Add simple and beautiful authentication to your Symfony project.
This library is deprecated since Symfony 2.8 and won't work with Symfony 3.
The original purpose was to get feedback and use-cases from people so that we can merge this feature into Symfony itself (see symfony/symfony#14673).
Now it's good (see news from Symfony).
On Symfony 2.8, use the official Guard component.
Be sure to be on Symfony 2.8, open composer.json
file and remove the library:
Before:
{
"require": {
"php": ">=5.5",
"symfony/symfony": "~2.8",
"...": "...",
"knpuniversity/guard-bundle": "~0.1@dev"
},
}
Now:
{
"require": {
"php": ">=5.5",
"symfony/symfony": "~2.8",
"...": "..."
},
}
If you're using the Symfony framework, remove the KnpUGuardBundle from AppKernel.php
.
Open and modify security.yml
file, replace in your firewall(s) key(s) knpu_guard
by guard
:
Before:
# app/config/security.yml
security:
# ...
firewalls:
# ...
main:
anonymous: ~
logout: ~
knpu_guard:
authenticators:
- app.form_login_authenticator
# maybe other things, like form_login, remember_me, etc
# ...
Now:
# app/config/security.yml
security:
# ...
firewalls:
# ...
main:
anonymous: ~
logout: ~
guard:
authenticators:
- app.form_login_authenticator
# maybe other things, like form_login, remember_me, etc
# ...
Update uses in Authenticator(s) class(es).
Warning: checkCredentials() NOW must return true in order for authentication to be successful. In KnpUGuard, if you did NOT throw an AuthenticationException, it would pass.
Before:
use KnpU\Guard\Authenticator\AbstractFormLoginAuthenticator;
use KnpU\Guard\...;
// ...
class FormLoginAuthenticator extends AbstractFormLoginAuthenticator
{
// ...
public function checkCredentials($credentials, UserInterface $user)
{
// ...
if ($password !== 'correctPassword') {
throw new AuthenticationException();
}
// do nothing, allow authentication to pass
}
// ...
}
Now:
use Symfony\Component\Security\Guard\Authenticator\AbstractFormLoginAuthenticator;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Guard\...;
// ...
class FormLoginAuthenticator extends AbstractFormLoginAuthenticator
{
// ...
public function checkCredentials($credentials, UserInterface $user)
{
// ...
if ($password !== 'correctPassword') {
// returning anything NOT true will cause an authentication failure
return;
// or, you can still throw an AuthenticationException if you want to
// throw new AuthenticationException();
}
// return true to make authentication successful
return true;
}
// ...
}
Upgrade to Symfony 3 (won't be worst than from Symfony 1 to Symfony 2) ;-)
- http://symfony.com/doc/current/cookbook/upgrade/major_version.html
- https://knpuniversity.com/screencast/new-symfony-2.2/symfony3
Find a full tutorial here: https://knpuniversity.com/screencast/guard
Check out the Tutorial for real documentation. But here's the basic idea.
Guard works by creating a single class - an authenticator - that handles everything about how you want to authenticate your users. And authenticator implements KnpU\Guard\GuardAuthenticatorInterface)
Here are some real-world examples from the tutorial:
Goal | Code | Tutorial |
---|---|---|
Authenticate by reading an X-TOKEN header |
ApiTokenAuthenticator.php | How to Authenticate via an API Token |
Form login authentication | FormLoginAuthenticator.php | How to Create a Login Form |
Social Login (Facebook) | FacebookAuthenticator.php | Social Login with Facebook |
Find a bug or a use-case that this doesn't support? Open an Issue so we can make things better.
This library is under the MIT license. See the complete license in the LICENSE file.