Of course, all routes and controllers should return some kind of response to be sent back to the user's browser. Lumen provides several different ways to return responses. The most basic response is simply returning a string from a route or controller:
$router->get('/', function () {
return 'Hello World';
});
The given string will automatically be converted into an HTTP response by the framework.
However, for most routes and controller actions, you will be returning a full Illuminate\Http\Response
instance. Returning a full Response
instance allows you to customize the response's HTTP status code and headers. A Response
instance inherits from the Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response
class, providing a variety of methods for building HTTP responses:
use Illuminate\Http\Response;
$router->get('home', function () {
return (new Response($content, $status))
->header('Content-Type', $value);
});
For convenience, you may also use the response
helper:
$router->get('home', function () {
return response($content, $status)
->header('Content-Type', $value);
});
Note: For a full list of available
Response
methods, check out its API documentation and the Symfony API documentation.
Keep in mind that most response methods are chainable, allowing for the fluent building of responses. For example, you may use the header
method to add a series of headers to the response before sending it back to the user:
return response($content)
->header('Content-Type', $type)
->header('X-Header-One', 'Header Value')
->header('X-Header-Two', 'Header Value');
Or, you may use the withHeaders
method to specify an array of headers to be added to the response:
return response($content)
->withHeaders([
'Content-Type' => $type,
'X-Header-One' => 'Header Value',
'X-Header-Two' => 'Header Value',
]);
The response
helper may be used to conveniently generate other types of response instances. When the response
helper is called without arguments, an implementation of the Laravel\Lumen\Http\ResponseFactory
class is returned. This class provides several helpful methods for generating responses.
The json
method will automatically set the Content-Type
header to application/json
, as well as convert the given array into JSON using the json_encode
PHP function:
return response()->json(['name' => 'Abigail', 'state' => 'CA']);
You can optionally provide a status code and an array of additional headers:
return response()->json(['error' => 'Unauthorized'], 401, ['X-Header-One' => 'Header Value']);
If you would like to create a JSONP response, you may use the json
method in addition to setCallback
:
return response()
->json(['name' => 'Abigail', 'state' => 'CA'])
->setCallback($request->input('callback'));
The download
method may be used to generate a response that forces the user's browser to download the file at the given path. The download
method accepts a file name as the second argument to the method, which will determine the file name that is seen by the user downloading the file. Finally, you may pass an array of HTTP headers as the third argument to the method:
return response()->download($pathToFile);
return response()->download($pathToFile, $name, $headers);
Note: Symfony HttpFoundation, which manages file downloads, requires the file being downloaded to have an ASCII file name.
Redirect responses are instances of the Illuminate\Http\RedirectResponse
class, and contain the proper headers needed to redirect the user to another URL. There are several ways to generate a RedirectResponse
instance. The simplest method is to use the global redirect
helper method:
$router->get('dashboard', function () {
return redirect('home/dashboard');
});
When you call the redirect
helper with no parameters, an instance of Laravel\Lumen\Http\Redirector
is returned, allowing you to call any method on the Redirector
instance. For example, to generate a RedirectResponse
to a named route, you may use the route
method:
return redirect()->route('login');
If your route has parameters, you may pass them as the second argument to the route
method:
// For a route with the following URI: profile/{id}
return redirect()->route('profile', ['id' => 1]);
If you are redirecting to a route with an "ID" parameter that is being populated from an Eloquent model, you may simply pass the model itself. The ID will be extracted automatically:
return redirect()->route('profile', [$user]);