API Versioning for Rails Routes

maletor picture maletor · Mar 9, 2012 · Viewed 31.3k times · Source

I'm trying to version my API like Stripe has. Below is given the latest API version is 2.

/api/users returns a 301 to /api/v2/users

/api/v1/users returns a 200 of users index at version 1

/api/v3/users returns a 301 to /api/v2/users

/api/asdf/users returns a 301 to /api/v2/users

So that basically anything that doesn't specify the version links to the latest unless the specified version exists then redirect to it.

This is what I have so far:

scope 'api', :format => :json do
  scope 'v:api_version', :api_version => /[12]/ do
    resources :users
  end

  match '/*path', :to => redirect { |params| "/api/v2/#{params[:path]}" }
end

Answer

Ryan Bigg picture Ryan Bigg · Mar 9, 2012

The original form of this answer is wildly different, and can be found here. Just proof that there's more than one way to skin a cat.

I've updated the answer since to use namespaces and to use 301 redirects -- rather than the default of 302. Thanks to pixeltrix and Bo Jeanes for the prompting on those things.


You might want to wear a really strong helmet because this is going to blow your mind.

The Rails 3 routing API is super wicked. To write the routes for your API, as per your requirements above, you need just this:

namespace :api do
  namespace :v1 do
    resources :users
  end

  namespace :v2 do
    resources :users
  end
  match 'v:api/*path', :to => redirect("/api/v2/%{path}")
  match '*path', :to => redirect("/api/v2/%{path}")
end

If your mind is still intact after this point, let me explain.

First, we call namespace which is super handy for when you want a bunch of routes scoped to a specific path and module that are similarly named. In this case, we want all routes inside the block for our namespace to be scoped to controllers within the Api module and all requests to paths inside this route will be prefixed with api. Requests such as /api/v2/users, ya know?

Inside the namespace, we define two more namespaces (woah!). This time we're defining the "v1" namespace, so all routes for the controllers here will be inside the V1 module inside the Api module: Api::V1. By defining resources :users inside this route, the controller will be located at Api::V1::UsersController. This is version 1, and you get there by making requests like /api/v1/users.

Version 2 is only a tiny bit different. Instead of the controller serving it being at Api::V1::UsersController, it's now at Api::V2::UsersController. You get there by making requests like /api/v2/users.

Next, a match is used. This will match all API routes that go to things like /api/v3/users.

This is the part I had to look up. The :to => option allows you to specify that a specific request should be redirected somewhere else -- I knew that much -- but I didn't know how to get it to redirect to somewhere else and pass in a piece of the original request along with it.

To do this, we call the redirect method and pass it a string with a special-interpolated %{path} parameter. When a request comes in that matches this final match, it will interpolate the path parameter into the location of %{path} inside the string and redirect the user to where they need to go.

Finally, we use another match to route all remaining paths prefixed with /api and redirect them to /api/v2/%{path}. This means requests like /api/users will go to /api/v2/users.

I couldn't figure out how to get /api/asdf/users to match, because how do you determine if that is supposed to be a request to /api/<resource>/<identifier> or /api/<version>/<resource>?

Anyway, this was fun to research and I hope it helps you!