CanActivateChild
Interface that a class can implement to be a guard deciding if a child route can be activated.
If all guards return true
, navigation continues. If any guard returns false
,
navigation is cancelled. If any guard returns a UrlTree
, current navigation
is cancelled and a new navigation begins to the UrlTree
returned from the guard.
Deprecated: Class-based Route
guards are deprecated in favor of functional guards. An
injectable class can be used as a functional guard using the inject
function: canActivateChild: [() => inject(myGuard).canActivateChild()]
.
interface CanActivateChild {
canActivateChild(childRoute: ActivatedRouteSnapshot, state: RouterStateSnapshot): MaybeAsync<GuardResult>
}
See also
Description
The following example implements a CanActivateChild
function that checks whether the
current user has permission to activate the requested child route.
class UserToken {}
class Permissions {
canActivate(user: UserToken, id: string): boolean {
return true;
}
}
@Injectable()
class CanActivateTeam implements CanActivateChild {
constructor(private permissions: Permissions, private currentUser: UserToken) {}
canActivateChild(
route: ActivatedRouteSnapshot,
state: RouterStateSnapshot
): MaybeAsync<GuardResult> {
return this.permissions.canActivate(this.currentUser, route.params.id);
}
}
Here, the defined guard function is provided as part of the Route
object
in the router configuration:
@NgModule({
imports: [
RouterModule.forRoot([
{
path: 'root',
canActivateChild: [CanActivateTeam],
children: [
{
path: 'team/:id',
component: TeamComponent
}
]
}
])
],
providers: [CanActivateTeam, UserToken, Permissions]
})
class AppModule {}
Methods
canActivateChild() | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parameters
Returns |