56

I am a newbie in Angular 2. I want to create isolated modules for every part of my app. For example I created the AuthModule with default component - AuthComponent which contain a router-outlet for his child components (SignIn or SignUp). So I want to realise the following scenario:

  1. When navigate to / - root off app - redirect to /auth
  2. After redirect to /auth - load AuthComponent with router outlet
  3. After AppComponent loaded - load default sign-in component via redirecting to /auth/sign-in

But when I going to localhost/ I get redirect to /auth what I want, but the next redirect to sign-in doesn't appear.

My code: app.routing

const routes: Routes = [
  {
      path: '', 
      redirectTo: '/auth', 
      pathMatch: 'full'
  }
];

export const appRouting: ModuleWithProviders = RouterModule.forRoot(routes);

auth.routing

const routes: Routes = [
  {
    path: 'auth',
    component: AuthComponent,
    children: [
      {
         path: '', 
         redirectTo: 'sign-in', 
         pathMatch: 'full'
      },
      {
         path: 'sign-in', 
         component: SignInComponent
      }
    ]
  },

];

export const authRouting: ModuleWithProviders = RouterModule.forChild(routes);

auth.component.html

<div class="container">
    <h1>Auth component</h1>
    <router-outlet></router-outlet>
</div>

Result:

code

result

Environment @angular/cli: 1.0.0-rc.2 node: 7.7.1 os: win32 x64

2
  • Put you child routes directly inside main route dont define them separately Mar 18, 2017 at 14:00
  • I put all of my routes to app routes but It still not working as expected. Mar 18, 2017 at 14:16

7 Answers 7

50

I have been the same problem. It seems an Angular tricks: If you remove leading slash in 'redirectTo' field, your application will be redirected successfully to auth/sign-in.

Use this in app.routing:

const routes: Routes = [ 

    {path: '', redirectTo: 'auth', pathMatch: 'full'}, 

];

‘redirectTo’ value starts with a ‘/’ = absolute path

‘redirectTo’ value starts without a ‘/’ = relative path

Read more about it: https://vsavkin.com/angular-router-understanding-redirects-2826177761fc

P.S My opinion that your structure more correctly then YounesM's one. Parent module can't keep children routes: "app" module don't know that "auth" module have children module "sign-in".

39

On auth.routes

const routes: Routes = [
  {
    path: "auth",
    redirectTo: "auth/sign-in"
  },
  {
    path: "auth",
    component: AuthComponent,
    children: [{ path: "sign-in", component: SignInComponent }]
  }
];
2
  • Clever solution. Honestly it never came to my mind that it was possible to duplicate the route configuration!
    – Lothre1
    Apr 26, 2020 at 9:50
  • 2
    This seems to break when using lazy loading on feature modules, is there anyway around this?
    – Ben Black
    May 1, 2020 at 20:58
9

So, what it seems to happen is that when you redirectTo:'auth' it tries to load the '' children's component and since it does not have any component the router-outlet is empty.

Now it seems like {path: '', redirectTo: 'sign-in', pathMatch: 'full'} doesn't have any other purpose then redirecting to sign-in so you can simply redirect to /auth/sign-in instead.

app.routes

const routes: Routes = [
  {path: '', redirectTo: '/auth/sign-in', pathMatch: 'full'}
];
export const appRouting: ModuleWithProviders = RouterModule.forRoot(routes);

auth.routes

const routes: Routes = [
  {
    path: 'auth',
    component: AuthComponent,
    children: [
      {path: 'sign-in', component: SignInComponent}
    ]
  },

];

or have a component in your '' path instead of redirecting.

app.routes

const routes: Routes = [
  {path: '', redirectTo: '/auth', pathMatch: 'full'}
];
export const appRouting: ModuleWithProviders = RouterModule.forRoot(routes);

auth.routes

const routes: Routes = [
  {
    path: 'auth',
    component: AuthComponent,
    children: [
      {path: '', component: SignInComponent}
    ]
  },

];
3
  • Thanks for the answer. Yes, I can redirect to /auth/sign-in from app routes directly and it works perfectly. But I don't want to open internal structure of AuthModule (/auth/**sign-in** part of route, for example) You said: So, what it seems to happen is that when you redirectTo:'auth' it tries to load the '' children's component and since it does not have any component the router-outlet is empty. but I have a default children router Mar 18, 2017 at 15:23
  • As long as you use '' route to redirect it seems that your routerLinks will not work properly (since they're trying to load the component) the other alternative will be to have a component to load in the '' route (as edited). I don't see another way to get around it.
    – YounesM
    Mar 18, 2017 at 15:33
  • Yes, it will work, but in this case we have no possibility to change url to /auth/ sign-in I thought there is a best practice to organize routes inside modules in angular 2. Thanks for your answer Mar 18, 2017 at 16:06
3

It's quite simple:

const routes: Routes = [
    { path: '', redirectTo: '/auth/signin', pathMatch: 'full' },
    { path: 'auth', component: AuthComponent, 
        children: [
            { path: 'signup', component: SignupComponent }, 
            { path: 'signin', component: SigninComponent }, 
            { path: 'logout', component: LogoutComponent }
        ]
    },
    { path: '**', redirectTo: '/auth/signin', pathMatch: 'full' }
];
2

You can do this in your child route:

const routes: Routes = [
  { path: 'auth', redirectTo: 'auth/signin'},
  {
    path: 'auth',
    component: AuthComponent,
    children: [{ path: 'signin', component: SignInComponent }],
  },
];
1

You can use the re-direction in your outer module, like this:

// Root routing module or app.routing.module
const routes: Routes = [
  {path: '', redirectTo: '/auth', pathMatch: 'full'},
  {path: 'auth', redirectTo: '/auth/sign-in', pathMatch: 'full'}
];

// Child routing module or child.routing.module
const routes: Routes = [
 {
   path: 'auth',
   //component: AuthComponent, may not need this as you only need the template
   children: [
     {path: 'sign-in', component: SignInComponent}
   ]
 },
];

You need not to have an empty path '' in your child component in case you want to navigate to this with a proper path

0

I have been the same problem, but none of the above answers seems to be a good resolution. In my code , i subscribe to the router events and finally resolve it.

code in AuthComponent's constructor:

  this.router.events.subscribe((e: Event) => {
   if (e instanceof NavigationEnd) {
    this.activeUrl = e.urlAfterRedirects || e.url;
    if (this.activeUrl === '/auth') {
      this.router.navigateByUrl('/auth/sign-in');
    }
   }
  });

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