It was previously reported that Rihanna split from Leonardo DiCaprio because he was unwilling to commit. However, a new source now claims they are back on.

According to In Touch, the Barbadian singer and "The Wolf of Wall Street" actor have recently rekindled their romance at this year's Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, with the former going back to DiCaprio because she reportedly could not move on.

The source also revealed the couple has been hooking up lately at each other's houses at night.

"She's still really into him," the source alleged. "Rihanna's holding out hope that Leo will eventually commit. She's obsessed."

It seems that Coachella was a time for Rihanna to reconnect with her exes, as she was reportedly spotted jamming to on-again, off-again flame Drake during his set on April 12. She was also supposedly cozying up to him. She even allegedly hung out with the Toronto rapper nearly the entire weekend.

"Rihanna and Drake were spotted together this weekend at Coachella, and our witnesses say they looked very 'couple-y,'" an insider told VH1's "The Gossip Table" after the festival.

A source then claimed to HollywoodLife.com that the two are "definitely hooking up again" and have "a very sensual relationship."

"He loves that she's so sexually aggressive. Rihanna likes sex and isn't embarrassed or shy about it," the source alleged, adding that they want to keep their romance on the down low, "but whenever they can, they get down in the bedroom."

In addition, the "American Oxygen" singer has supposedly been spending time with another ex, Chris Brown, since their encounter at the festival earlier this month.

"Rihanna and Chris have a connection that means they can't stay away from one another -- who knows what goes through her mind every time they reconnect?" an source told The Sun newspaper, via Yahoo Australia.

The source added that because she has been tied to both DiCaprio and Drake recently, it was likely that whatever was going on with her and Brown was likely to not last or be serious.