3

I am trying to implement UrlTree to redirect user if guard fails. this.authService.isAuthenticated() returns observable.

The following does not work but it does console false.

canActivate(route: ActivatedRouteSnapshot, state: RouterStateSnapshot): boolean | UrlTree {
  this.authService.isAuthenticated().subscribe(isAuthenticated => {
    if (isAuthenticated) {
      return true;
    } else {
      console.log(isAuthenticated);
      return this.router.createUrlTree(['auth/sign-in']);
    }
  });
  return false;
}

But the following works if I remove subscription:

canActivate(route: ActivatedRouteSnapshot, state: RouterStateSnapshot): boolean | UrlTree {
  return this.router.createUrlTree(['auth/sign-in']);
}

3 Answers 3

7

You cannot return from inside subscribe (in any case). Route guard can return a boolean or an observable of a boolean. So in your case you need to return an observable of boolean. Worth mentioning also, in your current code, since this is async, what you are currently returning is always false no matter the logged in status, why? It takes x amount of time to get the authenticated status, so false is returned every time, angular does not wait for the response, just moves on to the next code available, which is return false; in your current code.

So, as said, return an observable, i.e use map instead of subscribe:

import { map, take } from 'rxjs/operators';

// ....

canActivate(route: ActivatedRouteSnapshot, state: RouterStateSnapshot): Observable<boolean> {
  return this.authService.isAuthenticated()
    .pipe(
      take(1),
      map(isAuthenticated => {
        if (isAuthenticated) {
          return true;
        }
        // no need for else, if above is truthy, further code is not executed
        this.router.createUrlTree(['auth/sign-in']);
        return false;
      })
    );
}
1

Didn't know you need to redirect user. So use this functions:

canActivate(route: ActivatedRouteSnapshot, state: RouterStateSnapshot): Observable<boolean> {
   return this.authService.isAuthenticated().pipe(
             take(1),
             map(user => !!user), // Converting object to a boolean
             tap(loggedIn => {
                // If you not return any value
                // function will return loggedIn boolean value
                if (!loggedIn) {
                   this.router.navigate(['/login'])
                }
            })
      );
}
4
  • I tried your both solutions but it does not redirect. Jul 23, 2019 at 15:20
  • Updated to redirect you need to use .navigate() function.
    – Mises
    Jul 23, 2019 at 15:33
  • .navigate() works but not returning UrlTree which is introduced in Angular 7. I up vote your answer for your effort. Thanks Jul 23, 2019 at 15:35
  • Try to use second variable this.router.createUrlTree(['../login'], {relativeTo: XXX}). Never used that functions.
    – Mises
    Jul 23, 2019 at 16:22
0

@AJT82 answer didn't work for me in Angular 8. Returning a UrlTree with parseUrl and return a true is the only way it works.

canActivate(
    next: ActivatedRouteSnapshot,
    state: RouterStateSnapshot): Observable<boolean | UrlTree> | Promise<boolean | UrlTree> | boolean | UrlTree {
    return this.authService.auth$.pipe(
      map((authState: AuthState) => {
        console.log('=========root guard=============');
        if (!authState.isLoggedIn) {
          return this.router.parseUrl('/auth/login');
        }

        if (state.url === '' || state.url === '/') {
          if (authState.accessGroups.includes(AccessGroup.ADMIN)) {
            return this.router.parseUrl('/post/list');
          }
          if (authState.accessGroups.includes(AccessGroup.REEF)) {
            return this.router.parseUrl('/reef');
          }
        }
        return true;
      })
    );

And I don't really understand why returning the UrlTree is not enough. If I do not return the true the Router will be blocked. Very strange.

Setting the UrlTree and then returning True didn't work either. Only returning the UrlTree and return true works for me.

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