2

When a new user visits my site I want to redirect them to /welcome but only once, I thought to do this I could use cookies and set a cookie forever once they had visited the welcome page and then checking if the cookie existed before sending them to /welcome.

Here I have a base controller

class BaseController extends Controller
{
    public function __construct(Request $request) 
    {
        $this->checkWelcome($request);
    }

    private function checkWelcome(Request $request) {
        $currentRoute = Route::currentRouteName();

        if ($currentRoute != 'frontend.guest.welcome' && Cookie::get('visited_welcome') != '1') {
            header('location: ' . route('frontend.guest.welcome'));
            exit();
        }
    }
}

When sending to frontend.guest.welcome it has a route to WelcomeController

Route::get('/welcome', ['uses' => 'WelcomeController@getView', 'as' => 'frontend.guest.welcome']);

Here is WelcomeController

class WelcomeController extends BaseController
{
    public function getView()
    {
        Cookie::forever('visited_welcome', '1');

        return view('frontend.guest.welcome');
    }
}

The issue is, its constantly sending to /welcome, not once but always.

3 Answers 3

5

try to except your cookie in app\Http\Middleware\EncryptCookies.php

class EncryptCookies extends Middleware
{
    /**
     * The names of the cookies that should not be encrypted.
     *
     * @var array
     */
    protected $except = [
        'visited_welcome'
    ];
}
3

You aren't returning the cookie with the response, attach it to the response like so:

public function checkWelcome(Request $request) {
{
    if (!$request->cookie('visited_welcome')) {
        return redirect('frontend.guest.welcome')->withCookie(Cookie::forever('visited_welcome', '1'));
    }

    // otherwise proceed as normal
}

Alternatively, you can use the queue method on the Cookie facade:

Cookie::queue(Cookie::forever('visited_welcome', '1'));

https://laravel.com/docs/5.5/responses#attaching-cookies-to-responses

A better approach may be using middleware, that way you wouldn't need to implement any check in your controller code. For example:

// CheckIfFirstTimeVisit.php
public function handle(Request $request, Closure $next)
{
    if ($request->cookies->has('visited_welcome')) {
        return $request($next);
    }

    return response()->view('frontend.guest.welcome')
                     ->withCookie(Cookie::forever('visited_welcome', '1'));
}
1
  • ILU. Was fighting with this for a few hours.
    – PaulELI
    Jan 12, 2019 at 4:23
0

use this way

<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\Http\Response;
use App\Http\Requests;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;

class CookieController extends Controller {

   /* below code a set a cookie in browser */
   public function setCookie(Request $request){
      $response = new Response('Hello World');
      $response->withCookie(cookie('name', 'Anything else'));
      return $response;
   }
   /* below code a get a cookie in browser */
   public function getCookie(Request $request){
      $value = $request->cookie('name');
      echo $value;
   }
}
1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.