module ActionController class RedirectBackError < AbstractController::Error #:nodoc: DEFAULT_MESSAGE = 'No HTTP_REFERER was set in the request to this action, so redirect_to :back could not be called successfully. If this is a test, make sure to specify request.env["HTTP_REFERER"].' def initialize(message = nil) super(message || DEFAULT_MESSAGE) end end module Redirecting extend ActiveSupport::Concern include AbstractController::Logger include ActionController::UrlFor # Redirects the browser to the target specified in +options+. This parameter can be any one of: # # * Hash - The URL will be generated by calling url_for with the +options+. # * Record - The URL will be generated by calling url_for with the +options+, which will reference a named URL for that record. # * String starting with protocol:// (like http://) or a protocol relative reference (like //) - Is passed straight through as the target for redirection. # * String not containing a protocol - The current protocol and host is prepended to the string. # * Proc - A block that will be executed in the controller's context. Should return any option accepted by +redirect_to+. # # === Examples: # # redirect_to action: "show", id: 5 # redirect_to post # redirect_to "http://www.rubyonrails.org" # redirect_to "/images/screenshot.jpg" # redirect_to articles_url # redirect_to proc { edit_post_url(@post) } # # The redirection happens as a "302 Found" header unless otherwise specified using the :status option: # # redirect_to post_url(@post), status: :found # redirect_to action: 'atom', status: :moved_permanently # redirect_to post_url(@post), status: 301 # redirect_to action: 'atom', status: 302 # # The status code can either be a standard {HTTP Status code}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-status-codes] as an # integer, or a symbol representing the downcased, underscored and symbolized description. # Note that the status code must be a 3xx HTTP code, or redirection will not occur. # # If you are using XHR requests other than GET or POST and redirecting after the # request then some browsers will follow the redirect using the original request # method. This may lead to undesirable behavior such as a double DELETE. To work # around this you can return a 303 See Other status code which will be # followed using a GET request. # # redirect_to posts_url, status: :see_other # redirect_to action: 'index', status: 303 # # It is also possible to assign a flash message as part of the redirection. There are two special accessors for the commonly used flash names # +alert+ and +notice+ as well as a general purpose +flash+ bucket. # # redirect_to post_url(@post), alert: "Watch it, mister!" # redirect_to post_url(@post), status: :found, notice: "Pay attention to the road" # redirect_to post_url(@post), status: 301, flash: { updated_post_id: @post.id } # redirect_to({ action: 'atom' }, alert: "Something serious happened") # def redirect_to(options = {}, response_status = {}) #:doc: raise ActionControllerError.new("Cannot redirect to nil!") unless options raise AbstractController::DoubleRenderError if response_body self.status = _extract_redirect_to_status(options, response_status) self.location = _compute_redirect_to_location(request, options) self.response_body = "You are being redirected." end # Redirects the browser to the page that issued the request (the referrer) # if possible, otherwise redirects to the provided default fallback # location. # # The referrer information is pulled from the HTTP `Referer` (sic) header on # the request. This is an optional header and its presence on the request is # subject to browser security settings and user preferences. If the request # is missing this header, the fallback_location will be used. # # redirect_back fallback_location: { action: "show", id: 5 } # redirect_back fallback_location: post # redirect_back fallback_location: "http://www.rubyonrails.org" # redirect_back fallback_location: "/images/screenshot.jpg" # redirect_back fallback_location: articles_url # redirect_back fallback_location: proc { edit_post_url(@post) } # # All options that can be passed to redirect_to are accepted as # options and the behavior is identical. def redirect_back(fallback_location:, **args) if referer = request.headers["Referer"] redirect_to referer, **args else redirect_to fallback_location, **args end end def _compute_redirect_to_location(request, options) #:nodoc: case options # The scheme name consist of a letter followed by any combination of # letters, digits, and the plus ("+"), period ("."), or hyphen ("-") # characters; and is terminated by a colon (":"). # See http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3.1 # The protocol relative scheme starts with a double slash "//". when /\A([a-z][a-z\d\-+\.]*:|\/\/).*/i options when String request.protocol + request.host_with_port + options when :back ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn(<<-MESSAGE.squish) `redirect_to :back` is deprecated and will be removed from Rails 5.1. Please use `redirect_back(fallback_location: fallback_location)` where `fallback_location` represents the location to use if the request has no HTTP referer information. MESSAGE request.headers["Referer"] or raise RedirectBackError when Proc _compute_redirect_to_location request, options.call else url_for(options) end.delete("\0\r\n") end module_function :_compute_redirect_to_location public :_compute_redirect_to_location private def _extract_redirect_to_status(options, response_status) if options.is_a?(Hash) && options.key?(:status) Rack::Utils.status_code(options.delete(:status)) elsif response_status.key?(:status) Rack::Utils.status_code(response_status[:status]) else 302 end end end end