Vuejs: Routes are accessible even after deleting a token












0















I have a very strange behaviour when I log out from my app. Some inner links (from a user's panel, for example) are still accessible even after I logged out and deleted a token. And some links are not. Do you have any ideas how I can prevent this behaviour?










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  • Generally with a navigation guard that is applied globally and looks at the route meta data. Without any code it is impossible to tell why you see odd behaviour like that though.

    – Sumurai8
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09











  • Do you use guards? Maybe some code sample of your routes?

    – Konstantin Kudelko
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09
















0















I have a very strange behaviour when I log out from my app. Some inner links (from a user's panel, for example) are still accessible even after I logged out and deleted a token. And some links are not. Do you have any ideas how I can prevent this behaviour?










share|improve this question























  • Generally with a navigation guard that is applied globally and looks at the route meta data. Without any code it is impossible to tell why you see odd behaviour like that though.

    – Sumurai8
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09











  • Do you use guards? Maybe some code sample of your routes?

    – Konstantin Kudelko
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09














0












0








0








I have a very strange behaviour when I log out from my app. Some inner links (from a user's panel, for example) are still accessible even after I logged out and deleted a token. And some links are not. Do you have any ideas how I can prevent this behaviour?










share|improve this question














I have a very strange behaviour when I log out from my app. Some inner links (from a user's panel, for example) are still accessible even after I logged out and deleted a token. And some links are not. Do you have any ideas how I can prevent this behaviour?







javascript vue.js authorization






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asked Nov 22 '18 at 11:06









Olga BOlga B

106214




106214













  • Generally with a navigation guard that is applied globally and looks at the route meta data. Without any code it is impossible to tell why you see odd behaviour like that though.

    – Sumurai8
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09











  • Do you use guards? Maybe some code sample of your routes?

    – Konstantin Kudelko
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09



















  • Generally with a navigation guard that is applied globally and looks at the route meta data. Without any code it is impossible to tell why you see odd behaviour like that though.

    – Sumurai8
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09











  • Do you use guards? Maybe some code sample of your routes?

    – Konstantin Kudelko
    Nov 22 '18 at 11:09

















Generally with a navigation guard that is applied globally and looks at the route meta data. Without any code it is impossible to tell why you see odd behaviour like that though.

– Sumurai8
Nov 22 '18 at 11:09





Generally with a navigation guard that is applied globally and looks at the route meta data. Without any code it is impossible to tell why you see odd behaviour like that though.

– Sumurai8
Nov 22 '18 at 11:09













Do you use guards? Maybe some code sample of your routes?

– Konstantin Kudelko
Nov 22 '18 at 11:09





Do you use guards? Maybe some code sample of your routes?

– Konstantin Kudelko
Nov 22 '18 at 11:09












1 Answer
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So I solved my problem by using axios interceptors. I check if the error status in 401 (Unauthorised) and push router to the login page.



axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(null, (error) => {
if (error.response.status === 401) {
config.token = null;
router.push({ name: 'login' });
}
if (error.response.status === 404) {
router.push({ name: 'error' });
}
return Promise.reject(error);
});





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    So I solved my problem by using axios interceptors. I check if the error status in 401 (Unauthorised) and push router to the login page.



    axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(null, (error) => {
    if (error.response.status === 401) {
    config.token = null;
    router.push({ name: 'login' });
    }
    if (error.response.status === 404) {
    router.push({ name: 'error' });
    }
    return Promise.reject(error);
    });





    share|improve this answer




























      0














      So I solved my problem by using axios interceptors. I check if the error status in 401 (Unauthorised) and push router to the login page.



      axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(null, (error) => {
      if (error.response.status === 401) {
      config.token = null;
      router.push({ name: 'login' });
      }
      if (error.response.status === 404) {
      router.push({ name: 'error' });
      }
      return Promise.reject(error);
      });





      share|improve this answer


























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        0








        0







        So I solved my problem by using axios interceptors. I check if the error status in 401 (Unauthorised) and push router to the login page.



        axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(null, (error) => {
        if (error.response.status === 401) {
        config.token = null;
        router.push({ name: 'login' });
        }
        if (error.response.status === 404) {
        router.push({ name: 'error' });
        }
        return Promise.reject(error);
        });





        share|improve this answer













        So I solved my problem by using axios interceptors. I check if the error status in 401 (Unauthorised) and push router to the login page.



        axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(null, (error) => {
        if (error.response.status === 401) {
        config.token = null;
        router.push({ name: 'login' });
        }
        if (error.response.status === 404) {
        router.push({ name: 'error' });
        }
        return Promise.reject(error);
        });






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 23 '18 at 7:28









        Olga BOlga B

        106214




        106214
































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