Using tipfy, how does one express a catch-all route in urls.py if more specific routes do not match?

Tipfy uses Werkzeug-like routing, so there's this (in urls.py):

def get_rules(app): 
rules = [ 
    Rule('/<any>', endpoint='any', handler='apps.main.handlers.MainHandler'), 
    Rule('/', endpoint='main', handler='apps.main.handlers.MainHandler'), 
] 

This will match most random entry points into the application (app.example.com/foo, app.example.com/%20 etc) but does not cover the app.example.com/foo/bar case which results in a 404.

Alternatively, is there a graceful way to handle 404 in Tipfy that I'm missing?

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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

I think you want:

Rule('/<path:any>', endpoint='any', handler='apps.main.handlers.MainHandler')

The path matcher also matches slashes.

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Nice one, thank you very much. – Rich Churcher Oct 21 '10 at 3:07
This doesn't work for me. Werkzeug sees 'any' as an unexpected keyword argument. Is there an alternate syntax? – Wraith Mar 9 '11 at 3:25
Here's the docs. Maybe 'any' is confusing it because there's also an any matcher. You could try <path:foobar> to see if it works. – Luke Francl Mar 9 '11 at 21:33
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Maybe you could write custom middle ware:

class CustomErrorPageMiddleware(object):    
def handle_exception(self, e):           
    return Response("custom error page")

To enable it add somewhere to tipfy config:

   config['tipfy'] = {
       'middleware': [
           'apps.utils.CustomErrorPageMiddleware',
       ]
   }

It gives you quite a flexibility - you could for example send mail somewhere to inform that there was a problem. This will intercept all exceptions in your application

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This is a nice idea actually. I'm only accepting the other answer because it more specifically addresses the question of matching the URL, but your point is well-taken. Thanks! – Rich Churcher Oct 21 '10 at 3:06
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