
- Array of regexps to include in routes.- Default:
[]
- The regexp applies only to the name before the
_path
suffix, eg: you want to match exactlysettings_path
, the regexp should be/^settings$/
- Default:
namespace
- global object used to access routes.- Only available if
module_type
option is set tonil
. - Supports nested namespace like
MyProject.routes
- Default:
nil
- Only available if
camel_case
- specifies if route helpers should be generated in camel case instead of underscore case.- Default:
false
- Default:
url_links
- specifies if*_url
helpers should be generated (in addition to the default*_path
helpers).- Default:
false
- Note: generated URLs will first use the protocol, host, and port options specified in the route definition. Otherwise, the URL will be based on the option specified in the
default_url_options
config. If no default option has been set, then the URL will fallback to the current URL based onwindow.location
.
- Default:
compact
- Remove_path
suffix in path routes(*_url
routes stay untouched if they were enabled)- Default:
false
- Sample route call when option is set to true:
users() // => /users
- Default:
application
- a key to specify which rails engine you want to generate routes too.- This option allows to only generate routes for a specific rails engine, that is mounted into routes instead of all Rails app routes
- Default:
Rails.application
file
- a file location where generated routes are stored- Default:
app/javascript/routes.js
if setup with Webpacker, otherwiseapp/assets/javascripts/routes.js
if setup with Sprockets.
- Default:
Options to configure routes formatting. These options are available both in Ruby and JavaScript context.
default_url_options
- default parameters used when generating URLs- Example:
{format: "json", trailing_slash: true, protocol: "https", subdomain: "api", host: "example.com", port: 3000}
- Default:
{}
- Example:
prefix
- string that will prepend any generated URL. Usually used when app URL root includes a path component.- Example:
/rails-app
- Default:
Rails.application.config.relative_url_root
- Example:
serializer
- a JS function that serializes a Javascript Hash object into URL paramters like{a: 1, b: 2} => "a=1&b=2"
.- Default:
nil
. Uses built-in serializer compatible with Rails - Example:
jQuery.param
- use jQuery's serializer algorithm. You can attach serialize function from your favorite AJAX framework. - Example:
function (object) { ... }
- use completely custom serializer of your application.
- Default:
special_options_key
- a special key that helps JsRoutes to destinguish serialized model from options hash- This option exists because JS doesn't provide a difference between an object and a hash
- Default:
_options
Configuration above will create a nice javascript file with Routes
object that has all the rails routes available:
import {
user_path, user_project_path, company_path
} from 'routes';
users_path()
// => "/users"
user_path(1)
// => "/users/1"
user_path(1, {format: 'json'})
// => "/users/1.json"
user_path(1, {anchor: 'profile'})
// => "/users/1#profile"
new_user_project_path(1, {format: 'json'})
// => "/users/1/projects/new.json"
user_project_path(1,2, {q: 'hello', custom: true})
// => "/users/1/projects/2?q=hello&custom=true"
user_project_path(1,2, {hello: ['world', 'mars']})
// => "/users/1/projects/2?hello%5B%5D=world&hello%5B%5D=mars"
var google = {id: 1, name: "Google"};
company_path(google)
// => "/companies/1"
var google = {id: 1, name: "Google", to_param: "google"};
company_path(google)
// => "/companies/google"
In order to make routes helpers available globally:
import * as Routes from '../routes';
jQuery.extend(window, Routes)
Possible to get spec
of route by function toString
:
import {user_path, users_path} from '../routes'
users_path.toString() // => "/users(.:format)"
user_path.toString() // => "/users/:id(.:format)"
Route function also contain method requiredParams
inside which returns required param names array:
users_path.requiredParams() // => []
user_path.requiredParams() // => ['id']
JsRoutes tries to replicate the Rails routing API as closely as possible. If you find any incompatibilities (outside of what is described below), please open an issue.
Sometimes the destinction between JS Hash and Object can not be found by JsRoutes. In this case you would need to pass a special key to help:
import {company_project_path} from '../routes'
company_project_path({company_id: 1, id: 2}) // => Not enough parameters
company_project_path({company_id: 1, id: 2, _options: true}) // => "/companies/1/projects/2"
JsRoutes itself does not have security holes. It makes URLs without access protection more reachable by potential attacker. If that is an issue for you, you may use one of the following solutions:
Make sure module_type
is set to ESM
(the default). Modern JS bundlers like
Webpack can statically determine which ESM exports are used, and remove
the unused exports to reduce bundle size. This is known as Tree
Shaking.
JS files can use named imports to import only required routes into the file, like:
import {
inbox_path,
inboxes_path,
inbox_message_path,
inbox_attachment_path,
user_path,
} from '../routes'
JS files can also use star imports (import * as
) for tree shaking, as long as only explicit property accesses are used.
import * as routes from '../routes';
console.log(routes.inbox_path); // OK, only `inbox_path` is included in the bundle
console.log(Object.keys(routes)); // forces bundler to include all exports, breaking tree shaking
Split your routes into multiple files related to each section of your website like:
JsRoutes.generate!('app/javascript/admin-routes.js', include: /^admin_/) %>
JsRoutes.generate!('app/javascript/app-routes.js', exclude: /^admin_/) %>
There are some alternatives available. Most of them has only basic feature and don't reach the level of quality I accept. Advantages of this one are:
- Actively maintained
- ESM Tree shaking support
- Rich options set
- Full rails compatibility
- Support Rails
#to_param
convention for seo optimized paths - Well tested