8

I am trying to redirect a user to a new page if a login is successful in my React app. The redirect is called from the auth service which is not a component. To access the history object outside of my component I followed this example in the React Router FAQ. However, when I call history.push('/pageafterlogin'), the page is not changed and I remain on the login page (based on my Switch I would expect to end up on the 404 page). The URL in the address bar does get changed to /pageafterlogin but the page is not changed from the login page. No errors appear in the console or anything else to indicate my code does not work.

How can I make history.push() also change the page the user is on?

// /src/history.js
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history';
export default createBrowserHistory();

// /src/App.js
...
import { BrowserRouter as Router, Route, Switch } from 'react-router-dom';
import history from './history';

function App() {
    return (
        <Router history={history}>
            <Switch>
                <Route path="/" exact component={HomePage} />
                <Route path="/login" exact render={() => <FormWrapper><LoginForm /></FormWrapper>} />
                <Route render={() => <h1>404: not found</h1>} />
            </Switch>
        </Router>
    );
}

export default App;

// src/services/auth.service.js
import axios from 'axios';
import history from '../history';

const API_URL = '...';

class AuthService {
    login(username, password) {
        return axios.post(API_URL + 'login', {
            username,
            password
        }).then(res => {
            if (res.status === 200) {
                localStorage.setItem('user', JSON.stringify(res.data));
                history.push('/pageafterlogin');
            }
        });
    }
}
5
  • have you defined the path of the route in Route component? Aug 24, 2020 at 3:11
  • Sorry could you clarify what you mean? history is passed to the Router component and the Routes are inside a Switch so even if /pageafterlogin isn't defined it should default to the 404 page. Aug 24, 2020 at 3:14
  • If you're using history you can not use BrowserRouter you need to import Router... If you open the console you'll see - Warning: <BrowserRouter> ignores the history prop. To use a custom history, use import { Router } instead of import { BrowserRouter as Router }.
    – SakoBu
    Aug 24, 2020 at 4:03
  • @SakoBu Besides that, are there any differences between BrowserRouter and Router that would have an impact elsewhere in my code? Aug 24, 2020 at 4:04
  • Yes - they take different props: BrowserRouter - reactrouter.com/web/api/BrowserRouter Router - reactrouter.com/web/api/Router (you can see it takes the history prop) There are also HashRouter, MemoryRouter etc...
    – SakoBu
    Aug 24, 2020 at 4:08

5 Answers 5

5

Instead of using BrowserRouter, use Router from react-router-dom

You could see the example here


import { Router, Route, Switch, useHistory, create } from 'react-router-dom';
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history';
import React from 'react';

const history = createBrowserHistory();


export default function App() {
    return (
        <Router history={history}>
            <Switch>
                <Route path="/" exact component={() => <h1>HomePage</h1>} />
                <Route path="/login" exact component={Login} />
                <Route render={() => <h1>404: not found</h1>} />
            </Switch>
        </Router>
    );
}


function Login() {
  React.useEffect(() => {
    history.push('/pageafterlogin')
  }, [])

  return <h1>Login page</h1>
}
6
  • This seems to work now. However, is there anything I need to be aware of now that I am using Router instead of BrowserRouter? The React Router docs describe BrowserRouter as A <Router> that uses the HTML5 history API (pushState, replaceState and the popstate event) to keep your UI in sync with the URL.. Does the plain Router not do this? Aug 24, 2020 at 3:38
  • Why are you defining history from createBrowserHistory? I don't see any reasons unless you're doing the server-side rendering? Aug 24, 2020 at 3:40
  • I can't push to the history from outside of a component otherwise. The code that redirects the user is part of a "service" js file. Aug 24, 2020 at 3:45
  • Can't you just give the responsibility back to your Component. or better yet pass it as a callback to your APIs. Your services file should limit itself to just calling the API since the name is service. Aug 24, 2020 at 3:48
  • I could, but login() only does one thing (setting the cookie and redirecting to the specific page) on success so I would rather just handle the errors in the component. I am more curious now what the difference between BrowserRouter and Router is? Aug 24, 2020 at 3:53
4

If you are looking for a solution to this in 2022 and are using React V18+, the solution is that React v18 does not work well with react-router-dom v5.

I have not tried with react-router-dom v6 yet, but downgrading to React V17 solved the issue for me.

3

I removed StrictMode and it solved the problem

0
0
import { Router } from 'react-router-dom';
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history';
import React from 'react';
const history = createBrowserHistory();


export default function MyApp() {
    return (
        <Router history={history}></Router>
    );
}
3
0

I had the same problem when I hadn't specified the vesion of 'history'. You need to use a 4.x version with Router 5.x. For example, I use React v18, history v4.7.2 and react-router-dom v5.3.3 and it works fine. Try

npm i [email protected]

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.