View Source Controllers
Requirement: This guide expects that you have gone through the introductory guides and got a Phoenix application up and running.
Requirement: This guide expects that you have gone through the request life-cycle guide.
Phoenix controllers act as intermediary modules. Their functions — called actions — are invoked from the router in response to HTTP requests. The actions, in turn, gather all the necessary data and perform all the necessary steps before invoking the view layer to render a template or returning a JSON response.
Phoenix controllers also build on the Plug package, and are themselves plugs. Controllers provide the functions to do almost anything we need to in an action. If we do find ourselves looking for something that Phoenix controllers don't provide, we might find what we're looking for in Plug itself. Please see the Plug guide or the Plug documentation for more information.
A newly generated Phoenix app will have a single controller named PageController
, which can be found at lib/hello_web/controllers/page_controller.ex
which looks like this:
defmodule HelloWeb.PageController do
use HelloWeb, :controller
def home(conn, _params) do
render(conn, :home, layout: false)
end
end
The first line below the module definition invokes the __using__/1
macro of the HelloWeb
module, which imports some useful modules.
PageController
gives us the home
action to display the Phoenix welcome page associated with the default route Phoenix defines in the router.
Actions
Controller actions are just functions. We can name them anything we like as long as they follow Elixir's naming rules. The only requirement we must fulfill is that the action name matches a route defined in the router.
For example, in lib/hello_web/router.ex
we could change the action name in the default route that Phoenix gives us in a new app from home
:
get "/", PageController, :home
to index
:
get "/", PageController, :index
as long as we change the action name in PageController
to index
as well, the welcome page will load as before.
defmodule HelloWeb.PageController do
...
def index(conn, _params) do
render(conn, :index)
end
end
While we can name our actions whatever we like, there are conventions for action names which we should follow whenever possible. We went over these in the routing guide, but we'll take another quick look here.
- index - renders a list of all items of the given resource type
- show - renders an individual item by ID
- new - renders a form for creating a new item
- create - receives parameters for one new item and saves it in a data store
- edit - retrieves an individual item by ID and displays it in a form for editing
- update - receives parameters for one edited item and saves the item to a data store
- delete - receives an ID for an item to be deleted and deletes it from a data store
Each of these actions takes two parameters, which will be provided by Phoenix behind the scenes.
The first parameter is always conn
, a struct which holds information about the request such as the host, path elements, port, query string, and much more. conn
comes to Phoenix via Elixir's Plug middleware framework. More detailed information about conn
can be found in the Plug.Conn documentation.
The second parameter is params
. Not surprisingly, this is a map which holds any parameters passed along in the HTTP request. It is a good practice to pattern match against parameters in the function signature to provide data in a simple package we can pass on to rendering. We saw this in the request life-cycle guide when we added a messenger parameter to our show
route in lib/hello_web/controllers/hello_controller.ex
.
defmodule HelloWeb.HelloController do
...
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
render(conn, :show, messenger: messenger)
end
end
In some cases — often in index
actions, for instance — we don't care about parameters because our behavior doesn't depend on them. In those cases, we don't use the incoming parameters, and simply prefix the variable name with an underscore, calling it _params
. This will keep the compiler from complaining about the unused variable while still keeping the correct arity.
Rendering
Controllers can render content in several ways. The simplest is to render some plain text using the text/2
function which Phoenix provides.
For example, let's rewrite the show
action from HelloController
to return text instead. For that, we could do the following.
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
text(conn, "From messenger #{messenger}")
end
Now /hello/Frank
in your browser should display From messenger Frank
as plain text without any HTML.
A step beyond this is rendering pure JSON with the json/2
function. We need to pass it something that the Jason library can decode into JSON, such as a map. (Jason is one of Phoenix's dependencies.)
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
json(conn, %{id: messenger})
end
If we again visit /hello/Frank
in the browser, we should see a block of JSON with the key id
mapped to the string "Frank"
.
{"id": "Frank"}
The json/2
function is useful for writing APIs and there is also the html/2
function for rendering HTML, but most of the times we use Phoenix views to build our responses. For this, Phoenix includes the render/3
function. It is specially important for HTML responses, as Phoenix Views provide performance and security benefits.
Let's rollback our show
action to what we originally wrote in the request life-cycle guide:
defmodule HelloWeb.HelloController do
use HelloWeb, :controller
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
render(conn, :show, messenger: messenger)
end
end
In order for the render/3
function to work correctly, the controller and view must share the same root name (in this case Hello
), and the HelloHTML
module must include an embed_templates
definition specifying where its templates live. By default the controller, view module, and templates are collocated together in the same controller directory. In other words, HelloController
requires HelloHTML
, and HelloHTML
requires the existence of the lib/hello_web/controllers/hello_html/
directory, which must contain the show.html.heex
template.
render/3
will also pass the value which the show
action received for messenger
from the parameters as an assign.
If we need to pass values into the template when using render
, that's easy. We can pass a keyword like we've seen with messenger: messenger
, or we can use Plug.Conn.assign/3
, which conveniently returns conn
.
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
conn
|> Plug.Conn.assign(:messenger, messenger)
|> render(:show)
end
Note: Using Phoenix.Controller
imports Plug.Conn
, so shortening the call to assign/3
works just fine.
Passing more than one value to our template is as simple as connecting assign/3
functions together:
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
conn
|> assign(:messenger, messenger)
|> assign(:receiver, "Dweezil")
|> render(:show)
end
Or you can pass the assigns directly to render
instead:
def show(conn, %{"messenger" => messenger}) do
render(conn, :show, messenger: messenger, receiver: "Dweezil")
end
Generally speaking, once all assigns are configured, we invoke the view layer. The view layer (HelloWeb.HelloHTML
) then renders show.html
alongside the layout and a response is sent back to the browser.
Components and HEEx templates have their own guide, so we won't spend much time on them here. What we will look at is how to render different formats from inside a controller action.
New rendering formats
Rendering HTML through a template is fine, but what if we need to change the rendering format on the fly? Let's say that sometimes we need HTML, sometimes we need plain text, and sometimes we need JSON. Then what?
The view's job is not only to render HTML templates. Views are about data presentation. Given a bag of data, the view's purpose is to present that in a meaningful way given some format, be it HTML, JSON, CSV, or others. Many web apps today return JSON to remote clients, and Phoenix views are great for JSON rendering.
As an example, let's take PageController
's home
action from a newly generated app. Out of the box, this has the right view PageHTML
, the embedded templates from (lib/hello_web/controllers/page_html
), and the right template for rendering HTML (home.html.heex
.)
def home(conn, _params) do
render(conn, :home, layout: false)
end
What it doesn't have is a view for rendering JSON. Phoenix Controller hands off to a view module to render templates, and it does so per format. We already have a view for the HTML format, but we need to instruct Phoenix how to render the JSON format as well. By default, you can see which formats your controllers support in lib/hello_web.ex
:
def controller do
quote do
use Phoenix.Controller,
formats: [:html, :json],
layouts: [html: HelloWeb.Layouts]
...
end
end
So out of the box Phoenix will look for a HTML
and JSON
view modules based on the request format and the controller name. We can also explicitly tell Phoenix in our controller which view(s) to use for each format. For example, what Phoenix does by default can be explicitly set with the following in your controller:
plug :put_view, html: HelloWeb.PageHTML, json: HelloWeb.PageJSON
Let's add a PageJSON
view module at lib/hello_web/controllers/page_json.ex
:
defmodule HelloWeb.PageJSON do
def home(_assigns) do
%{message: "this is some JSON"}
end
end
Since the Phoenix View layer is simply a function that the controller renders, passing connection assigns, we can define a regular home/1
function and return a map to be serialized as JSON.
There are just a few more things we need to do to make this work. Because we want to render both HTML and JSON from the same controller, we need to tell our router that it should accept the json
format. We do that by adding json
to the list of accepted formats in the :browser
pipeline. Let's open up lib/hello_web/router.ex
and change plug :accepts
to include json
as well as html
like this.
defmodule HelloWeb.Router do
use HelloWeb, :router
pipeline :browser do
plug :accepts, ["html", "json"]
plug :fetch_session
plug :fetch_live_flash
plug :put_root_layout, html: {HelloWeb.LayoutView, :root}
plug :protect_from_forgery
plug :put_secure_browser_headers
end
...
Phoenix allows us to change formats on the fly with the _format
query string parameter. If we go to http://localhost:4000/?_format=json
, we will see %{"message": "this is some JSON"}
.
In practice, however, applications that need to render both formats typically use two distinct pipelines for each, such as the pipeline :api
already defined in your router file. To learn more, see our JSON and APIs guide.
Sending responses directly
If none of the rendering options above quite fits our needs, we can compose our own using some of the functions that Plug
gives us. Let's say we want to send a response with a status of "201" and no body whatsoever. We can do that with the Plug.Conn.send_resp/3
function.
Edit the home
action of PageController
in lib/hello_web/controllers/page_controller.ex
to look like this:
def home(conn, _params) do
send_resp(conn, 201, "")
end
Reloading http://localhost:4000 should show us a completely blank page. The network tab of our browser's developer tools should show a response status of "201" (Created). Some browsers (Safari) will download the response, as the content type is not set.
To be specific about the content type, we can use put_resp_content_type/2
in conjunction with send_resp/3
.
def home(conn, _params) do
conn
|> put_resp_content_type("text/plain")
|> send_resp(201, "")
end
Using Plug
functions in this way, we can craft just the response we need.
Setting the content type
Analogous to the _format
query string param, we can render any sort of format we want by modifying the HTTP Content-Type Header and providing the appropriate template.
If we wanted to render an XML version of our home
action, we might implement the action like this in lib/hello_web/page_controller.ex
.
def home(conn, _params) do
conn
|> put_resp_content_type("text/xml")
|> render(:home, content: some_xml_content)
end
We would then need to provide an home.xml.eex
template which created valid XML, and we would be done.
For a list of valid content mime-types, please see the MIME
library.
Setting the HTTP Status
We can also set the HTTP status code of a response similarly to the way we set the content type. The Plug.Conn
module, imported into all controllers, has a put_status/2
function to do this.
Plug.Conn.put_status/2
takes conn
as the first parameter and as the second parameter either an integer or a "friendly name" used as an atom for the status code we want to set. The list of status code atom representations can be found in Plug.Conn.Status.code/1
documentation.
Let's change the status in our PageController
home
action.
def home(conn, _params) do
conn
|> put_status(202)
|> render(:home, layout: false)
end
The status code we provide must be a valid number.
Redirection
Often, we need to redirect to a new URL in the middle of a request. A successful create
action, for instance, will usually redirect to the show
action for the resource we just created. Alternately, it could redirect to the index
action to show all the things of that same type. There are plenty of other cases where redirection is useful as well.
Whatever the circumstance, Phoenix controllers provide the handy redirect/2
function to make redirection easy. Phoenix differentiates between redirecting to a path within the application and redirecting to a URL — either within our application or external to it.
In order to try out redirect/2
, let's create a new route in lib/hello_web/router.ex
.
defmodule HelloWeb.Router do
...
scope "/", HelloWeb do
...
get "/", PageController, :home
get "/redirect_test", PageController, :redirect_test
...
end
end
Then we'll change PageController
's home
action of our controller to do nothing but to redirect to our new route.
defmodule HelloWeb.PageController do
use HelloWeb, :controller
def home(conn, _params) do
redirect(conn, to: ~p"/redirect_test")
end
end
We made use of Phoenix.VerifiedRoutes.sigil_p/2
to build our redirect path, which is the preferred approach to reference any path within our application. We learned about verified routes in the routing guide.
Finally, let's define in the same file the action we redirect to, which simply renders the home, but now under a new address:
def redirect_test(conn, _params) do
render(conn, :home, layout: false)
end
When we reload our welcome page, we see that we've been redirected to /redirect_test
which shows the original welcome page. It works!
If we care to, we can open up our developer tools, click on the network tab, and visit our root route again. We see two main requests for this page - a get to /
with a status of 302
, and a get to /redirect_test
with a status of 200
.
Notice that the redirect function takes conn
as well as a string representing a relative path within our application. For security reasons, the :to
option can only redirect to paths within your application. If you want to redirect to a fully-qualified path or an external URL, you should use :external
instead:
def home(conn, _params) do
redirect(conn, external: "https://elixir-lang.org/")
end
Flash messages
Sometimes we need to communicate with users during the course of an action. Maybe there was an error updating a schema, or maybe we just want to welcome them back to the application. For this, we have flash messages.
The Phoenix.Controller
module provides the put_flash/3
to set flash messages as a key-value pair and placing them into a @flash
assign in the connection. Let's set two flash messages in our HelloWeb.PageController
to try this out.
To do this we modify the home
action as follows:
defmodule HelloWeb.PageController do
...
def home(conn, _params) do
conn
|> put_flash(:error, "Let's pretend we have an error.")
|> render(:home, layout: false)
end
end
In order to see our flash messages, we need to be able to retrieve them and display them in a template layout. We can do that using Phoenix.Flash.get/2
which takes the flash data and the key we care about. It then returns the value for that key.
For our convenience, a flash_group
component is already available and added to the beginning of our welcome page
<.flash_group flash={@flash} />
When we reload the welcome page, our message should appear in the top right corner of the page.
The flash functionality is handy when mixed with redirects. Perhaps you want to redirect to a page with some extra information. If we reuse the redirect action from the previous section, we can do:
def home(conn, _params) do
conn
|> put_flash(:error, "Let's pretend we have an error.")
|> redirect(to: ~p"/redirect_test")
end
Now if you reload the welcome page, you will be redirected and the flash message will be shown once more.
Besides put_flash/3
, the Phoenix.Controller
module has another useful function worth knowing about. clear_flash/1
takes only conn
and removes any flash messages which might be stored in the session.
Phoenix does not enforce which keys are stored in the flash. As long as we are internally consistent, all will be well. :info
and :error
, however, are common and are handled by default in our templates.
Error pages
Phoenix has two views called ErrorHTML
and ErrorJSON
which live in lib/hello_web/controllers/
. The purpose of these views is to handle errors in a general way for incoming HTML or JSON requests. Similar to the views we built in this guide, error views can return both HTML and JSON responses. See the Custom Error Pages How-To for more information.