<?php /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Application Routes |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Simply tell Laravel the HTTP verbs and URIs it should respond to. It is a | breeze to setup your applications using Laravel's RESTful routing, and it | is perfectly suited for building both large applications and simple APIs. | Enjoy the fresh air and simplicity of the framework. | | Let's respond to a simple GET request to http://example.com/hello: | | Route::get('hello', function() | { | return 'Hello World!'; | }); | | You can even respond to more than one URI: | | Route::post('hello, world', function() | { | return 'Hello World!'; | }); | | It's easy to allow URI wildcards using (:num) or (:any): | | Route::put('hello/(:any)', function($name) | { | return "Welcome, $name."; | }); | */ Route::get('/', function() { return View::make('home.index'); }); /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Application 404 & 500 Error Handlers |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | To centralize and simplify 404 handling, Laravel uses an awesome event | system to retrieve the response. Feel free to modify this function to | your tastes and the needs of your application. | | Similarly, we use an event to handle the display of 500 level errors | within the application. These errors are fired when there is an | uncaught exception thrown in the application. | */ Event::listen('404', function() { return Response::error('404'); }); Event::listen('500', function() { return Response::error('500'); }); /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Route Filters |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Filters provide a convenient method for attaching functionality to your | routes. The built-in "before" and "after" filters are called before and | after every request to your application, and you may even create other | filters that can be attached to individual routes. | | Let's walk through an example... | | First, define a filter: | | Route::filter('filter', function() | { | return 'Filtered!'; | }); | | Next, attach the filter to a route: | | Router::register('GET /', array('before' => 'filter', function() | { | return 'Hello World!'; | })); | */ Route::filter('before', function() { // Do stuff before every request to your application... }); Route::filter('after', function($response) { // Do stuff after every request to your application... }); Route::filter('csrf', function() { if (Request::forged()) return Response::error('500'); }); Route::filter('auth', function() { if (Auth::guest()) return Redirect::to('login'); });