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Attribute Routing not working in areas

Scenario: I have a Forms area in my ASP.NET MVC 5 site.

I'm trying to redirect to the Details Action which uses a custom route defined using the new Attribute Routing feature.

The RedirectToAction:

return RedirectToAction("Details", new { slug }); 

The action I'm redirecting to:

[HttpGet] [Route("forms/{slug}")] public ActionResult Details(string slug) {     var form = FormRepository.Get(slug);      ...      return View(model); } 

I would expect a redirect to http://localhost/forms/my-slug but instead the app is redirecting me to http://localhost/Forms/Details?slug=my-slug.

This means that the attribute routing is not working.

How can this be solved?

I have added the routes.MapMvcAttributeRoutes(); line to my RouteConfig:

public class RouteConfig {     public static void RegisterRoutes(RouteCollection routes)     {         routes.IgnoreRoute("{resource}.axd/{*pathInfo}");          routes.MapMvcAttributeRoutes();          routes.MapRoute(             name: "Default",             url: "{controller}/{action}/{id}",             defaults: new { controller = "Home", action = "Index", id = UrlParameter.Optional }         );     } } 

And here's my Application_Start():

protected void Application_Start() {     AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();     FilterConfig.RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);     RouteConfig.RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);     BundleConfig.RegisterBundles(BundleTable.Bundles); } 
like image 466
Thomas Stock Avatar asked Dec 09 '13 09:12

Thomas Stock


People also ask

Is attribute based routing is more maintainable?

Attribute routing gives you more control over your routes because you can map specifc controllers and actions to specific routes and not worry that the wrong route will be matched. Further, since routes are in close proximity to controllers troubleshooting routes is much easier.

Is conventional routing and attribute routing can work together?

Note: Attribute Routing is configuring before the Convention Routing or simple Routing. We can use Convention based Routing and Attribute Routing in the same project. Be sure attribute routing should be defined first to convention based routing.


2 Answers

You are probably combining convention based routing with attribute routing, and you should register your areas after you map the attribute routes.

The line

AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas(); 

should be called AFTER this line:

routes.MapMvcAttributeRoutes(); 

The explanation (from https://devblogs.microsoft.com/aspnet/attribute-routing-in-asp-net-mvc-5/):

If you are using both Areas with route attributes, and areas with convention based routes (set by an AreaRegistration class), then you need to make sure that area registration happen after MVC attribute routes are configured, however before the default convention-based route is set. The reason is that route registration should be ordered from the most specific (attributes) through more general (area registration) to the mist generic (the default route) to avoid generic routes from “hiding” more specific routes by matching incoming requests too early in the pipeline.

When you create a blank asp.net mvc website, add an area and start using attribute routing, you will encounter this problem because the "Add Area" action in visual studio adds the RegisterAllAreas call in your Application_Start, before the route configuration..

Alternative solution

Perhaps you do not intend to keep using convention based routing and prefer to only use attribute routing. In this case you can just delete the FormsAreaRegistration.cs file.

like image 197
Thomas Stock Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 06:09

Thomas Stock


Moving the AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas() to RouteConfig.cs wasn't enough for me. I also needed to use the AreaPrefix parameter for the RouteArea attibute:

//Use the named parameter "AreaPrefix" [RouteArea("AreaName", AreaPrefix = "area-name-in-url")] [RoutePrefix("controller-name-in-url")] public class SampleController : Controller {     [Route("{actionParameter}")]     public ActionResult Index(string actionParameter)     {         return View();     } } 

Edit: At some point, I came across a sample solution from Microsoft that nicely showed how to handle attribute routing. It also showed some nice examples of how to translate a SelectList into an array of input[type="radio"] items as well as doing the same with an array of input[type="checkbox"] items (if I recall). This sample solution is probably a better answer to this question--as well as giving some good examples on displaying radio buttons and checkbox items. If anyone knows of this sample solution, please add a comment with a link to it.

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MikeT Avatar answered Sep 20 '22 06:09

MikeT