42

I'm building the Flask app with React, I ended up having a problem with routing.

The backend is responsible to be an API, hence some routes look like:

@app.route('/api/v1/do-something/', methods=["GET"])
def do_something():
    return something()

and the main route which leads to the React:

@app.route('/')
def index():
    return render_template('index.html')

I'm using react-router in the React app, everything works fine, react-router takes me to /something and I get the rendered view, but when I refresh the page on /something then Flask app takes care of this call and I get Not Found error.

What is the best solution? I was thinking about redirecting all calls which are not calling /api/v1/... to / it's not ideal as I will get back the home page of my app, not rendered React view.

5
  • 2
    The fastest and easiest way if you do not want your backend to handle the urls is not to use the HTML5 history api. Deactivating it will lead to hashbang urls like /#/something and reloading them will always trigger the / view on the backend. Otherwise you need to either handle the requests on your backend or redirect them to your react app, which in turn needs to analyze the request and trigger the location change if the requested url is not /.
    – sthzg
    Jun 3, 2015 at 12:45
  • That seems like some kind of solution, thanks!
    – knowbody
    Jun 3, 2015 at 12:50
  • 5
    I don't think it's a good solution. It's 2015, you really should use History API. Jun 3, 2015 at 12:53
  • @DanAbramov exactly, but how?
    – knowbody
    Jun 3, 2015 at 12:54
  • There could be one more way - you can simply write a re-write statement in .htaccess file so every-time that particular #something comes through react-router instead flask. This could be an efficient solution in case URL are based on certain pattern in case not then its waste of time. Jun 3, 2015 at 13:04

5 Answers 5

39

We used catch-all URLs for this.

from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)

@app.route('/', defaults={'path': ''})
@app.route('/<path:path>')
def catch_all(path):
    return 'You want path: %s' % path

if __name__ == '__main__':
    app.run()

You can also go an extra mile and reuse the Flask routing system to match path to the same routes as client so you can embed the data client will need as JSON inside the HTML response.

6
  • 1
    if all the routes will be directed to catch all function, how would you separate backend api routes and react routes when i do a ajax request call from front end? Dec 22, 2015 at 16:29
  • 7
    @shangyeshen Register API routes before catch-all so they have precedence. Dec 22, 2015 at 16:59
  • Is there a complete example of this somewhere? The code here doesn't do any index rendering like the example above and I have been unable to combine the two in a way that works.
    – juanitogan
    Mar 5, 2016 at 4:57
  • 6
    Found it. I couldn't get @app.route('/<path:path>') to match on anything until I figured out the poorly documented Flask parameters. Setting static_url_path="" is bad. I ended up with static_url_path="/public", static_folder="../public". Then I return a static: return app.send_static_file("index.html") with hard-coded "/public/..." urls. Also, look at: reddit.com/r/reactjs/comments/42pn95/reactrouter_and_flask_404 (not me).
    – juanitogan
    Mar 5, 2016 at 21:52
  • This is the solution I used for a while until I needed to break my bundle into parts using React.lazy. React.lazy wants to get the bundle parts from the path instead of the static directory that flask is using. Any ideas on that?
    – Jason
    Aug 23, 2019 at 10:40
6

Maybe as extension to the answers before. This solved the problem for me:

from flask import send_from_directory

@app.route('/', defaults={'path': ''})
@app.route('/<path:path>')
def serve(path):
     path_dir = os.path.abspath("../build") #path react build
     if path != "" and os.path.exists(os.path.join(path_dir, path)):
         return send_from_directory(os.path.join(path_dir), path)
     else:
         return send_from_directory(os.path.join(path_dir),'index.html')
1
  • Can't you replace the empty os.path.join(path_dir) with just a plain path_dir?
    – TheDiveO
    Nov 17, 2020 at 15:13
4

For some reason, the catch-all URLs did not work for me. I found that using the flask 404 handler results in the exact same thing. It sees the url and passes it down to react where your router will handle it.

@app.errorhandler(404)   
def not_found(e):   
  return app.send_static_file('index.html')
1
  • This works great! thanks for sharing this!
    – Sundios
    Feb 19, 2021 at 4:18
1

Just to inform handle error 404 and render_template works perfectly for me.

@app.errorhandler(404)
def not_found(e):
    return render_template("index.html")
0

I have to combine both catch-all and 404 handler for it to work properly. I am hosting a react-app in a subpath with its own redirection handler from react-router.

@app.route('/sub-path',  defaults={'path': 'index.html'})
@app.route('/sub-path/<path:path>')
def index(path):
    return send_from_directory('../react-dir/build', path)

@app.errorhandler(404)
def not_found(e):
  return send_from_directory('../react-dir/build','index.html')

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