There will be several high profile links for customers to focus on, for example:
- Contact Us @ domain.com/home/contact
- About the Service @ domain.com/home/service
- Pricing @ domain.com/home/pricing
- How It Works @ domain.com/home/how_it_works
Stuff like that. I would like to hide the home controller from the URL so the customer only sees /contact/, not /home/contact/. Same with /pricing/ not /home/pricing/
I know I can setup a controller or a route for each special page, but they will look the same except for content I want to pull from the database, and I would rather keep my code DRY.
I setup the following routes:
Route::get('/about_us', 'home@about_us');
Route::get('/featured_locations', 'home@featured_locations');
Which work well, but I am afraid of SEO trouble if I have duplicate content on the link with the controller in the URL. ( I don't plan on using both, but I have been known to do dumber things.)
So then made routes like these:
Route::get('/about_us', 'home@about_us');
Route::get('/home/about_us', function()
{
return Redirect::to('/about_us', 301);
});
Route::get('/featured_locations', 'home@featured_locations');
Route::get('/home/featured_locations', function()
{
return Redirect::to('/featured_locations', 301);
});
And now I have a redirect. It feels dumb, but it appears to be working the way I want. If I load the page at my shorter URL, it loads my content. If I try to visit the longer URL I get redirected.
It is only for about 8 or 9 special links, so I can easily manage the routes, but I feel there must be a smart way to do it.
Is this even an PHP problem, or is this an .htaccess / web.config problem?
What hell have I created with this redirection scheme. How do smart people do it? I have been searching for two hours but I cannot find a term to describe what I am doing.
Is there something built into laravel 4 that handles this?
UPDATE:
Here is my attempt to implement one of the answers. This is NOT working and I don't know what I am doing wrong.
application/routes.php
Route::controller('home');
Route::controller('Home_Controller', '/');
(you can see the edit history if you really want to look at some broken code)
And now domain.com/AboutYou and domain.com/aboutUs are returning 404. But the domain.com/home/AboutYou and domain.com/home/aboutUs are still returning as they should.
FINAL EDIT
I copied an idea from the PongoCMS routes.php (which is based on Laravel 3) and I see they used filters to get any URI segment and try to create a CMS page.
See my answer below using route filters. This new way doesn't require that I register every special route (good) but does give up redirects to the canonical (bad)