I solved this problem myself by having a login form in the header that always submits to one login controller, but the catch is that the header login form (which appears on every page) always has a hidden input called redirect which the actual login controller captures...
Here's the basic set up (make sure the url helper is loaded):
The Header Login Form
<form action="/login" method="post">
<input type="hidden" name="redirect" value="<?php echo current_url(); ?>" />
<input type="text" name="username" value="" />
<input type="password" name="password" value="" />
<input type="submit" name="login" value="Login" id="submit">
</form>
The Login Controller Form
<form id="login" action="" method="post">
<input type="text" name="username" id="username" value="" />
<input type="password" name="password" id="password" value=""/>
<?php if(isset($_POST['redirect'])) : ?>
<input type="hidden" name="redirect" value="<?php echo $_POST['redirect']; ?>" />
<?php endif; ?>
<input type="submit" name="login" id="submit" value="Login" />
</form>
The best part is you keep setting the redirect on failure and the redirect input only gets set if you're logging in from somewhere else.
The Controller
function index()
{
if( ! $this->form_validation->run())
{
// do your error handling thing
}
else
{
// log the user in, then redirect accordingly
$this->_redirect();
}
}
function _redirect()
{
// Is there a redirect to handle?
if( ! isset($_POST['redirect']))
{
redirect("site/members_area", "location");
return;
}
// Basic check to make sure we aren't redirecting to the login page
// current_url would be your login controller
if($_POST['redirect'] === current_url())
{
redirect("site/members_area", "location");
return;
}
redirect($_POST['redirect'], "location");
}
What's happening here is this:
- User logins on a different page.
- The login form submits to a single login controller with a hidden input element stating where they are logging in from.
- The login controller processes the login, then redirects based on the input.
- On failed login the redirect keeps getting set again, so no matter what, the user will return to the original page.
That's just a basic example. You can obviously tweak it as needed.