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li3_rest: RESTful support for the Lithium framework

Introduction

This plugin lets you define one or more resources, which map automatically to their appropriate controller actions. The plugin provides a common set of default settings, which should work for the common cases (nonetheless it is possible to customize every part of the plugin easily). Read on for a hands-on guide on how to install and use the plugin.

Installation

To install and activate the plugin, you have to perform three easy steps.

1: Download or clone the plugin into your libraries directory.

cd app/libraries
git clone git://github.com/daschl/li3_rest.git

2: Enable the plugin at the bottom of your bootstrap file (app/config/bootstrap/libraries.php).

/**
 * Add some plugins:
 */
Libraries::add('li3_rest');

3: Use the extended Router class instead of the default one (at the top of app/config/routes.php).

// use lithium\net\http\Router;
use li3_rest\net\http\Router;

Basic Usage

If you want to add a resource, you have to call the Router::resource() method with one or more params. The first param is the name of the resource (which has great impact on the routes generated), the second one is an array of options that will optionally override the default settings.

If you want to add a Posts resource, add the following to app/config/routes.php:

Router::resource('Posts');

This will generate a bunch of routes. If you want to list them, you can use the li3 route command:

/posts(.{:type:\w+})*                               	{"controller":"posts","action":"index"}
/posts/{:id:[0-9a-f]{24}|[0-9]+}(.{:type:\w+})*        	{"controller":"posts","action":"show"}
/posts/add                          	                {"controller":"posts","action":"add"}
/posts(.{:type:\w+})*                            	    {"controller":"posts","action":"create"}
/posts/{:id:[0-9a-f]{24}|[0-9]+}/edit	                {"controller":"posts","action":"edit"}
/posts/{:id:[0-9a-f]{24}|[0-9]+}(.{:type:\w+})*       	{"controller":"posts","action":"update"}
/posts/{:id:[0-9a-f]{24}|[0-9]+}(.{:type:\w+})*       	{"controller":"posts","action":"delete"}

This routes look complex in the first place, but they try to be as flexible as possible. You can pass all default ids (both MongoDB and for relational databases) and always an optional type (like json). With the default resource activated, you can use the following URIs.

GET /posts or /posts.json => Show a list of available posts
GET /posts/1234 or /posts/1234.json => Show the post with the ID 1234
GET /posts/add => Add a new post (maybe a HTML form)
PUT /posts or /posts.json => Add a new post (has the form data attached)
GET /posts/1234/edit => Edit the post with the ID 1234 (maybe a HTML form)
PUT /posts/1234 or /posts/1234.json => Edit the post with the ID 1234 (has the form data attached)
DELETE /posts/1234 or /posts/1234.json => Deletes the post with the ID 1234

If you wonder why there is no POST http method included, here's the reason: in a classical RESTful design, POST is used to create a new sub-resource (and this plugin currently does not support sub-resources out of the box). If you use the helpers that come with this plugin, you should not notice any difference as they handle the http methods for you. Just keep this in mind when you test your web services with CURL.

Note: as this plugin is currently in the making, I'll add more documentation as soon as the api and generated routes have stableized.

Contributing

Feel free to fork the plugin and send in pull requests. If you find any bugs or need a feature that is not (yet) implemented, open a ticket.