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I've got a requirement to specify a named route in a Ruby on Rails project that returns the public/404.html page along with the 404 server response code.

Leaving it blank is not an option, please don't question why, it just is :) It absolutely must be a named route, or a map.connect entry would do.

Something like this would be great:

map.my_named_route '/some/route/', :response => '404'

Anyone have any idea what's the easiest way to do something like this. I could create a controller method which renders the 404.html file but thought there might be an existing cleaner way to do this. Looking forward to any responses - thanks,

Eliot

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3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Why dont you do this in Apache/nginx where you use mod_rewrite (or however nginx does rewrites) to link to a non-existent page or instead send a 410 (Gone, no longer exists) Flag?

Anyway, if you want the rails app to do this, I think the way is as you suggested, create a named route to an action that does a render(:file => "#{RAILS_ROOT}/public/404.html", :status => 404)

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You can route to a rack endpoint (rails 3) that vends a simple 404:

match 'my/route' => proc { [404, {}, ['']] }

This is particularly handy, for example, to define a named route to your omniauth endpoint:

match 'auth/:action' => proc { [404, {}, ['']] }, as: :omniauth_authorize
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In your routes.rb:

map.my_404 '/ohnoes', :controller => 'foobar', :action => 'ohnoes'

In FoobarController:

def ohnoes
  render :text => "Not found", :status => 404
end

If you need to render the same 404 file as a normal 404, you can do that with render :file.

See ActionController::Base documentation for examples.

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