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Protecting Routes

The RouteGuard component

The RouteGuard component is just a wrapper for the Guard component. It will make it easy to use the Guard component to protect application routes. But to use the RouteGuard, we first need to define a RoutePolicy.

Define a RoutePolicy

To protect routes, we must redirect the user to the correct page once authorization or authentication fails. We can add a redirect property to PolicyResult objects to determine the destination.

ts
import { Policy } from 'react-guardian'

const authPolicy: Policy = () => ({
  authorize: !!user,
  redirect: '/login',
})

The redirect property is optional in the PolicyResult, but it's necessary for the RouteGuard component's functionality. To ensure you don't forget to define it, you can use the RoutePolicy type to annotate the policy functions.

ts
import { RoutePolicy } from 'react-guardian'

const authPolicy: RoutePolicy = () => ({
  authorize: !!user,
  redirect: '/login',
})

Using RouteGuard

When a policy denies accessing a page, the RouteGuard will use the redirect property defined by the RoutePolicy to route the user to the correct page.

With React Router , we can use the RouteGuard component either as a pathless layout route or a wrapper for the route element.

Use RouteGuard As Pathless Layout Route

Using RouteGuard as a pathless layout route, it will render an <Outlet/> as its children element to protect any sub-route.

tsx
<Routes>
  <Route element={<RouteGuard policies={[authPolicy]} />}>
    <Route path="profile" element={<UserProfilePage />} />
  </Route>

  <Route path="login" element={<LoginPage />} />
</Routes>
tsx
const routes = [
  {
    element: <RouteGuard policies={[authPolicy]} />,
    children: [
      {
        path: 'profile',
        element: <UserProfilePage />,
      },
    ],
  },
  {
    path: 'login',
    element: <LoginPage />,
  },
]

Use RouteGuard As Route Element Wrapper

If we wrap the route element in the RouteGuard component, it will render its children instead of <Outlet/>. This method is helpful if you use some automation like file-system routing to generate the route tree.

tsx
<Routes>
  <Route
    path="profile"
    element={
      <RouteGuard policies={[authPolicy]}>
        <UserProfilePage />
      </RouteGuard>
    }
  />

  <Route path="login" element={<LoginPage />} />
</Routes>
tsx
const routes = [
  {
    path: 'profile',
    element: (
      <RouteGuard policies={[authPolicy]}>
        <UserProfilePage />
      </RouteGuard>
    ),
  },
  {
    path: 'login',
    element: <LoginPage />,
  },
]

Released under the MIT License.