2

How can you adapt a standard Authlogic app so instead of the home page every time, it directs a user to whatever link they were trying to get to?

Example 1 - standard log in works as expected

User goes to app.com
Goes through 'login' process
Redirected to home_url

Example 2 - user attempts to visit a specific page

User goes to app.com/specific_link
Redirected to login_url for authentication
Expects to be sent back to /special_link; instead sent to home_url

How can I return the user to the link they want in Example 2?

4 Answers 4

1

Save the page when you go to login, then used that to return the user to that page after login, e.g.

# redirect to the login page. Call this in the login action, when successful.
def redirect_away(*params)
  session[:original_uri] = request.request_uri
  redirect_to(*params)
end

# returns to the original url from a redirect_away or to a default url
def redirect_back(*params)
  uri = session[:original_uri]
  session[:original_uri] = nil
  if uri
    redirect_to uri
  else
    redirect_to(*params)
  end
end
1
  • I just realized I was missing the second part of this code in my user_sessions_controller. Thanks Michael.
    – sscirrus
    Apr 23, 2013 at 17:24
1

Michael was close, but there is no "request_uri" method for the request object.

Murifox was also close, but #referrer does not give you the information you want. You probably want #url.

Try this (assumes "authenticated" returns your logged in status):

before_filter :check_authentication
.
.
.
private

def check_authentication
  unless authenticated
    session[:intented_page] = request.url
    redirect_to login_page
  end
end

Then in the controller that handles logins, after a successful login in you just do:

redirect_to session[:intended_page]

Incidentally: the #referrer method was originally mis-spelled as #referer. Now there is an alias so both spellings work, but "referrer" is proper according to the dictionary.

(Edited later): Actually #referrer might be what you want. If you are IN the controller for the target url when you check your authentication (as in the code here) then you want #url. If you are in a controller where you've been redirected from the target controller, then you want the #referrer.

0

I think request.referer holds this information for you. So you check for the existence of this attribute on the request object, and if it exists, you redirect to it, instead of the home_url.

if request.referer
  redirect_to request.referer
else
  redirect_to home_url
end

Something like this.

1
  • Be careful when using the referrer. Imagine a user being redirected to a login page. If they have to make more than one attempt at entering their password, you'll lose the original referrer.
    – Aupajo
    Sep 25, 2013 at 1:18
0

While the above suggestions will work use of session is not the best option cookies have a maximum size of 4,096 bytes. This is not much and if your mixing what could be a rather long URL could cause your session store to fail.

You should use the cookies method instead. This will create a separate unencrypted(by default) cookie keeping your session data separate.

cookies[:original_uri] = { value: request.request_uri, expires: 10.minutes.from_now }

Then to read the cookie you use

cookies[:original_uri]

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