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grape-route-helpers

Build Status

Provides named route helpers for Grape APIs, similar to Rails' route helpers.

Installation

Compatibility with Grape

If you're using grape 0.16.0 or higher, you'll need version 2.0.0 or higher of grape-route-helpers.

Rails

1.) Add the gem to your Gemfile.

$ bundle install grape-route-helpers

Sinatra/Rack

1.) Add the gem to your Gemfile if you're using Bundler.

If you're not using Bundler to install/manage dependencies:

$ gem install grape-route-helpers
# environment setup file
require 'grape'
require 'grape/route_helpers'

2.) Write a rake task called :environment that loads the application's environment first. This gem's tasks are dependent on it. You could put this in the root of your project directory:

# Rakefile

require 'rake'
require 'bundler'
Bundler.setup
require 'grape-route-helpers'
require 'grape-route-helpers/tasks'

desc 'load the Sinatra environment.'
task :environment do
  require File.expand_path('your_app_file', File.dirname(__FILE__))
end

Usage

List All Helper Names

To see which methods correspond to which paths, and which options you can pass them:

# In your API root directory, at the command line
$ rake grape:route_helpers

Use Helpers in IRB/Pry

You can use helper methods in your REPL session by including a module:

[1] pry(main)> include GrapeRouteHelpers::NamedRouteMatcher

Use Helpers in Your API

Use the methods inside your Grape API actions. Given this example API:

class ExampleAPI < Grape::API
  version 'v1'
  prefix 'api'
  format 'json'

  get 'ping' do
    'pong'
  end

  resource :cats do
    get '/' do
      %w(cats cats cats)
    end

    route_param :id do
      get do
        'cat'
      end
    end
  end

  route :any, '*anything' do
    redirect api_v1_cats_path
  end
end

You'd have the following methods available inside your Grape API actions:

# specifying the version when using Grape's "path" versioning strategy
api_v1_ping_path # => '/api/v1/ping.json'

# specifying the format
api_v1_cats_path(format: '.xml') # => '/api/v1/cats.xml'

# adding a query string
api_v1_cats_path(params: { sort_by: :age }) # => '/api/v1/cats?sort_by=age'

# passing in values required to build a path
api_v1_cats_path(id: 1) # => '/api/v1/cats/1.json'

# catch-all paths have helpers
api_v1_anything_path # => '/api/v1/*anything'

Custom Helper Names

If you want to assign a custom helper name to a route, pass the :as option when creating your route in your API:

class Base < Grape::API
  get 'ping', as: 'is_the_server_running'
    'pong'
  end
end

This results in creating a helper called is_the_server_running_path.

Testing

You can use route helpers in your API tests by including the GrapeRouteHelpers::NamedRouteMatcher module inside your specs. Here's an example:

require 'spec_helper'

describe Api::Base do
  include GrapeRouteHelpers::NamedRouteMatcher

  describe 'GET /ping' do
    it 'returns a 200 OK' do
      get api_v2_ping_path
      expect(response.status).to be(200)
    end
  end
end

Contributing

1.) Fork it

2.) Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)

3.) Write specs for your feature

4.) Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')

5.) Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)

6.) Create a new pull request

License

See LICENSE