17

I get an incorrect URL from the Action method when I use a URL rewrite.

I have this rewrite rule in web.config:

<rule name="Old Objects 2" stopProcessing="true">
  <match url="^transportbilar/(nya|begagnade|miljobilar)/(.*)$" ignoreCase="true"/>
  <action type="Rewrite" url="/transportbilar/{R:2}"/>
</rule>

This will rewrite an URL like /transportbilar/nya/fiat/7s76s8dg to /transportbilar/fiat/7s76s8dg, which works fine, but the Url.Action gets confused by this.

I use an expression like this to create an URL in the page:

url.Action("Slideshow", "Object", new { id = objectId });

When the URL rewrite is not used (browsing directly to the page), this produces the correct URL /Object/Slideshow/7s76s8dg, but when the URL rewrite is used, the Action method adds the first part of the page URL to the generated URL, and produces the incorrect URL /transportbilar/Object/Slideshow/7s76s8dg.

I think that I can do a Redirect in the rewrite rule instead, which would circumvent the problem as the requesting URL would change, but is there a way to make it work without changing it to a Redirect?

Edit:

The routes that I think could possibly be relevant are these (added in this order):

transportbilar/handlare/{id}/{criteria}
transportbilar/handlare
transportbilar
transportbilar/sokresultat/{criteria}
transportbilar/{brand}/{id}/{criteria}
{controller}/{action}/{id}

The last route would catch the url /Object/Slideshow/7s76s8dg and the second from last would catch /transportbilar/fiat/7s76s8dg.

4
  • Is transportbilar a virtual directory?
    – Tomasi
    May 4, 2011 at 4:45
  • 2
    What Routes do you have set up? Also, since you are using MVC, you should probably using routes rather than the IIS rewriting module. You'll run into more problems if you need to do user authentication. Have a look at learn.iis.net/page.aspx/496/…
    – musaul
    May 4, 2011 at 20:30
  • @diamandiev: No, it's not a directory at all, it's part of a route.
    – Guffa
    May 4, 2011 at 22:24
  • @Musaul: I have added the routes that I think possibly could affect this above.
    – Guffa
    May 4, 2011 at 22:35

5 Answers 5

5
+100

Hmmm.. don't think I can help you get to your rewrite based solution. I'm guessing internally IIS/ASP.NET may be having a problem that you may face when you try to hack a regex mapping in your routes - i.e. URL.Action can't determine the correct reverse mapping from the Controller/Action combination.

You could check what the following say about your URL, and if that gives you any hints as to what the problem is ...

<%= Request.Path %>
<%= Request.RawUrl %>
<%= Request.ServerVariables["HTTP_URL"] %>

... to see if `/transportbilar' is being added that stage.

In any case, I'd seriously go with redirecting the legacy URLs. That approach isolates your actual current system from the legacy, especially since it seems like your route collection is complicated enough already.

8
  • I put those in the page, and the RawUrl contains the original URL, and the other contain the rewritten URL. Is this a bug in IIS? What do you mean by "hack a regex mapping"?
    – Guffa
    May 6, 2011 at 17:25
  • 1
    So it looks like its the rewriter that's changing /Object/Slideshow/7s76s8dg to /transportbilar/Object/Slideshow/7s76s8dg. I'd try to isolate that rule and try it in a separate context/website with similar URLs to see if the problem can be replicated there.
    – musaul
    May 6, 2011 at 20:57
  • Regex routes ... iridescence.no/post/…
    – musaul
    May 6, 2011 at 20:57
  • @Musaul: No, it's not the rewriter that changes the URL, that's the URL that is produced by the Action method. It's the route {controller}/{action}/{id} that is used to create the URL, as that is the only route to use the controller and action in the URL. I'm not using any regular expressions in the routes.
    – Guffa
    May 7, 2011 at 7:53
  • The URLs in the request object should not be affected by url.action, they are set on the incoming request before mvc starts handling the request. They are, however, affected by the rewrite module. If that's already happened by that stage, mvc could well be seeing the wrong url, and mapping it to a different controller.
    – musaul
    May 7, 2011 at 11:09
3

Use routing instead of URL rewrites, you are using MVC after all.

Check this article about routing:

http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2007/12/03/asp-net-mvc-framework-part-2-url-routing.aspx

5
  • I am already using routes, and if I add this as a route also, they conflict. Depending on the order I add them, the Action method will produce the URL /transportbilar/nya/fiat/7s76s8dg when I want /transportbilar/fiat/7s76s8dg, or the URL /transportbilar/nya/fiat/7s76s8dg will be misinterpreded so that I end up with the id fiat instead of 7s76s8dg.
    – Guffa
    May 4, 2011 at 22:24
  • Remove the URL rewrite and ONLY use the route. I can't see why that wouldn't work. Controller=transportbilar Action=fiat Id=7s76s8dg May 4, 2011 at 23:11
  • Can't you create multiple routes like this? ... /transportbilar/nya/{action}/{id}, /transportbilar/begagnade/{action}/{id} and have them all handled by the same controller? ... or are you trying to use the url rewrite as a shorthand?
    – musaul
    May 4, 2011 at 23:46
  • That doesn't work because I want to handle both /transportbilar/nya/fiat/7s76s8dg and /transportbilar/fiat/7s76s8dg.
    – Guffa
    May 5, 2011 at 0:22
  • @Musaul: If the routes followed the same pattern, it would be no problem, and I already have multiple routes similar to that. The problem is that I have the older version of the URLs with nya/begagnade in them, and the new version without that distinction.
    – Guffa
    May 5, 2011 at 0:28
3

Is the Url rewriting stuff for legacy Urls?

Could you perhaps ditch the Url rewrite and using a route with constraints. Something like:

routes.MapRoute(
    "OldObject2",
    "transportbilar/{mycondition}/{make}/{id}",
    new { controller = "Object", action = "Slideshow" },
    new
    {
        mycondition = "nya|begagnade|miljobila"
    }
);

I'm not sure exactly what your app is doing so the above might not make 100% sense but should give you an idea of what I'm thinking...

3
  • I have already tried that, but with three separate routes. The problem with that is that it doesn't work to have both routes like transportbilar/nya/{make}/{id} and transportbilar/{make}/{id}. Depending on the order they are added, either the route mapping or the Action method uses the wrong route to decode/encode an URL.
    – Guffa
    May 6, 2011 at 17:31
  • @Guffa, why don't you make the {mycondition} be optional ? May 6, 2011 at 18:03
  • @Gaby aka G. Petrioli: I tried that, and neither resolving the URL or mathing the action worked.
    – Guffa
    May 6, 2011 at 19:30
1

This worked for me (borrowing a little from another answer):

routes.MapRoute(
    "NewRoute",
    "transportbilar/{make}/{id}",
    new { controller = "Home", action = "Test" }
);
routes.MapRoute(
    "OldRoute",
    "transportbilar/{mycondition}/{make}/{id}",
    new { controller = "Home", action = "Test" },
    new
    {
        mycondition = "nya|begagnade|miljobila"
    }
);

The new one goes first so the helper methods resolve to it. But both go to the same controller and action.

<p>@Html.ActionLink("link", "Test", new { make = "testmake4", id = 5})</p>

On both the old and new URLs this resolves to /transportbilar/testmake4/5

3
  • Thanks for the effort to test it. I have tried that (before and now once more), and both URLs resolve to the first route. It probably works in your test because getting make="nya" and id="testmarke4" doesn't cause an error, but I get an error when the make is sent to the id parameter in the controller method and it can't be parsed.
    – Guffa
    May 6, 2011 at 21:33
  • Make sure you haven't marked the id parameter as optional. That might cause it to match the wrong rule.
    – RandomEngy
    May 6, 2011 at 21:45
  • Also just double checked and the values are coming through correctly in both cases. (MVC 3)
    – RandomEngy
    May 6, 2011 at 21:48
0

You can use your these functions to avoid these problems:

    public static string UrlAction(string actionName) {
        return String.Format("/{0}", actionName);
    }

    public static string UrlAction(string actionName, string controllerName) {
        return String.Format("/{0}/{1}", controllerName, actionName);
    }

    public static string UrlAction(string actionName, string controllerName, RouteValueDictionary routeValues) {
        string url = String.Format("/{0}/{1}", controllerName, actionName);

        var parameters = routeValues.Select(s => string.Format("{0}={1}", s.Key, s.Value))
            .Aggregate((current, next) => string.Format("{0}&{1}", current, next));

        return url+"?"+parameters;
    }

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