1) Not if you use a RESTful framework like RecessPHP or if you use a mod_rewrite rule in your .htaccess file to redirect all API requests to a single PHP file (known as the front controller).
.htaccess
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^/api/ api.php
api.php
$request = $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']; //this would be /users/show/abc.json
2) You can use the rewrite module of apache to redirect all api requests to a special PHP file that handles them. Depending on your apache configuration, the original requested (RESTful) url will be stored in a server variable in PHP, I believe it's $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
. Of course you could also just pass along a $_GET[]
variable to PHP that contained the RESTful url.
.htaccess
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^/api/([^.]+).(xml|json|atom) api.php?url=$1&type=$2
api.php
$request_parts = explode('/', $_GET['url']); // array('users', 'show', 'abc')
$file_type = $_GET['type'];
$output = get_data_from_db(); //Do your processing here
//You can outsource to other files via an include/require
//Output based on request
switch($file_type) {
case 'json':
echo json_encode($output);
break;
case 'xml':
echo xml_encode($output); //This isn't a real function, but you can make one
break;
default:
echo $output;
}
3) Twitter (and many other APIs) use this because it is a convenient way of supplying the format that an application expects back from an API. All of the API requests are rerouted to a single PHP file which handles creating all the files and echoing their contents to the output. The file is never actually stored on the server (unless it is cached).
Good Resources
A note on RecessPHP. It's certainly a great tool and I would encourage you look at it (maybe at its source to get an idea of how it processes things), but that said, it seems a bit clunky to me. The fact that path names are written in special comments seems very not-PHP to me. I'd stray away from this, and I wouldn't call it the perfect framework, but it's certainly a start. Good luck!
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…