Authentication
Laravel makes implementing authentication very simple. In fact, almost everything is configured for you out of the box. The authentication configuration file is located at , which contains several well documented options for tweaking the behavior of the authentication services.
By default, Laravel includes an App\User
model in your app
directory. This model may be used with the default Eloquent authentication driver.
Remember: when building the database schema for this model, make the password column at least 60 characters. Also, before getting started, make sure that your users
(or equivalent) table contains a nullable, string remember_token
column of 100 characters. This column will be used to store a token for "remember me" sessions being maintained by your application. This can be done by using $table->rememberToken();
in a migration. Of course, Laravel 5 ships migrations for these columns out of the box!
If your application is not using Eloquent, you may use the database
authentication driver which uses the Laravel query builder.
Authenticating Users
Laravel ships with two authentication related controllers out of the box. The AuthController
handles new user registration and "logging in", while the PasswordController
contains the logic to help existing users reset their forgotten passwords.
Each of these controllers uses a trait to include their necessary methods. For many applications, you will not need to modify these controllers at all. The views that these controllers render are located in the resources/views/auth
directory. You are free to customize these views however you wish.
To modify the form fields that are required when a new user registers with your application, you may modify the App\Services\Registrar
class. This class is responsible for validating and creating new users of your application.
The validator
method of the Registrar
contains the validation rules for new users of the application, while the create
method of the Registrar
is responsible for creating new User
records in your database. You are free to modify each of these methods as you wish. The Registrar
is called by the AuthController
via the methods contained in the AuthenticatesAndRegistersUsers
trait.
Manual Authentication
If you choose not to use the provided AuthController
implementation, you will need to manage the authentication of your users using the Laravel authentication classes directly. Don't worry, it's still a cinch! First, let's check out the attempt
method:
The attempt
method accepts an array of key / value pairs as its first argument. The password
value will be hashed. The other values in the array will be used to find the user in your database table. So, in the example above, the user will be retrieved by the value of the email
column. If the user is found, the hashed password stored in the database will be compared with the hashed password
value passed to the method via the array. If the two hashed passwords match, a new authenticated session will be started for the user.
The attempt
method will return true
if authentication was successful. Otherwise, false
will be returned.
The intended
redirect function will redirect the user to the URL they were attempting 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.
Authenticating A User With Conditions
You also may add extra conditions to the authentication query:
if (Auth::attempt(['email' => $email, 'password' => $password, 'active' => 1]))
{
// The user is active, not suspended, and exists.
}
Determining If A User Is Authenticated
To determine if the user is already logged into your application, you may use the check
method:
if (Auth::check())
{
// The user is logged in...
}
Authenticating A User And "Remembering" Them
if (Auth::attempt(['email' => $email, 'password' => $password], $remember))
{
// The user is being remembered...
}
If you are "remembering" users, you may use the viaRemember
method to determine if the user was authenticated using the "remember me" cookie:
if (Auth::viaRemember())
{
//
}
Authenticating Users By ID
To log a user into the application by their ID, use the loginUsingId
method:
Auth::loginUsingId(1);
Validating User Credentials Without Login
The validate
method allows you to validate a user's credentials without actually logging them into the application:
if (Auth::validate($credentials))
{
//
}
Logging A User In For A Single Request
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:
if (Auth::once($credentials))
//
}
Manually Logging In A User
If you need to log an existing user instance into your application, you may call the login
method with the user instance:
This is equivalent to logging in a user via credentials using the attempt
method.
Logging A User Out Of The Application
Auth::logout();
Of course, if you are using the built-in Laravel authentication controllers, a controller method that handles logging users out of the application is provided out of the box.
Authentication Events
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.
Once a user is authenticated, there are several ways to obtain an instance of the User.
First, you may access the user from the facade:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Auth;
use Illuminate\Routing\Controller;
class ProfileController extends Controller {
/**
* Update the user's profile.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function updateProfile()
{
if (Auth::user())
{
// Auth::user() returns an instance of the authenticated user...
}
}
}
Second, you may access the authenticated user via an Illuminate\Http\Request
instance:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\Routing\Controller;
class ProfileController extends Controller {
/**
* Update the user's profile.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function updateProfile(Request $request)
{
if ($request->user())
{
// $request->user() returns an instance of the authenticated user...
}
}
}
Thirdly, you may type-hint the Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\Authenticatable
contract. This type-hint may be added to a controller constructor, controller method, or any other constructor of a class resolved by the service container:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\Authenticatable;
class ProfileController extends Controller {
/**
* Update the user's profile.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function updateProfile(Authenticatable $user)
{
// $user is an instance of the authenticated user...
}
}
Protecting Routes
can be used to allow only authenticated users to access a given route. Laravel provides the middleware by default, and it is defined in app\Http\Middleware\Authenticate.php
. All you need to do is attach it to a route definition:
// With A Route Closure...
Route::get('profile', ['middleware' => 'auth', function()
{
// Only authenticated users may enter...
}]);
// With A Controller...
Route::get('profile', ['middleware' => 'auth', 'uses' => '[email protected]']);
Protecting A Route With HTTP Basic
Route::get('profile', ['middleware' => 'auth.basic', function()
{
// Only authenticated users may enter...
}]);
By default, the basic
middleware will use the email
column on the user record as the "username".
Setting Up A Stateless HTTP Basic Filter
You may also use HTTP Basic Authentication without setting a user identifier cookie in the session, which is particularly useful for API authentication. To do so, define a middleware that calls the onceBasic
method:
public function handle($request, Closure $next)
{
return Auth::onceBasic() ?: $next($request);
}
If you are using PHP FastCGI, HTTP Basic authentication may not work correctly out of the box. The following lines should be added to your .htaccess
file:
Password Reminders & Reset
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\Contracts\Auth\CanResetPassword
contract. Of course, the User
model included with the framework already implements this interface, and uses the Illuminate\Auth\Passwords\CanResetPassword
trait to include the methods needed to implement the interface.
Generating The Reminder Table Migration
Next, a table must be created to store the password reset tokens. The migration for this table is included with Laravel out of the box, and resides in the database/migrations
directory. So all you need to do is migrate:
php artisan migrate
Laravel also includes an Auth\PasswordController
that contains the logic necessary to reset user passwords. We've even provided views to get you started! The views are located in the resources/views/auth
directory. You are free to modify these views as you wish to suit your own application's design.
Your user will receive an e-mail with a link that points to the getReset
method of the PasswordController
. This method will render the password reset form and allow users to reset their passwords. After the password is reset, the user will automatically be logged into the application and redirected to /home
. You can customize the post-reset redirect location by defining a redirectTo
property on the PasswordController
:
protected $redirectTo = '/dashboard';
Note: By default, password reset tokens expire after one hour. You may change this via the
reminder.expire
option in yourconfig/auth.php
file.
In addition to typical, form based authentication, Laravel also provides a simple, convenient way to authenticate with OAuth providers using . Socialite currently supports authentication with Facebook, Twitter, Google, GitHub and Bitbucket.
To get started with Socialite, include the package in your composer.json
file:
"laravel/socialite": "~2.0"
Next, register the Laravel\Socialite\SocialiteServiceProvider
in your config/app.php
configuration file. You may also register a facade:
'Socialize' => 'Laravel\Socialite\Facades\Socialite',
You will need to add credentials for the OAuth services your application utilizes. These credentials should be placed in your config/services.php
configuration file, and should use the key facebook
, twitter
, google
, or github
, depending on the providers your application requires. For example:
'github' => [
'client_id' => 'your-github-app-id',
'client_secret' => 'your-github-app-secret',
'redirect' => 'http://your-callback-url',
],
Next, you are ready to authenticate users! You will need two routes: one for redirecting the user to the OAuth provider, and another for receiving the callback from the provider after authentication. Here's an example using the Socialize
facade:
public function redirectToProvider()
{
return Socialize::with('github')->redirect();
}
public function handleProviderCallback()
{
$user = Socialize::with('github')->user();
// $user->token;
}
Once you have a user instance, you can grab a few more details about the user: