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File: routes.php
<?php defined('SYSPATH') OR die('No direct access allowed.'); /** * ##### Custom Routes * Before changing this file you should copy it to your application/config directory. * * [!!] Routes will run in the order they are defined. Higher routes will always take precedence over lower ones. * * __Default Route__ * * $config['_default'] = 'welcome'; * * $config['_default'] specifies the default route. It is used to indicate which controller * should be used when a URI contains no segments. For example, if your web application is at * www.example.com and you visit this address with a web browser, the welcome controller would * be used even though it wasn't specified in the URI. The result would be the same as if the * browser had gone to www.example.com/welcome. * * __Custom Routes__ * * In addition to the default route above, you can also specify your own routes. The basic * format for a routing rule is: * * $config['route'] = 'class/method'; * * Where *route* is the URI you want to route, and *class/method* would replace it. * * For example, if your Kohana web application was installed at www.example.com and * you had the following routing rule: `$config['test'] = 'foo/bar';` * Browsing to www.example.com/test would be *internally* redirected to www.example.com/foo/bar. * * __Advanced Routes with Regex__ * * The route part of a routing rule is actually a regular expression. If you are unfamiliar * with regular expressions you can read more about them at the PHP website. Using regular expressions, * you can be more selective about which URIs will match your routing rules, and you can make use of the * sub-pattern back referencing technique to re-use parts of the URI in it's replacement. * * This is best described with an example. Suppose we wanted to make the URL www.example.com/article/22 * work, we might use a routing rule like this: * * $config['article/([0-9]+)'] = 'news/show/$1'; * * which would match URIs starting with “article/” followed by some numeric digits. If the URI takes this * form, we will use the news controller and call it's show() method passing in the article number as the * first argument. In the www.example.com/article/22 example, it is as if the URL www.example.com/news/show/22 * had been visited. * * @package Kohana * @author Kohana Team * @copyright (c) 2007-2009 Kohana Team * @license http://kohanaphp.com/license */ /** * Sets the default route to "welcome" */ $config['_default'] = 'welcome';