Solution that works for your case but is not recommended
You have a predefined set of controllers (usually less than 10) in your application so you can put a constraint on controller name and then route everything else to user profile:
routes.MapRoute(
"Default",
"{controller}/{action}/{id}",
new { controller = "Home", action = "Index", id = UrlParameter.Optional },
new { controller = "Home|Admin|Reports|..." }
);
routes.MapRoute(
"Profile",
"{username}/{action}",
new { controller = "Profile", action = "Details" }
);
But this will not work in case some username is the same as your controller name. It's a small possibility based on experience end empirical data, but it's not 0% chance. When username is the same as some controller it automatically means it will get handled by the first route because constraints won't fail it.
Recommended solution
The best way would be to rather have URL requests as:
www.mydomain.com/profile/username
Why do I recommend it to be this way? Becasue this will make it much simpler and cleaner and will allow to have several different profile pages:
- details
www.mydomain.com/profile/username
- settings
www.mydomain.com/profile/username/settings
- messages
www.mydomain.com/profile/username/messages
- etc.
Route definition in this case would be like this:
routes.MapRoute(
"Profile",
"Profile/{username}/{action}",
new { controller = "Profile", action = "Details" }
);
routes.MapRoute(
"Default",
"{controller}/{action}/{id}",
new { controller = "Home", action = "Index", id = UrlParameter.Optional }
);
{controller}/{action}/{id}route configured before the route above, it will literally match any URL - in this case controller =somethingthatisnotacontrollername, action =Index, and empty id...routes are matched top to bottom, so there's little point defining anything under the default one... – Jon Jul 27 '11 at 1:19