712 lines
23 KiB
ReStructuredText
712 lines
23 KiB
ReStructuredText
Security
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========
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The *SecurityServiceProvider* manages authentication and authorization for
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your applications.
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Parameters
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----------
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* **security.hide_user_not_found** (optional): Defines whether to hide user not
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found exception or not. Defaults to ``true``.
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* **security.encoder.bcrypt.cost** (optional): Defines BCrypt password encoder cost. Defaults to 13.
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Services
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--------
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* **security.token_storage**: Gives access to the user token.
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* **security.authorization_checker**: Allows to check authorizations for the
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users.
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* **security.authentication_manager**: An instance of
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`AuthenticationProviderManager
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/Authentication/AuthenticationProviderManager.html>`_,
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responsible for authentication.
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* **security.access_manager**: An instance of `AccessDecisionManager
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/Authorization/AccessDecisionManager.html>`_,
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responsible for authorization.
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* **security.session_strategy**: Define the session strategy used for
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authentication (default to a migration strategy).
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* **security.user_checker**: Checks user flags after authentication.
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* **security.last_error**: Returns the last authentication errors when given a
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Request object.
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* **security.encoder_factory**: Defines the encoding strategies for user
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passwords (uses ``security.default_encoder``).
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* **security.default_encoder**: The encoder to use by default for all users (BCrypt).
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* **security.encoder.digest**: Digest password encoder.
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* **security.encoder.bcrypt**: BCrypt password encoder.
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* **security.encoder.pbkdf2**: Pbkdf2 password encoder.
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* **user**: Returns the current user
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.. note::
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The service provider defines many other services that are used internally
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but rarely need to be customized.
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Registering
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-----------
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.. code-block:: php
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$app->register(new Silex\Provider\SecurityServiceProvider(), array(
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'security.firewalls' => // see below
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));
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.. note::
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Add the Symfony Security Component as a dependency:
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.. code-block:: bash
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composer require symfony/security
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.. caution::
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If you're using a form to authenticate users, you need to enable
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``SessionServiceProvider``.
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.. caution::
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The security features are only available after the Application has been
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booted. So, if you want to use it outside of the handling of a request,
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don't forget to call ``boot()`` first::
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$app->boot();
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Usage
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-----
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The Symfony Security component is powerful. To learn more about it, read the
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`Symfony Security documentation
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<http://symfony.com/doc/2.8/book/security.html>`_.
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.. tip::
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When a security configuration does not behave as expected, enable logging
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(with the Monolog extension for instance) as the Security Component logs a
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lot of interesting information about what it does and why.
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Below is a list of recipes that cover some common use cases.
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Accessing the current User
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The current user information is stored in a token that is accessible via the
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``security`` service::
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$token = $app['security.token_storage']->getToken();
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If there is no information about the user, the token is ``null``. If the user
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is known, you can get it with a call to ``getUser()``::
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if (null !== $token) {
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$user = $token->getUser();
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}
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The user can be a string, an object with a ``__toString()`` method, or an
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instance of `UserInterface
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/UserInterface.html>`_.
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Securing a Path with HTTP Authentication
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The following configuration uses HTTP basic authentication to secure URLs
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under ``/admin/``::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'admin' => array(
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'pattern' => '^/admin',
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'http' => true,
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'users' => array(
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// raw password is foo
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'admin' => array('ROLE_ADMIN', '$2y$10$3i9/lVd8UOFIJ6PAMFt8gu3/r5g0qeCJvoSlLCsvMTythye19F77a'),
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),
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),
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);
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The ``pattern`` is a regular expression on the URL path; the ``http`` setting
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tells the security layer to use HTTP basic authentication and the ``users``
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entry defines valid users.
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If you want to restrict the firewall by more than the URL pattern (like the
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HTTP method, the client IP, the hostname, or any Request attributes), use an
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instance of a `RequestMatcher
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/RequestMatcher.html>`_
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for the ``pattern`` option::
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use Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/RequestMatcher;
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'admin' => array(
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'pattern' => new RequestMatcher('^/admin', 'example.com', 'POST'),
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// ...
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),
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);
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Each user is defined with the following information:
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* The role or an array of roles for the user (roles are strings beginning with
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``ROLE_`` and ending with anything you want);
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* The user encoded password.
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.. caution::
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All users must at least have one role associated with them.
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The default configuration of the extension enforces encoded passwords. To
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generate a valid encoded password from a raw password, use the
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``security.encoder_factory`` service::
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// find the encoder for a UserInterface instance
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$encoder = $app['security.encoder_factory']->getEncoder($user);
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// compute the encoded password for foo
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$password = $encoder->encodePassword('foo', $user->getSalt());
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When the user is authenticated, the user stored in the token is an instance of
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`User
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/User.html>`_
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.. caution::
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If you are using php-cgi under Apache, you need to add this configuration
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to make things work correctly:
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.. code-block:: apache
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RewriteEngine On
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RewriteCond %{HTTP:Authorization} ^(.+)$
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RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%{HTTP:Authorization}]
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RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
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RewriteRule ^(.*)$ app.php [QSA,L]
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Securing a Path with a Form
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Using a form to authenticate users is very similar to the above configuration.
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Instead of using the ``http`` setting, use the ``form`` one and define these
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two parameters:
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* **login_path**: The login path where the user is redirected when they are
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accessing a secured area without being authenticated so that they can enter
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their credentials;
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* **check_path**: The check URL used by Symfony to validate the credentials of
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the user.
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Here is how to secure all URLs under ``/admin/`` with a form::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'admin' => array(
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'pattern' => '^/admin/',
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'form' => array('login_path' => '/login', 'check_path' => '/admin/login_check'),
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'users' => array(
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'admin' => array('ROLE_ADMIN', '$2y$10$3i9/lVd8UOFIJ6PAMFt8gu3/r5g0qeCJvoSlLCsvMTythye19F77a'),
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),
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),
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);
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Always keep in mind the following two golden rules:
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* The ``login_path`` path must always be defined **outside** the secured area
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(or if it is in the secured area, the ``anonymous`` authentication mechanism
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must be enabled -- see below);
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* The ``check_path`` path must always be defined **inside** the secured area.
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For the login form to work, create a controller like the following::
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use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
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$app->get('/login', function(Request $request) use ($app) {
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return $app['twig']->render('login.html', array(
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'error' => $app['security.last_error']($request),
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'last_username' => $app['session']->get('_security.last_username'),
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));
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});
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The ``error`` and ``last_username`` variables contain the last authentication
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error and the last username entered by the user in case of an authentication
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error.
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Create the associated template:
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.. code-block:: jinja
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<form action="{{ path('admin_login_check') }}" method="post">
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{{ error }}
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<input type="text" name="_username" value="{{ last_username }}" />
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<input type="password" name="_password" value="" />
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<input type="submit" />
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</form>
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.. note::
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The ``admin_login_check`` route is automatically defined by Silex and its
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name is derived from the ``check_path`` value (all ``/`` are replaced with
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``_`` and the leading ``/`` is stripped).
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Defining more than one Firewall
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You are not limited to define one firewall per project.
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Configuring several firewalls is useful when you want to secure different
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parts of your website with different authentication strategies or for
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different users (like using an HTTP basic authentication for the website API
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and a form to secure your website administration area).
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It's also useful when you want to secure all URLs except the login form::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'login' => array(
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'pattern' => '^/login$',
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),
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'secured' => array(
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'pattern' => '^.*$',
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'form' => array('login_path' => '/login', 'check_path' => '/login_check'),
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'users' => array(
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'admin' => array('ROLE_ADMIN', '$2y$10$3i9/lVd8UOFIJ6PAMFt8gu3/r5g0qeCJvoSlLCsvMTythye19F77a'),
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),
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),
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);
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The order of the firewall configurations is significant as the first one to
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match wins. The above configuration first ensures that the ``/login`` URL is
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not secured (no authentication settings), and then it secures all other URLs.
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.. tip::
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You can toggle all registered authentication mechanisms for a particular
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area on and off with the ``security`` flag::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'api' => array(
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'pattern' => '^/api',
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'security' => $app['debug'] ? false : true,
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'wsse' => true,
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// ...
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),
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);
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Adding a Logout
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When using a form for authentication, you can let users log out if you add the
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``logout`` setting, where ``logout_path`` must match the main firewall
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pattern::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'secured' => array(
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'pattern' => '^/admin/',
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'form' => array('login_path' => '/login', 'check_path' => '/admin/login_check'),
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'logout' => array('logout_path' => '/admin/logout', 'invalidate_session' => true),
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// ...
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),
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);
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A route is automatically generated, based on the configured path (all ``/``
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are replaced with ``_`` and the leading ``/`` is stripped):
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.. code-block:: jinja
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<a href="{{ path('admin_logout') }}">Logout</a>
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Allowing Anonymous Users
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When securing only some parts of your website, the user information are not
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available in non-secured areas. To make the user accessible in such areas,
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enabled the ``anonymous`` authentication mechanism::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'unsecured' => array(
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'anonymous' => true,
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// ...
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),
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);
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When enabling the anonymous setting, a user will always be accessible from the
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security context; if the user is not authenticated, it returns the ``anon.``
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string.
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Checking User Roles
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To check if a user is granted some role, use the ``isGranted()`` method on the
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security context::
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if ($app['security.authorization_checker']->isGranted('ROLE_ADMIN')) {
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// ...
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}
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You can check roles in Twig templates too:
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.. code-block:: jinja
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{% if is_granted('ROLE_ADMIN') %}
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<a href="/secured?_switch_user=fabien">Switch to Fabien</a>
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{% endif %}
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You can check if a user is "fully authenticated" (not an anonymous user for
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instance) with the special ``IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY`` role:
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.. code-block:: jinja
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{% if is_granted('IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY') %}
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<a href="{{ path('logout') }}">Logout</a>
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{% else %}
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<a href="{{ path('login') }}">Login</a>
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{% endif %}
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Of course you will need to define a ``login`` route for this to work.
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.. tip::
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Don't use the ``getRoles()`` method to check user roles.
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.. caution::
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``isGranted()`` throws an exception when no authentication information is
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available (which is the case on non-secured area).
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Impersonating a User
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you want to be able to switch to another user (without knowing the user
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credentials), enable the ``switch_user`` authentication strategy::
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$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
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'unsecured' => array(
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'switch_user' => array('parameter' => '_switch_user', 'role' => 'ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH'),
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// ...
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),
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);
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Switching to another user is now a matter of adding the ``_switch_user`` query
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parameter to any URL when logged in as a user who has the
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``ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH`` role:
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.. code-block:: jinja
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{% if is_granted('ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH') %}
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<a href="?_switch_user=fabien">Switch to user Fabien</a>
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{% endif %}
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You can check that you are impersonating a user by checking the special
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``ROLE_PREVIOUS_ADMIN``. This is useful for instance to allow the user to
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switch back to their primary account:
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.. code-block:: jinja
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{% if is_granted('ROLE_PREVIOUS_ADMIN') %}
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You are an admin but you've switched to another user,
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<a href="?_switch_user=_exit"> exit</a> the switch.
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{% endif %}
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Defining a Role Hierarchy
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Defining a role hierarchy allows to automatically grant users some additional
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roles::
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$app['security.role_hierarchy'] = array(
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'ROLE_ADMIN' => array('ROLE_USER', 'ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH'),
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);
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With this configuration, all users with the ``ROLE_ADMIN`` role also
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automatically have the ``ROLE_USER`` and ``ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH`` roles.
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Defining Access Rules
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Roles are a great way to adapt the behavior of your website depending on
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groups of users, but they can also be used to further secure some areas by
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defining access rules::
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$app['security.access_rules'] = array(
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array('^/admin', 'ROLE_ADMIN', 'https'),
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array('^.*$', 'ROLE_USER'),
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);
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With the above configuration, users must have the ``ROLE_ADMIN`` to access the
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``/admin`` section of the website, and ``ROLE_USER`` for everything else.
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Furthermore, the admin section can only be accessible via HTTPS (if that's not
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the case, the user will be automatically redirected).
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.. note::
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The first argument can also be a `RequestMatcher
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/HttpFoundation/RequestMatcher.html>`_
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instance.
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Defining a custom User Provider
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Using an array of users is simple and useful when securing an admin section of
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a personal website, but you can override this default mechanism with you own.
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The ``users`` setting can be defined as a service that returns an instance of
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`UserProviderInterface
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/UserProviderInterface.html>`_::
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'users' => function () use ($app) {
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return new UserProvider($app['db']);
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},
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Here is a simple example of a user provider, where Doctrine DBAL is used to
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store the users::
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserProviderInterface;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserInterface;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\UnsupportedUserException;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\UsernameNotFoundException;
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use Doctrine\DBAL\Connection;
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class UserProvider implements UserProviderInterface
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{
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private $conn;
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public function __construct(Connection $conn)
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{
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$this->conn = $conn;
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}
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public function loadUserByUsername($username)
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{
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$stmt = $this->conn->executeQuery('SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = ?', array(strtolower($username)));
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if (!$user = $stmt->fetch()) {
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throw new UsernameNotFoundException(sprintf('Username "%s" does not exist.', $username));
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}
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return new User($user['username'], $user['password'], explode(',', $user['roles']), true, true, true, true);
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}
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public function refreshUser(UserInterface $user)
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{
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if (!$user instanceof User) {
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throw new UnsupportedUserException(sprintf('Instances of "%s" are not supported.', get_class($user)));
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}
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return $this->loadUserByUsername($user->getUsername());
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}
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public function supportsClass($class)
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{
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return $class === 'Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User';
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}
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}
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In this example, instances of the default ``User`` class are created for the
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users, but you can define your own class; the only requirement is that the
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class must implement `UserInterface
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<http://api.symfony.com/master/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/UserInterface.html>`_
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And here is the code that you can use to create the database schema and some
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sample users::
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use Doctrine\DBAL\Schema\Table;
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$schema = $app['db']->getSchemaManager();
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if (!$schema->tablesExist('users')) {
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$users = new Table('users');
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$users->addColumn('id', 'integer', array('unsigned' => true, 'autoincrement' => true));
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$users->setPrimaryKey(array('id'));
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$users->addColumn('username', 'string', array('length' => 32));
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$users->addUniqueIndex(array('username'));
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$users->addColumn('password', 'string', array('length' => 255));
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$users->addColumn('roles', 'string', array('length' => 255));
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$schema->createTable($users);
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$app['db']->insert('users', array(
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'username' => 'fabien',
|
|
'password' => '$2y$10$3i9/lVd8UOFIJ6PAMFt8gu3/r5g0qeCJvoSlLCsvMTythye19F77a',
|
|
'roles' => 'ROLE_USER'
|
|
));
|
|
|
|
$app['db']->insert('users', array(
|
|
'username' => 'admin',
|
|
'password' => '$2y$10$3i9/lVd8UOFIJ6PAMFt8gu3/r5g0qeCJvoSlLCsvMTythye19F77a',
|
|
'roles' => 'ROLE_ADMIN'
|
|
));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
.. tip::
|
|
|
|
If you are using the Doctrine ORM, the Symfony bridge for Doctrine
|
|
provides a user provider class that is able to load users from your
|
|
entities.
|
|
|
|
Defining a custom Encoder
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
By default, Silex uses the ``BCrypt`` algorithm to encode passwords.
|
|
Additionally, the password is encoded multiple times.
|
|
You can change these defaults by overriding ``security.default_encoder``
|
|
service to return one of the predefined encoders:
|
|
|
|
* **security.encoder.digest**: Digest password encoder.
|
|
|
|
* **security.encoder.bcrypt**: BCrypt password encoder.
|
|
|
|
* **security.encoder.pbkdf2**: Pbkdf2 password encoder.
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: php
|
|
|
|
$app['security.default_encoder'] = function ($app) {
|
|
return $app['security.encoder.pbkdf2'];
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
Or you can define you own, fully customizable encoder::
|
|
|
|
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Encoder\PlaintextPasswordEncoder;
|
|
|
|
$app['security.default_encoder'] = function ($app) {
|
|
// Plain text (e.g. for debugging)
|
|
return new PlaintextPasswordEncoder();
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
.. tip::
|
|
|
|
You can change the default BCrypt encoding cost by overriding ``security.encoder.bcrypt.cost``
|
|
|
|
Defining a custom Authentication Provider
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The Symfony Security component provides a lot of ready-to-use authentication
|
|
providers (form, HTTP, X509, remember me, ...), but you can add new ones
|
|
easily. To register a new authentication provider, create a service named
|
|
``security.authentication_listener.factory.XXX`` where ``XXX`` is the name you want to
|
|
use in your configuration::
|
|
|
|
$app['security.authentication_listener.factory.wsse'] = $app->protect(function ($name, $options) use ($app) {
|
|
// define the authentication provider object
|
|
$app['security.authentication_provider.'.$name.'.wsse'] = function () use ($app) {
|
|
return new WsseProvider($app['security.user_provider.default'], __DIR__.'/security_cache');
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// define the authentication listener object
|
|
$app['security.authentication_listener.'.$name.'.wsse'] = function () use ($app) {
|
|
return new WsseListener($app['security.token_storage'], $app['security.authentication_manager']);
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
return array(
|
|
// the authentication provider id
|
|
'security.authentication_provider.'.$name.'.wsse',
|
|
// the authentication listener id
|
|
'security.authentication_listener.'.$name.'.wsse',
|
|
// the entry point id
|
|
null,
|
|
// the position of the listener in the stack
|
|
'pre_auth'
|
|
);
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
You can now use it in your configuration like any other built-in
|
|
authentication provider::
|
|
|
|
$app->register(new Silex\Provider\SecurityServiceProvider(), array(
|
|
'security.firewalls' => array(
|
|
'default' => array(
|
|
'wsse' => true,
|
|
|
|
// ...
|
|
),
|
|
),
|
|
));
|
|
|
|
Instead of ``true``, you can also define an array of options that customize
|
|
the behavior of your authentication factory; it will be passed as the second
|
|
argument of your authentication factory (see above).
|
|
|
|
This example uses the authentication provider classes as described in the
|
|
Symfony `cookbook`_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
The Guard component simplifies the creation of custom authentication
|
|
providers. :doc:`How to Create a Custom Authentication System with Guard
|
|
</cookbook/guard_authentication>`
|
|
|
|
Stateless Authentication
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
By default, a session cookie is created to persist the security context of
|
|
the user. However, if you use certificates, HTTP authentication, WSSE and so
|
|
on, the credentials are sent for each request. In that case, you can turn off
|
|
persistence by activating the ``stateless`` authentication flag::
|
|
|
|
$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
|
|
'default' => array(
|
|
'stateless' => true,
|
|
'wsse' => true,
|
|
|
|
// ...
|
|
),
|
|
);
|
|
|
|
Traits
|
|
------
|
|
|
|
``Silex\Application\SecurityTrait`` adds the following shortcuts:
|
|
|
|
* **encodePassword**: Encode a given password.
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: php
|
|
|
|
$user = $app->user();
|
|
|
|
$encoded = $app->encodePassword($user, 'foo');
|
|
|
|
``Silex\Route\SecurityTrait`` adds the following methods to the controllers:
|
|
|
|
* **secure**: Secures a controller for the given roles.
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: php
|
|
|
|
$app->get('/', function () {
|
|
// do something but only for admins
|
|
})->secure('ROLE_ADMIN');
|
|
|
|
.. caution::
|
|
|
|
The ``Silex\Route\SecurityTrait`` must be used with a user defined
|
|
``Route`` class, not the application.
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: php
|
|
|
|
use Silex\Route;
|
|
|
|
class MyRoute extends Route
|
|
{
|
|
use Route\SecurityTrait;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: php
|
|
|
|
$app['route_class'] = 'MyRoute';
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _cookbook: http://symfony.com/doc/current/cookbook/security/custom_authentication_provider.html
|