Solution 1:

Had this same problem and this worked for me:

root :to => "pages#show", :id => '1'

Solution 2:

As of Rails 4.0, you can declare the root route like this:

root 'controller#action'

Solution 3:

I'm using Rails 5.1 to point the home page to a specific blog. In config/routes.rb I have ...

root 'blogs#show', {id: 1}

This will point the root route to /blogs/1

I'm doing this on a blog site I'm building. The first blog will be the main site blog as well as the homepage.

Cheers

Solution 4:

Matthew's solution works, but I think it is more readable to fetch the object. For example, let's say you want to root to the Page#show action for the page with the name "landing". This is a bit more readable:

root :to => "pages#show", :id => Page.find_by_name("landing").id

From a performance perspective, this solution is worse because it requires an additional database query, but this solution is more readable if performance is not a high priority.

Solution 5:

Try:

 match 'pages/show/:id' => 'pages#show', :as => :root

In Rails console. rake routes | grep root, should show something like:

root     /pages/show/:id(.:format)      {:controller=>"pages", :action=>"show"}

Hope that helps.