248

I need to know the current route in a filter in Rails. How can I find out what it is?

I'm doing REST resources, and see no named routes.

2
  • 3
    What are you trying to accomplish with this? When you say "route" do you mean "URI"?
    – jdl
    Jul 30, 2009 at 1:14
  • 1
    any thoughts on how to get it in middleware.
    – Saurabh
    Mar 14, 2017 at 8:03

14 Answers 14

338

If you are trying to special case something in a view, you can use current_page? as in:

<% if current_page?(:controller => 'users', :action => 'index') %>

...or an action and id...

<% if current_page?(:controller => 'users', :action => 'show', :id => 1) %>

...or a named route...

<% if current_page?(users_path) %>

...and

<% if current_page?(user_path(1)) %>

Because current_page? requires both a controller and action, when I care about just the controller I make a current_controller? method in ApplicationController:

  def current_controller?(names)
    names.include?(current_controller)
  end

And use it like this:

<% if current_controller?('users') %>

...which also works with multiple controller names...

<% if current_controller?(['users', 'comments']) %>
11
  • 30
    Note that you can also use current_page? with named routes: current_page?(users_path)
    – tothemario
    Sep 9, 2011 at 12:13
  • Nice tothemario. I didn't know that. I'm modifying the answer.
    – IAmNaN
    Dec 4, 2011 at 19:33
  • 6
    controller_name and action_name are good for use in helpers and views for this sort of thing too. Feb 4, 2014 at 5:47
  • 1
    In a view you can also just do <% if params[:action] == 'show' %> so you don't need the controller
    – rmcsharry
    May 12, 2016 at 17:37
  • 1
    In Rails 6 (and probably as early as Rails 4 or 5), you can simply provide an active record object: current_page?(@user) or collection current_page?(@users). Rails uses polymorphic_path under the hood to generate the path from the given active record object. Pretty neat!
    – Goulven
    Jul 17, 2020 at 14:48
218

To find out URI:

current_uri = request.env['PATH_INFO']
# If you are browsing http://example.com/my/test/path, 
# then above line will yield current_uri as "/my/test/path"

To find out the route i.e. controller, action and params:

path = ActionController::Routing::Routes.recognize_path "/your/path/here/"

# ...or newer Rails versions:
#
path = Rails.application.routes.recognize_path('/your/path/here')

controller = path[:controller]
action = path[:action]
# You will most certainly know that params are available in 'params' hash
6
  • 2
    Would you happen to know if this is the same/right way to do it in Rails 3? I'm sure it's still accessible, but I just want to be sure that I'm adhering to the latest conventions.
    – John
    Oct 29, 2010 at 20:46
  • 40
    The current controller and action are always available in params[:controller] and params[:action]. However, outside of it, if you want to recognize the route, this API is not available anymore. It has now shifted to ActionDispatch::Routing and I haven't tried out the recognize_path on it yet.
    – Swanand
    Oct 30, 2010 at 7:53
  • 41
    It’s better to use request.path for finding the current path. Aug 21, 2012 at 19:02
  • 3
    You could also call request.env['ORIGINAL_FULLPATH'] to include the possible parameters in the path, see my answer below.
    – Darme
    Feb 18, 2013 at 16:46
  • 2
    current_uri = request.env['PATH_INFO'] doesn't work if trailing_slash is set in routes Jun 5, 2013 at 17:30
177

Simplest solution I can come up with in 2015 (verified using Rails 4, but should also work using Rails 3)

request.url
# => "http://localhost:3000/lists/7/items"
request.path
# => "/lists/7/items"
2
  • 2
    And if you want the id in the view: <%= request.path_parameters[:id] %>
    – rmcsharry
    Apr 7, 2016 at 10:17
  • This is awesome! Use this in a partial form to redirect to the current page with new params. <form action="<%= request.path %>">
    – xHocquet
    Aug 23, 2016 at 22:03
21

You can do this

Rails.application.routes.recognize_path "/your/path"

It works for me in rails 3.1.0.rc4

1
  • This returns a hash which is the params hash. Any way to actually get the route object? With the name and then other attributes?
    – nroose
    Mar 27, 2021 at 22:23
11

In rails 3 you can access the Rack::Mount::RouteSet object via the Rails.application.routes object, then call recognize on it directly

route, match, params = Rails.application.routes.set.recognize(controller.request)

that gets the first (best) match, the following block form loops over the matching routes:

Rails.application.routes.set.recognize(controller.request) do |r, m, p|
  ... do something here ...
end

once you have the route, you can get the route name via route.name. If you need to get the route name for a particular URL, not the current request path, then you'll need to mock up a fake request object to pass down to rack, check out ActionController::Routing::Routes.recognize_path to see how they're doing it.

1
  • 6
    Error: undefined method 'recognize' for #<Journey::Routes:0x007f893dcfa648>
    – fguillen
    Aug 4, 2013 at 15:22
9

Based on @AmNaN suggestion (more details):

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base

 def current_controller?(names)
  names.include?(params[:controller]) unless params[:controller].blank? || false
 end

 helper_method :current_controller?

end

Now you can call it e.g. in a navigation layout for marking list items as active:

<ul class="nav nav-tabs">
  <li role="presentation" class="<%= current_controller?('items') ? 'active' : '' %>">
    <%= link_to user_items_path(current_user) do %>
      <i class="fa fa-cloud-upload"></i>
    <% end %>
  </li>
  <li role="presentation" class="<%= current_controller?('users') ? 'active' : '' %>">
    <%= link_to users_path do %>
      <i class="fa fa-newspaper-o"></i>
    <% end %>
  </li>
  <li role="presentation" class="<%= current_controller?('alerts') ? 'active' : '' %>">
    <%= link_to alerts_path do %>
      <i class="fa fa-bell-o"></i>
    <% end %>
  </li>
</ul>

For the users and alerts routes, current_page? would be enough:

 current_page?(users_path)
 current_page?(alerts_path)

But with nested routes and request for all actions of a controller (comparable with items), current_controller? was the better method for me:

 resources :users do 
  resources :items
 end

The first menu entry is that way active for the following routes:

   /users/x/items        #index
   /users/x/items/x      #show
   /users/x/items/new    #new
   /users/x/items/x/edit #edit
0
7

Or, more elegantly: request.path_info

Source:
Request Rack Documentation

6

Should you also need the parameters:

current_fullpath = request.env['ORIGINAL_FULLPATH']
# If you are browsing http://example.com/my/test/path?param_n=N 
# then current_fullpath will point to "/my/test/path?param_n=N"

And remember you can always call <%= debug request.env %> in a view to see all the available options.

4

I'll assume you mean the URI:

class BankController < ActionController::Base
  before_filter :pre_process 

  def index
    # do something
  end

  private
    def pre_process
      logger.debug("The URL" + request.url)
    end
end

As per your comment below, if you need the name of the controller, you can simply do this:

  private
    def pre_process
      self.controller_name        #  Will return "order"
      self.controller_class_name  # Will return "OrderController"
    end
2
  • yes I did that, but I hoped in a better way. What I need is to know which controller has been called, but I have pretty complicated nested resources.. request.path_parameters('controller') doesn't seem to work properly to me.
    – luca
    Jul 30, 2009 at 8:12
  • No need for self. in self.controller_name and self.controller_class_name Jul 24, 2015 at 18:06
4

request.url

request.path #to get path except the base url

2

You can see all routes via rake:routes (this might help you).

1
  • I prefer to open a new tab with an invalid path, and see all the path/routes from the browser, since they're prettier that way. But I don't think this helps get the current route.
    – ahnbizcad
    Jul 2, 2014 at 1:25
1

You can do this:

def active_action?(controller)
   'active' if controller.remove('/') == controller_name
end

Now, you can use like this:

<%= link_to users_path, class: "some-class #{active_action? users_path}" %>
1

I find that the the approved answer, request.env['PATH_INFO'], works for getting the base URL, but this does not always contain the full path if you have nested routes. You can use request.env['HTTP_REFERER'] to get the full path and then see if it matches a given route:

request.env['HTTP_REFERER'].match?(my_cool_path)
0

You can do request.env['REQUEST_URI'] to see the full requested URI.. it will output something like below

http://localhost:3000/client/1/users/1?name=test

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