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React Route Guard

Based on react-router-dom with route guard functionality on top of it. It makes it easier to control permissions and roles on a route.

Requirements

  • Node <=7.1

Install

yarn add react-route-guard

You don't need to install @types/react-route-guard, as it's written in TypeScript and the npm module already has index.d.ts there.

Concept

  • SecureRoute

    <SecureRoute> works like same way as <Route> and therefore you can use it in the exact same way. To enable the RouteGuard features pass in extra props (see below). SecureRoute will then perform the following tasks:

    • No DOM component will be created before <SecureRoute> has finished its check

    • When the <SecureRoute> component has mounted, it will run RouteGuard.shouldRoute(). When this function is complete, SecureRoute will update the state. RouteGuard.shouldRoute() can synchronously return a boolean or asynchronously return a Promise<boolean> or Observable<boolean>

    • SecureRoute.render() will only render the route component when route guard has finished, and will render <Redirect to={this.props.redirectToPathWhenFail | '/'} /> if the route guard check fails

    <Router>
    <Switch>
        <SecureRoute path='/about' component={AboutComponent} />
        <SecureRoute path='/users' component={UserListComponent} routeGuard={UserRouteGuard} redirectToPathWhenFail='/login' />
        <SecureRoute path='/users/:id' component={UserEditComponent} routeGuard={UserRouteGuard} redirectToPathWhenFail='/login' />
        <Route />
        <Route />
    </Switch>
    </Router>
  • RouteGuard

    RouteGuard is responsible for telling <SecureRoute> whether to enter that route or not. shouldRoute() is the key to making that happen, this method must return a boolean value in sync mode or return a Promise<boolean> or Observable<boolean> in async mode. Before the RouteGuard finished, no child components will be rendered, which means no real routing will be executed. RouteGuard will stop unauthorized users seeing a route altogether.

export type RouteGuardResultType = boolean | Promise<boolean> | Observable<boolean>

/**
* @export
* @interface RouteGuard
*/
export interface RouteGuard {
    shouldRoute: () => RouteGuardResultType
}

Usage

Here are some shouldRoute() example for different situation:

  • Sync example
shouldRoute(): RouteGuardResultType {
    // Sync API call here, and the final return value must be `map` to `boolean` if not
    const resultFromSyncApiCall = true;
    return resultFromSyncApiCall
}
  • Async Promise example
async shouldRoute(): RouteGuardResultType {
    // You can use a `Promise` to get
    // the final boolean result 
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        // Simulate call backend API for checking the authentication and even authorization
        setTimeout(() => {
            resolve(true)
        }, 3000)
    });
}
  • Async Promise example with multiple promises
async shouldRoute(): RouteGuardResultType {
    // You can use `Promise.all()` for getting
    // the final boolean result to based on multiple requirements 

    const results = await Promise.all([
        loginUserPromise,
        getUserPermissionPromise,
        getUserDashboardPromise
    ])

    return results[0].user ? true : false
}
  • Async Observable example
shouldRoute(): RouteGuardResultType {
    // If use Redux, we can dispatch an action to tell UI that `RouteGuard` is running.
    // This is useful for displaying loading indicators before the `shouldRoute` is complete
    appStore.dispatch(routingActions.executeRouteGuard())

    // Simulate a call to an API to grab the user and permissions
    return Observable.timer(1000)
        .map(n => {
            // When API call done, we need to `map` to `boolean` if not
            return true
        })
        .take(1)
        // If use Redux, then dispatch an action to tell UI that `RouteGuard` is done, can hide 
        // the loading spin right now.
        .do(() => appStore.dispatch(routingActions.executeRouteGuardDone()))
    }
  • Async real world example
shouldRoute(): RouteGuardResultType {
    appStore.dispatch(routingActions.executeRouteGuard())

    // Get the entire state to check whether the user is already logged in or not
    const appState: AppState = appStore.getState() as AppState;

    // Already logged in, pass instantly
    if (appState.auth.loginUser && (!appState.auth.loginError || appState.auth.loginError === '')) {
        // We can call any BackEnd APIs to rebuild the entire app state that are needed for the 
        // routed component to be rendered correctly
        //
        // Passed
        return true
    } else {
        // Say for instance a user just opened a URL in a new tab, then we can try to load some 
        // cookie or call some API to load user info. If the API responds successfully, 
        // then the check has passed. From here we rebuild the entire
        // app state for the routed component if needed
        
        return UserService.loadUserStateFromCookie()
            .switchMap(loadedUser => loadedUser ? UserService.loadUserList() : Observable.of(false))
            .do(userList => {
                // Dispatch an action to let Reducer rebuild the state synchronize
                if (userList && typeof(userList) === 'object') {
                    appStore.dispatch(actions.rebuildState(userList))) 
                }
            }
            // Map to boolean result
            .map(userList => userList ? true : false)
            .take(1)
    }
}

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Add the power Route Guard functionality to `react-router-dom`

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