I have an app using react @0.14, redux @3.05, react-router @1.0.3, and redux-simple-router @2.0.2. I'm trying to configure onEnter transitions for some of my routes based on store state. The transition hooks successfully fire and push new state to my store, which changes the url. However, the actual component that is rendered on the page is the original component handler from the route match, not the new component handler for the new url.
Here is what my routes.js
file looks like
export default function configRoutes(store) {
const authTransition = function authTransition(location, replaceWith) {
const state = store.getState()
const user = state.user
if (!user.isAuthenticated) {
store.dispatch(routeActions.push('/login'))
}
}
return (
<Route component={App}>
<Route path="/" component={Home}/>
<Route path="/login" component={Login}/>
<Route path="/dashboard" component={Dashboard} onEnter={authTransition}/>
<Route path="/workouts" component={Workout} onEnter={authTransition}>
<IndexRoute component={WorkoutsView}/>
<Route path="/workouts/create" component={WorkoutCreate}/>
</Route>
</Route>
)
}
Here is my Root.js
component that gets inserted into the DOM
export default class Root extends React.Component {
render() {
const { store, history } = this.props
const routes = configRoutes(store)
return (
<Provider store={store}>
<div>
{isDev ? <DevTools /> : null}
<Router history={history} children={routes} />
</div>
</Provider>
)
}
}
To clarify, if I go to '/workouts', it will fire the onEnter authTransition hook, dispatch the redux-simple-router push action, change the url to '/login', but will display the Workout component on the page. Looking in Redux DevTools shows that state -> router -> location -> pathname
is '/login'.
The state flow is
Am I passing the store to the routes incorrectly? I can't figure out why the next Router/Update_Location doesn't work
Turns out you want to use the react-router api (replace), not the redux-simple-router to control your transitions.
const authTransition = function authTransition(nextState, replace, callback) {
const state = store.getState()
const user = state.user
// todo: in react-router 2.0, you can pass a single object to replace :)
if (!user.isAuthenticated) {
replace({ nextPathname: nextState.location.pathname }, '/login', nextState.location.query)
}
callback()
}
Also, be careful. I saw a lot of documentation out there for the react-router replace where you pass a single object. That's for react-router 2.0-rc*. If you're using react-router 1.0, you're going to want to pass replace 3 separate arguments.
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