4

Is it possible to assemble a route with parameters containing forward slashes?

Config:

'someroute' => array(
       'type' => 'Zend\Mvc\Router\Http\Segment',
       'options' => array(
                'route' => 'someroute/:path',
                'defaults' => array(
                    'controller' => 'Controller',
                    'action' => 'index'
                ),
                'constraints' => array(
                    'path' => '(.)+'
                )
       )
 )

Controller:

$path = 'some/subdirectory';
$this->url('someroute', array('path' => $path));

Results in:

http://host.name/someroute/some%2Fsubdirectory
3
  • 2
    This is absolutely intended behavior and more than wanted. path in your example is considered a parameter and therefore gets urlencoded. Everything else would be a security risk
    – Sam
    May 24, 2013 at 14:03
  • 1
    that is a very unstatisfying answer. i want to map a tree in a seo-friendly way. it is impossible, that dynamic generation of subfolders is not available.
    – machete
    May 28, 2013 at 15:43
  • for example: i have a taxonomy tree and want the following uris: /taxonomy/term1/term1subterm1/term1subterm1subsubterm1/ /taxonomy/term1/term1subterm2/term1subterm2subsubterm1/ /taxonomy/term1/anoterhterm1/
    – machete
    May 28, 2013 at 15:48

3 Answers 3

2

Using rawurldecode() in the view solves this issue of course.

2

Just use the regex route type:

'path' => array(
    'type' => 'regex',
    'options' => array(
        'regex' => '/path(?<path>\/.*)',
        'defaults' => array(
            'controller' => 'explorer',
            'action' => 'path',
        ),
        'spec' => '/path%path%'
    )
)
1
  • You will need use Zend\Router\Http\Regex; at the top.
    – Paul
    Jul 23, 2021 at 17:35
2

I had a similar problem, so I'm posting found solution with Zend 3 to my project.

By default, the Symfony/Zend Routing component requires that the parameters match the following regular expression: [^/]+. This means that all characters are allowed except /.

You must explicitly allow / to be part of your placeholder by specifying a more permissive regular expression for it:

  'type' => Segment::class,
                'options' => [
                    'route' => '/imovel[/:id][/:realtor][/:friendly]',
                    'constraints' => array(
                        'friendly' => '.+',
                        'id' => '[0-9]+',
                        'realtor' => 'C[0-9]+'
                    ),
                    'defaults' => [
                        'controller' => Controller\PropertyController::class,
                        'action' => 'form'
                    ]
                ]

Basically, you can allow all characters, and then check/trycatch/validate in the action.

Ref: How to Allow a "/" Character in a Route Parameter

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