90

I've just started learning the Laravel framework and I'm having an issue with routing.

The only route that's working is the default home route that's attached to Laravel out of the box.

I'm using WAMP on Windows and it uses PHP 5.4.3, and Apache 2.2.22, and I also have mod_rewrite enabled, and have removed the 'index.php' from the application.php config file to leave an empty string.

I've created a new controller called User:

class User_Controller extends Base_Controller {
    public $restful = true;

    public function get_index() 
    {
        return View::make('user.index');
    }
}

I've created a view file in application/views/user/ called index.php with some basic HTML code, and in routes.php I've added the following:

Route::get('/', function () {
    return View::make('home.index');
});

Route::get('user', function () {
    return View::make('user.index');
});

The first route works fine when visiting the root (http://localhost/mysite/public) in my web browser, but when I try to go to my second route with http://localhost/mysite/public/user I get a 404 Not Found error. Why would this be happening?

3
  • The .htaccess is unmodified, just as it was out of the box. Commented Aug 3, 2012 at 7:51
  • It appears that WAMP was the issue. Have changed to XAMPP now and everything works great and as it should. Should I self-answer this question explaining that WAMP was the issue? Commented Aug 4, 2012 at 2:48
  • @AquilaSolutions Yes, you may. So everyone will clearly see your issue is solved now.
    – Jocelyn
    Commented Sep 30, 2012 at 0:56

20 Answers 20

148

On my Ubuntu LAMP installation, I solved this problem with the following 2 changes.

  1. Enable mod_rewrite on the apache server: sudo a2enmod rewrite.
  2. Edit /etc/apache2/apache2.conf, changing the "AllowOverride" directive for the /var/www directory (which is my main document root): AllowOverride All

Then restart the Apache server: service apache2 restart

5
  • This fixed this issue for me on a vagrant machine downloaded from puphpet.
    – winkbrace
    Commented Feb 4, 2015 at 22:08
  • Worked for me on MacOS High Sierra 10.13.3 with Laravel-5.4 Commented Mar 5, 2018 at 4:30
  • 2
    @McSonk, probably question is for windows. This alternative solution works for Ubuntu. Thank dude. Commented Jul 11, 2018 at 3:31
  • The apache2 config file seems to take precedence over the virtualhost file. If you have AllowOverride All in your virtualhost file the website may be using whatever value you have in your apache config file instead.
    – sdexp
    Commented Aug 27, 2018 at 18:30
  • That's a great answer if you have a local apache or virtual machine. But in real life, your web is in a hosting, and you don't have any access to the apache config. There must be another solution. Commented Dec 15, 2018 at 21:12
63

Using WAMP click on wamp icon ->apache->apache modules->scroll and check rewrite_module.

Restart a LoadModule rewrite_module

Note: the server application restarts automatically for you once you enable "rewrite_module"

4
  • THANKS A LOT, been having trying to sort this issue since yesterday
    – Moe
    Commented Nov 24, 2013 at 12:29
  • 2
    This seems to happen to me every time I install/reinstall WAMP and Laravel on a computer. This is always the issue. Hopefully it will finally be committed to memory ;)
    – Kenmore
    Commented Dec 13, 2013 at 7:53
  • Under Ubuntu 14.04, 'sudo a2enmod rewrite' and then 'sudo service apache2 restart' worked.
    – nspo
    Commented Sep 24, 2014 at 8:54
  • for linux systems enable rewrite module sudo a2enmod rewrite after that restart sudo service apache2 restart
    – aimme
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 19:53
38

Have you tried to check if

http://localhost/mysite/public/index.php/user 

was working? If so then make sure all your path's folders don't have any uppercase letters. I had the same situation and converting letters to lower case helped.

6
  • Thanks. I'm going through the Laravel book (Laravel Starter) step by step and was stuck with routing to a closure (page 13). This resolved that problem for me. Commented Feb 5, 2013 at 19:33
  • This solved my problem. I had a .htaccess in the root of my apache folder that broke laravel's htaccess.
    – Maarten00
    Commented Dec 11, 2013 at 10:51
  • This solved other problem I had. Using Laravel to generate pages, and Angular to call REST, on Windows the call to api/branches worked, but on linux, I had to change this url like : index.php/api/branches Any way to resolve this to have the same urls ? Commented Sep 23, 2015 at 9:57
  • I never thought it's case-sensitive
    – ClearBoth
    Commented May 23, 2017 at 5:35
  • instead place .htaccess file from public/ folder to the root of project, then you can access by http://localhost/mysite/user Commented Jan 10, 2018 at 9:56
25

Have you tried adding this to your routes file instead Route::get('user', "user@index")?

The piece of text before the @, user in this case, will direct the page to the user controller and the piece of text after the @, index, will direct the script to the user function public function get_index().

I see you're using $restful, in which case you could set your Route to Route::any('user', 'user@index'). This will handle both POST and GET, instead of writing them both out separately.

3
  • I change from WAMP to XAMPP because the issue remained. After starting a fresh project on XAMPP server and using the '@' symbol instead of the '.' it working great now. Commented Aug 4, 2012 at 2:46
  • 1
    It works fine with WAMP, you just have to enable rewrite_module. See @Muvera's comment below. Commented Jan 3, 2015 at 18:21
  • 3
    I know this is an old answer, but I had a similar issue: a new route was added and did not work! (404). I only needed to clear cached routes! using php artisan route:clear
    – trainoasis
    Commented Dec 22, 2015 at 8:27
10

I was getting the same problem using EasyPHP. Found that I had to specify AllowOverride All in my <Directory> block in httpd.conf. Without this, Apache sometimes ignores your .htaccess.

Mine ended up looking like this...

<Directory "D:/Dev">
    Options FollowSymLinks Indexes
    #### NEXT IS THE CRUCIAL LINE ####
    AllowOverride All                  
    Order deny,allow
    Allow from 127.0.0.1
    Deny from all
    Require all granted     
</Directory>
1
  • 1
    I found on Debian GNU/Linux 7.6, that this response gave part of what was required, in addition to enabling the module for apache2 (a2enmod rewrite). Commented Sep 8, 2014 at 19:16
9

Just Run in your terminal.

php artisan route:clear
6

You could try to move root/public/.htaccess to root/.htaccess and it should work

1
  • 4
    You posted the exact same answer to 8 questions. If you think they are duplicates, you should mark them as such and not post an answer to each.
    – Jaap
    Commented Dec 22, 2016 at 19:45
5

Routes

Use them to define specific routes that aren't managed by controllers.

Controllers

Use them when you want to use traditional MVC architecture

Solution to your problem

You don't register controllers as routes unless you want a specific 'named' route for a controller action.

Rather than create a route for your controllers actions, just register your controller:

Route::controller('user');

Now your controller is registered, you can navigate to http://localhost/mysite/public/user and your get_index will be run.

You can also register all controllers in one go:

Route::controller(Controller::detect());
4

OK, so after bashing my head on this problem for a little over a day... I got up and did what I SHOULD have done yesterday, and DEBUGGED what was going on!

What Laravel is TRYING to do here, is insert the file index.php right in front of the path given as a Route. SO for instance, if you specified a Route::get('/account/create', ..., and execute your app from say localhost/laravel/authenticate/public/account/create on your browser, then laravel wants to execute localhost/authenticate/public/index.php/account/create, but to do that.... Apache needs to see that requests through /wamp/www/laravel/laravel/authentication/public (your path may vary somewhat, depending on where your laravel app is actually installed, but the trailing public is where the substitution needs to take place) must have a 'RewriteRule' applied.

Thankfully, laravel supplies the correct Rewrite rule in a handy .htaccess file right there in your app's public folder. The PROBLEM is, the code in that '.htaccess' file won't work with the way WAMP is configured out of the box. The reason for this SEEMS to be the problem suggested by muvera at the top of this thread -- the rewrite_module code needs to be loaded by Apache before the RewriteRule stuff will work. Heck this makes sense.

The part that DOESN'T make sense: simply stopping and restarting Apache services will not pick up the changes necessary for WAMP to do the right thing with your RewriteRule -- I know, I tried this many times!

What DOES work: make the changes suggested by muvera (see top of thread) to load the correct modules. Then, reset your whole Windows session, thus dumping Apache out of memory altogether. Restart (reload) WAMP, and VOILA! the fix works, the correct RewriteRule is applied, yada, yada; I'm living happily ever after.

The good news out of all this: I know a LOT more about .htaccess, RewriteRule, and httpd.conf files now. There is a good (performance) argument for moving the logic from your app's public .htaccess file, and putting it into a Directory ... section of your httpd.conf in your Apache 'bin' folder BTW (especially if you have access to that folder).

4

Don't forget the RewriteBase in your public/.htaccess:

For example:

Options +FollowSymLinks
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /your/folder/public
1
  • 1
    where do you put this in the file?
    – Goddard
    Commented Feb 6, 2015 at 22:42
0

Try enabling short php tags in your php.ini. WAMP has them off usually and laravel needs them on.

1
  • Wait, what? Laravel needs short tags on?
    – bishop
    Commented Oct 24, 2014 at 13:29
0

you must be using Laravel 5 the command

  class User_Controller extends Controller {
  public $restful = true;
  public function get_index(){
  return View('user.index');
  }
  }

and in routes.php

  Route::get('/', function()
  {
  return view('home.index');
  });

  Route::get('user', function()
  {
  return view('user.index');
  });

Laravel 5 command changes for view and controller see the documentation i was having same error before

0

Just Run in your terminal.

 composer dump-autoload
0

I think you have deleted default .htaccess file inside the laravel public folder. upload the file it should fix your problem.

0

the simple Commands with automatic loads the dependencies

composer dump-autoload

and still getting that your some important files are missing so go here to see whole procedure

https://codingexpertise.blogspot.com/2018/11/laravel-new.html

0

If you're using Vagrant though Homestead, it's possible there was an error mounting the shared folder. It looks like Vagrant takes your files from that folder and swaps out the files that are actually on the host machine on boot, so if there was an error, you're essentially trying to access your Laravel installation from when you first made it (which is why you're only getting "home"- that was generated during installation).

You can easily check this by sshing into your vm and checking the routes/web.php file to see if it's actually your file. If it isn't, exit out and vagrant halt, vagrant up, and look for errors on boot.

0
  1. setup .env file
  2. configure index.html
  3. make sure u have .htaccess
  4. sudo service apache2 restart

most probably it's due to cache problems

0

The Main problem of route not working is there is mod_rewrite.so module in macos, linux not enabled in httpd.conf file of apache configuration, so can .htaccess to work. i have solved this by uncomment the line :

# LoadModule rewrite_module libexec/apache2/mod_rewrite.so

Remove the # from above line of httpdf.conf. Then it will works.
enjoy!

0
Route::get('/', function() {
    return View::make('home.index');
});
    
Route::get('user', function() {
    return View::make('user.index');
});

change above to

Route::get('user', function() {
    return View::make('user.index');
});
    
Route::get('/', function() {
    return View::make('home.index');
});

You have to use '/'(home/default) at the end in your routes

0

Check for a .env.backup

I got this error locally while writing and testing some new tests. After ruling out every other answer to this question, I finally decided to go into my last backup and compare the files in the server root (where the environment files are located).

I then noticed I had an .env.backup file that shouldn't have been there - this file is automatically created by Laravel to backup the contents of your .env file into before pasting the contents of your test-specific environment files - when the tests are done running, it copies your original contents back into .env. Except that for some reason Laravel didn't automatically do this last step, causing some (but not all) of my views to return 404s. Deleting the incomplete .env and renaming .env.backup to .env is all that's required to fix the issue immediately.

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