- Configuration
- Storing Passwords
- Authenticating Users
- Protecting Routes
- HTTP Basic Authentication
- Password Reminders & Reset
- Encryption
Laravel aims to make implementing authentication very simple. In fact, almost everything is configured for you out of the box. The authentication configuration file is located at app/config/auth.php
, which contains several well documented options for tweaking the behavior of the authentication facilities.
By default, Laravel includes a User
model in your app/models
directory which may be used with the default Eloquent authentication driver. Please remember when building the Schema for this Model to ensure that the password field is a minimum of 60 characters.
If your application is not using Eloquent, you may use the database
authentication driver which uses the Laravel query builder.
The Laravel Hash
class provides secure Bcrypt hashing:
Hashing A Password Using Bcrypt
$password = Hash::make('secret');
Verifying A Password Against A Hash
if (Hash::check('secret', $hashedPassword))
{
// The passwords match...
}
Checking If A Password Needs To Be Rehashed
if (Hash::needsRehash($hashed))
{
$hashed = Hash::make('secret');
}
To log a user into your application, you may use the Auth::attempt
method.
if (Auth::attempt(array('email' => $email, 'password' => $password)))
{
return Redirect::intended('dashboard');
}
Take note that email
is not a required option, it is merely used for example. You should use whatever column name corresponds to a "username" in your database. The Redirect::intended
function will redirect the user to the URL they were trying to access before being caught by the authentication filter. A fallback URI may be given to this method in case the intended destination is not available.
When the attempt
method is called, the auth.attempt
event will be fired. If the authentication attempt is successful and the user is logged in, the auth.login
event will be fired as well.
To determine if the user is already logged into your application, you may use the check
method:
Determining If A User Is Authenticated
if (Auth::check())
{
// The user is logged in...
}
If you would like to provide "remember me" functionality in your application, you may pass true
as the second argument to the attempt
method, which will keep the user authenticated indefinitely (or until they manually logout):
Authenticating A User And "Remembering" Them
if (Auth::attempt(array('email' => $email, 'password' => $password), true))
{
// The user is being remembered...
}
Note: If the attempt
method returns true
, the user is considered logged into the application.
You also may add extra conditions to the authenticating query:
Authenticating A User With Conditions
if (Auth::attempt(array('email' => $email, 'password' => $password, 'active' => 1))
{
// The user is active, not suspended, and exists.
}
Once a user is authenticated, you may access the User model / record:
Accessing The Logged In User
$email = Auth::user()->email;
To simply log a user into the application by their ID, use the loginUsingId
method:
Auth::loginUsingId(1);
The validate
method allows you to validate a user's credentials without actually logging them into the application:
Validating User Credentials Without Login
if (Auth::validate($credentials))
{
//
}
You may also use the once
method to log a user into the application for a single request. No sessions or cookies will be utilized.
Logging A User In For A Single Request
if (Auth::once($credentials))
{
//
}
Logging A User Out Of The Application
Auth::logout();
Route filters may be used to allow only authenticated users to access a given route. Laravel provides the auth
filter by default, and it is defined in app/filters.php
.
Protecting A Route
Route::get('profile', array('before' => 'auth', function()
{
// Only authenticated users may enter...
}));
Laravel provides an easy method of protecting your application from cross-site request forgeries.
Inserting CSRF Token Into Form
<input type="hidden" name="_token" value="<?php echo csrf_token(); ?>">
Validate The Submitted CSRF Token
Route::post('register', array('before' => 'csrf', function()
{
return 'You gave a valid CSRF token!';
}));
HTTP Basic Authentication provides a quick way to authenticate users of your application without setting up a dedicated "login" page. To get started, attach the auth.basic
filter to your route:
Protecting A Route With HTTP Basic
Route::get('profile', array('before' => 'auth.basic', function()
{
// Only authenticated users may enter...
}));
By default, the basic
filter will use the email
column on the user record when authenticating. If you wish to use another column you may pass the column name as the first parameter to the basic
method:
return Auth::basic('username');
You may also use HTTP Basic Authentication without setting a user identifier cookie in the session, which is particularly useful for API authentication. To do so, define a filter that returns the onceBasic
method:
Setting Up A Stateless HTTP Basic Filter
Route::filter('basic.once', function()
{
return Auth::onceBasic();
});
Most web applications provide a way for users to reset their forgotten passwords. Rather than forcing you to re-implement this on each application, Laravel provides convenient methods for sending password reminders and performing password resets. To get started, verify that your User
model implements the Illuminate\Auth\Reminders\RemindableInterface
contract. Of course, the User
model included with the framework already implements this interface.
Implementing The RemindableInterface
class User extends Eloquent implements RemindableInterface {
public function getReminderEmail()
{
return $this->email;
}
}
Next, a table must be created to store the password reset tokens. To generate a migration for this table, simply execute the auth:reminders
Artisan command:
Generating The Reminder Table Migration
php artisan auth:reminders
php artisan migrate
To send a password reminder, we can use the Password::remind
method:
Sending A Password Reminder
Route::post('password/remind', function()
{
$credentials = array('email' => Input::get('email'));
return Password::remind($credentials);
});
Note that the arguments passed to the remind
method are similar to the Auth::attempt
method. This method will retrieve the User
and send them a password reset link via e-mail. The e-mail view will be passed a token
variable which may be used to construct the link to the password reset form. The user
object will also be passed to the view.
Note: You may specify which view is used as the e-mail message by changing the
auth.reminder.email
configuration option. Of course, a default view is provided out of the box.
You may modify the message instance that is sent to the user by passing a Closure as the second argument to the remind
method:
return Password::remind($credentials, function($message, $user)
{
$message->subject('Your Password Reminder');
});
You may also have noticed that we are returning the results of the remind
method directly from a route. By default, the remind
method will return a Redirect
to the current URI. If an error occurred while attempting to reset the password, an error
variable will be flashed to the session, as well as a reason
, which can be used to extract a language line from the reminders
language file. If the password reset was successful, a success
variable will be flashed to the session. So, your password reset form view could look something like this:
@if (Session::has('error'))
{{ trans(Session::get('reason')) }}
@elseif (Session::has('success'))
An e-mail with the password reset has been sent.
@endif
<input type="text" name="email">
<input type="submit" value="Send Reminder">
Once a user has clicked on the reset link from the reminder e-mail, they should be directed to a form that includes a hidden token
field, as well as a password
and password_confirmation
field. Below is an example route for the password reset form:
Route::get('password/reset/{token}', function($token)
{
return View::make('auth.reset')->with('token', $token);
});
And, a password reset form might look like this:
@if (Session::has('error'))
{{ trans(Session::get('reason')) }}
@endif
<input type="hidden" name="token" value="{{ $token }}">
<input type="text" name="email">
<input type="password" name="password">
<input type="password" name="password_confirmation">
Again, notice we are using the Session
to display any errors that may be detected by the framework while resetting passwords. Next, we can define a POST
route to handle the reset:
Route::post('password/reset/{token}', function()
{
$credentials = array('email' => Input::get('email'));
return Password::reset($credentials, function($user, $password)
{
$user->password = Hash::make($password);
$user->save();
return Redirect::to('home');
});
});
If the password reset is successful, the User
instance and the password will be passed to your Closure, allowing you to actually perform the save operation. Then, you may return a Redirect
or any other type of response from the Closure which will be returned by the reset
method. Note that the reset
method automatically checks for a valid token
in the request, valid credentials, and matching passwords.
Also, similarly to the remind
method, if an error occurs while resetting the password, the reset
method will return a Redirect
to the current URI with an error
and reason
.
Laravel provides facilities for strong AES-256 encryption via the mcrypt PHP extension:
Encrypting A Value
$encrypted = Crypt::encrypt('secret');
Note: Be sure to set a 32 character, random string in the
key
option of theapp/config/app.php
file. Otherwise, encrypted values will not be secure.
Decrypting A Value
$decrypted = Crypt::decrypt($encryptedValue);
You may also set the cipher and mode used by the encrypter:
Setting The Cipher & Mode
Crypt::setMode('crt');
Crypt::setCipher($cipher);