Kohana $this->request->param('id') - what is it used for - GET or POST - kohana

I'm new to Kohana. It is used this:
$this->request->param('id')
when should I use it - it means POST or GET?
When could I use it - how to pass parameters when they are $_POST or $_GET data?
Thanks!

Both POST and GET in fact are not true.
For POST you will use:
$this->request->post();
For GET you will use:
$this->request->query();
That what you are asking:
$this->request->param('id')
is used if you want to get route id parameter.
Read about routes here:
https://kohanaframework.org/3.3/guide/kohana/routing

Related

How to make optional params name in express route?

Here is below my code of route:-
app.get('/server/lead/get/:id?', leadCtrl.get);
app.get('/server/lead/filter/:filterQuery', leadCtrl.get);
As you see above i am using different route to access same controller method leadCtrl.get.
Now, i want something like route app.get('/server/lead/get/:id?:filter?', leadCtrl.get);. So, i can get params either req.params.id or req.params.filter but only one at a time.
What you asked in the question is not possible in the form that you describe it.
Now, i want something like route
app.get('/server/lead/get/:id?:filter?', leadCtrl.get);. So, i can get
params either req.params.id or req.params.filter but only one at a
time.
Your router would have no way to differentiate those two parameters. If it got a request to /server/lead/get/X then what is X? A filter or an ID?
Your options
You have few solutions here:
You can either keep using two routes like you did before.
You can use a common parameter for both cases as Robert explained in the comments.
Or you can use what seems to me the perfect solution for your use case - named query parameters - just use a route /server/lead/get and use query parameters to pass id and the filter.
Example URLs:
/server/lead/get?id=xxx
/server/lead/get?filterQuery=xxx
You will only have to make sure in your handler that only one of those two are set at a time with something like:
if (req.query.id && req.query.filterQuery) {
// respond with error
}
You can even mix the two if you have app.get('/server/lead/get/:id?') route you can have the id in the route and filterQuery as a query parameter. Now the URLs would be:
/server/lead/get/xxx (for id)
/server/lead/get?filterQuery=xxx (for filter)
For more info see: http://expressjs.com/en/api.html#req.query
Better way
If you follow some REST conventions then you can use:
app.get('/server/lead/:id') for one object with id (not optional)
app.get('/server/lead') for a list of objects (with optional filterQuery passed as a query parameter)
That way you would always know that when you access:
/server/lead/xxx - then it's one object with ID = xxx
/server/lead - then it's a list of any objects
/server/lead?filterQuery=xxx - then it's a list of objects that match the query
If you follow the REST conventions for things like this instead of inventing your own, it would be much easier for you to design the routes and handlers, and it would be much easier for other people to use your system.
You may also want to use plural /server/leads instead of /server/lead which is common with REST. That way it will be more obvious that leads is a list and leads/id is one of its elements.
For more info see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_state_transfer
http://www.restapitutorial.com/lessons/whatisrest.html
https://spring.io/understanding/REST
You have to realize that the following two routes match exactly the same:
app.get('/server/lead/get/:id?', leadCtrl.get);
app.get('/server/lead/get/:filter?', leadCtrl.get);
Express doesn't care about how you name the placeholders, so any requests for /server/lead/get/SOMEVALUE will always match the first (the one with :id).
You can add a distinction yourself, by only allowing a parameter to match a particular regular expression. From your code, it looks like :id should match MongoDB ObjectId's, so you can create a specific match for those:
app.get('/server/lead/get/:id([a-fA-F0-9]{24})?', leadCtrl.get);
If SOMEVALUE matches an ObjectId, it will call leadCtrl.get and populate req.params.id. If you also add another router for "the rest", you can also cover the req.params.filter case:
app.get('/server/lead/get/:filter?', leadCtrl.get);
As an aside: you're saying that you're passing JSON to the "filter" routes, in the URL. I would strongly suggest using a POST route for that, and post the JSON as request body content.

restify.js route endpoint conflict with parameter

My code is like below:
server.get('/currency/:code', currency.find);
server.get('/currency/rates', currency.rate_getall);
Whenever I try to reach [/rates] endpoint, the server will assume I am passing parameter to '/currency/:code' route. How can I fix this? Thank you.
Ryan
If you can I would consider changing up your rest interface just a little.
server.get('/currency/:code', currency.find);
server.get('/currency/rates/:type', currency.rate);
That way it solves your initial problem and allows for flexibility in the future if you just want to return a rate for a particular currency.
Inside your currency.rate function you could check for either an id or the literal 'all' and return what is appropriate.

When to use 'app.params' and 'req.params'?

Since, I can get parameters from both the methods using a code similar to the one below:
req.params.<PARAM NAME> in single/many separate app.METHOD function(s)
(think this may result in code repetition)
&
app.params(<ARRAY>,<CALLBACK>) function, independent of the app.METHOD functions, and called if the URL contains any parameter (:id, :name .etc)
What are the use-cases to apply one over the other?
My best guess would be is using app.params for parameter validation or some sort of preprocessing. For example the express docs provide and example where you attach req.user information to the request using app.params and after that you can work directly with the user information instead of processing the parameter again. Using req.params would be more specific in terms of processing the specific query. For example I'd use req.params for a REST endpoint which should perform an operation by id (update/delete) as in general there shouldn't be any additional preprocessing involder.

Best practice to pass query conditions in ajax request

I'm writing a REST api in node js that will execute a sql query and send the results;
in the request I need to send the WHERE conditions; ex:
GET 127.0.0.1:5007/users //gets the list of users
GET 127.0.0.1:5007/users
id = 1 //gets the user with id 1
Right now the conditions are passed from the client to the rest api in the request's headers.
In the API I'm using sequelize, an ORM that needs to receive WHERE conditions in a particular form (an object); ex: having the condition:
(x=1 AND (y=2 OR z=3)) OR (x=3 AND y=1)
this needs to be formatted as a nested object:
-- x=1
-- AND -| -- y=2
| -- OR ----|
| -- z=3
-- OR -|
|
| -- x=3
-- AND -|
-- y=1
so the object would be:
Sequelize.or (
Sequelize.and (
{x=1},
Sequelize.or(
{y=2},
{z=3}
)
),
Sequelize.and (
{x=3},
{y=1}
)
)
Now I'm trying to pass a simple string (like "(x=1 AND (y=2 OR z=3)) OR (x=3 AND y=1)"), but then I will need a function on the server that can convert the string in the needed object (this method in my opinion has the advantage that the developer writing the client, can pass the where conditions in a simple way, like using sql, and this method is also indipendent from the used ORM, with no need to change the client if we need to change the server or use a different ORM);
The function to read and convert the conditions' string into an object is giving me headache (I'm trying to write one without success, so if you have some examples about how to do something like this...)
What I would like to get is a route capable of executing almost any kind of sql query and give the results:
now I have a different route for everything:
127.0.0.1:5007/users //to get all users
127.0.0.1:5007/users/1 //to get a single user
127.0.0.1:5007/lastusers //to get user registered in the last month
and so on for the other tables i need to query (one route for every kind of request I need in the client);
instead I would like to have only one route, something like:
127.0.0.1:5007/request
(when calling this route I will pass the table name and the conditions' string)
Do you think this solution would be a good solution or you generally use other ways to handle this kind of things?
Do you have any idea on how to write a function to convert the conditions' string into the desired object?
Any suggestion would be appreciated ;)
I would strongly advise you not to expose any part of your database model to your clients. Doing so means you can't change anything you expose without the risk of breaking the clients. One suggestion as far as what you've supplied is that you can and should use query parameters to cut down on the number of endpoints you've got.
GET /users //to get all users
GET /users?registeredInPastDays=30 //to get user registered in the last month
GET /users/1 //to get a single user
Obviously "registeredInPastDays" should be renamed to something less clumsy .. it's just an example.
As far as the conditions string, there ought to be plenty of parsers available online. The grammar looks very straightforward.
IMHO the main disadvantage of your solution is that you are creating just another API for quering data. Why create sthm from scratch if it is already created? You should use existing mature query API and focus on your business logic rather then inventing sthm new.
For example, you can take query syntax from Odata. Many people have been developing that standard for a long time. They have already considered different use cases and obstacles for query API.
Resources are located with a URI. You can use or mix three ways to address them:
Hierarchically with a sequence of path segments:
/users/john/posts/4711
Non hierarchically with query parameters:
/users/john/posts?minVotes=10&minViews=1000&tags=java
With matrix parameters which affect only one path segment:
/users;country=ukraine/posts
This is normally sufficient enough but it has limitations like the maximum length. In your case a problem is that you can't easily describe and and or conjunctions with query parameters. But you can use a custom or standard query syntax. For instance if you want to find all cars or vehicles from Ford except the Capri with a price between $10000 and $20000 Google uses the search parameter
q=cars+OR+vehicles+%22ford%22+-capri+%2410000..%2420000
(the %22 is a escaped ", the %24 a escaped $).
If this does not work for your case and you want to pass data outside of the URI the format is just a matter of your taste. Adding a custom header like X-Filter may be a valid approach. I would tend to use a POST. Although you just want to query data this is still RESTful if you treat your request as the creation of a search result resource:
POST /search HTTP/1.1
your query-data
Your server should return the newly created resource in the Location header:
HTTP/1.1 201 Created
Location: /search/3
The result can still be cached and you can bookmark it or send the link. The downside is that you need an additional POST.

how to rewrite search[] to something else with htaccess

I have created a search form with get method. But when the url looks like this search.php?search[] or search?search[] (mod_rewrite) then I get a sql fattal error. It's passing an array and I want to avoid that problem.
my question is how do I redirect a person from that url to search.php
It sounds like you are directly passing the ?search[] query string variable into your SQL. mod_rewrite won't fix this for you... what if I decide to call your page with http://www.yoursite.com/search.php?search=;DROP TABLE users;? You simply aren't able to use mod_rewrite to predict all the bad kinds of input that a user can come up with.
Your code needs to be doing input validation and sanitization. You must assume that everything your script receives from the user is malicious and dangerous. That includes all data inside $_GET, $_POST and $_COOKIE.
The right solution here is to check that $_GET['search'] is a valid value to be passing to your SQL. Something like:
if (is_string($_GET['search']) && ! empty($_GET['search']) {
//escape the input properly using your database-specific method, e.g.:
$searchParam = mysql_real_escape_string($_GET['search']);
//run your query with the escaped data
}
At a minimum, that would ensure that your passed in search variable was not an empty string.

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