67

Is it possible to redirect using a POST method ?
Or should redirects always be made using GET ?

The use for this is in the final steps of an order process for an e-commerce site, to send the data to the payment processor, without introducing an extra step for the user.

1
  • This whole thing seems very old, not considering HTML5, should this post be removed?
    – Mars2024
    Nov 23, 2021 at 17:38

6 Answers 6

85

Redirection isn't possible with POST requests - it's part of the HTTP/1.1 protocol.

You could either introduce another step that contains the form data to be POSTed to the payment processor, or you could send the post from your application (something I have done when working with PROTX).

0
14

I "solved" the issue by displaying a summary page with all the products and delivery charges etc, with the typical "to confirm and pay for your purchases, click the continue button below" type message. The continue button causes the site to POST the product data and everything across to the payment processor.

The short answer - there is another step for the user. However, the key is to make it seem as natural and as much part of the checkout experience as you can. This way, it doesn't come across too much as "just another step".

However, if you do come across a better way, I'll be very interested to hear what it was :)

3
  • 1
    Instead you can just display "Processing order..." placeholder and autosubmit the form with hidden fields. If the page works fast enough the user wont even see this page most of the time...
    – mdrozdziel
    Sep 26, 2011 at 7:12
  • 1
    That's pretty much the same as Alsciende's method below. Perfectly fine, but you will be relyin on JavaScript and as such you'll want some sort of fallback for the (admittedly unlikely these days, but possible) case where JS is not available. Oct 2, 2011 at 14:14
  • Yeah, but this is very trivial. Just putting the submit inside noscript should do the trick...
    – mdrozdziel
    Oct 3, 2011 at 12:17
11

With a simple line of javascript, you can have your POST form to post itself (form.submit()). You can then hide the form and display a simple "please wait while..." message to the user while the form is submitted to the payment processor.

1
  • And fall back to the manual 'press the submit button' method where JS is disabled? That's not a bad idea actually... Jun 12, 2009 at 9:55
9

The idea is to make a 'redirect' while under the hood you generate a form with method :post.

I have faced the same problem and extracted the solution into the gem repost, so it is doing all that work for you, so no need to create a separate view with the form, just use the provided by gem function redirect_post() on your controller.

class MyController < ActionController::Base
...
  def some_action
    redirect_post('url', params: {}, options: {})
  end
...
end
1

html hack: instead redirect_to, render this html template (based on Alsciende answer)

<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.2.4/jquery.min.js"></script>

<form id="step" name="step" action="<%= URL %>" method="POST">
  <!-- optional params -->
  <input type='hidden' name='token' value='e7295d6d1cd512a8621f1de5965b90a' />

</form>

<script type="text/javascript">
 $(document).ready(function () {
   setTimeout(function () {
     $("#step").submit();
   }, 0);
 });
</script>
0

If you need to redirect a POST request internally based on payload (for example, when using webhooks on an API for which you do not control the event granularity), you may want to use rack middleware.

You can then "redirect" the request before it is assigned to a route (you aren't technically redirecting the request, just updating the url to point towards the route of your choice). See inspiration

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.