I store token after success login call in vuex store like this:
axios.post('/api/auth/doLogin.php', params, axiosConfig)
.then(res => {
console.log(res.data); // token
this.$store.commit('login', res.data);
})
axiosConfig is file where I only set baseURL export default { baseURL: 'http://localhost/obiezaca/v2' }
and params is just data sent to backend.
My vuex file looks is:
import Vue from 'vue';
import Vuex from 'vuex';
Vue.use(Vuex);
export const store = new Vuex.Store({
state: {
logged: false,
token: ''
},
mutations: {
login: (state, response) => {
state.logged = true;
state.token = response;
console.log('state updated');
console.log('state.logged flag is: '+state.logged);
console.log('state.token: '+state.token);
},
logout: (state) => {
state.logged = false;
state.token = '';
}
}
});
It is working correctly, I can re-render some of content in my SPA basing on v-if="this.$store.state.logged"
for logged user. I'm able to access this.$store.state.logged
from any component in my entire app.
Now I want to add my token to every request which call my rest API backend. I've created basic axios http interceptor which looks like this:
import axios from 'axios';
axios.interceptors.request.use(function(config) {
const token = this.$store.state.token;
if(token) {
config.headers.Authorization = `Bearer ${token}`;
}
return config;
}, function(err) {
return Promise.reject(err);
});
Now I have 2 problems/questions about it.
this.$store.state.logged
or this.$store.state.token
across every component but can I use it same way in single javascript file?$httpProvider.interceptors.push('authInterceptorService');
in config but I don't know how to do same thing in vue architecture. So where should I inject my interceptor?EDIT
I followed GMaiolo tips I added
import interceptor from './helpers/httpInterceptor.js';
interceptor();
to my main.js file and I refactor my interceptor to this:
import axios from 'axios';
import store from '../store/store';
export default function execute() {
axios.interceptors.request.use(function(config) {
const token = this.$store.state.token;
if(token) {
config.headers.Authorization = `Bearer ${token}`;
}
return config;
}, function(err) {
return Promise.reject(err);
});
}
Result of this changes is that every already existing backend calls ( GET ) which don't need token to work stopped working but it is logical because I didn't clarified to which request it should add token so it is trying to add it everywhere and in my interceptor something is still wrong and that is why every already exisitng request stopped working.
When I try to do backend POST call in browser console I still get this error:
TypeError: Cannot read property '$store' of undefined
Although I import store to my interceptor file. Any ideas? I can provide some more information if any needed.
I additionally add screenshot of this main, store and interceptor tree structure so you can see that I'm importing fron correct path:
First of all I'd use a Vuex Module as this Login/Session behavior seems to be ideal for a Session
module. After that (which is totally optional) you can set up a Getter to avoid accessing the state
itself from outside Vuex, you'd would end up with something like this:
state: {
// bear in mind i'm not using a module here for the sake of simplicity
session: {
logged: false,
token: ''
}
},
getters: {
// could use only this getter and use it for both token and logged
session: state => state.session,
// or could have both getters separated
logged: state => state.session.logged,
token: state => state.session.token
},
mutations: {
...
}
With those getters set, you can get the values a bit easier from components. With either using this.$store.getters.logged
(or the one you'd want to use) or using the mapGetters
helper from Vuex [for more info about this you can check the getters docs]:
import { mapGetters } from 'vuex'
export default {
// ...
computed: {
...mapGetters([
'logged',
'token'
])
}
}
I like to run Axios' interceptors along with Vue instantation in main.js
creating, importing and executing an interceptors.js
helper. I'd leave an example so you get an idea, but, then again, this is my own preference:
main.js
import Vue from 'vue';
import store from 'Src/store';
import router from 'Src/router';
import App from 'Src/App';
// importing the helper
import interceptorsSetup from 'Src/helpers/interceptors'
// and running it somewhere here
interceptorsSetup()
/* eslint-disable no-new */
new Vue({
el: '#app',
router,
store,
template: '<App/>',
components: { App }
});
interceptors.js
import axios from 'axios';
import store from 'your/store/path/store'
export default function setup() {
axios.interceptors.request.use(function(config) {
const token = store.getters.token;
if(token) {
config.headers.Authorization = `Bearer ${token}`;
}
return config;
}, function(err) {
return Promise.reject(err);
});
}
And there you'd end up having all the behavior cleanly encapsulated.