Code Monkey home page Code Monkey logo

laravel-authz's Introduction

Laravel Authorization

Laravel-authz is an authorization library for the laravel framework.

Build Status Coverage Status Latest Stable Version Total Downloads License

It's based on Casbin, an authorization library that supports access control models like ACL, RBAC, ABAC.

All you need to learn to use Casbin first.

Installation

Require this package in the composer.json of your Laravel project. This will download the package.

composer require casbin/laravel-authz

The Lauthz\LauthzServiceProvider is auto-discovered and registered by default, but if you want to register it yourself:

Add the ServiceProvider in config/app.php

'providers' => [
    /*
     * Package Service Providers...
     */
    Lauthz\LauthzServiceProvider::class,
]

The Enforcer facade is also auto-discovered, but if you want to add it manually:

Add the Facade in config/app.php

'aliases' => [
    // ...
    'Enforcer' => Lauthz\Facades\Enforcer::class,
]

To publish the config, run the vendor publish command:

php artisan vendor:publish

This will create a new model config file named config/lauthz-rbac-model.conf and a new lauthz config file named config/lauthz.php.

To migrate the migrations, run the migrate command:

php artisan migrate

This will create a new table named rules

Usage

Quick start

Once installed you can do stuff like this:

use Enforcer;

// adds permissions to a user
Enforcer::addPermissionForUser('eve', 'articles', 'read');
// adds a role for a user.
Enforcer::addRoleForUser('eve', 'writer');
// adds permissions to a rule
Enforcer::addPolicy('writer', 'articles','edit');

You can check if a user has a permission like this:

// to check if a user has permission
if (Enforcer::enforce("eve", "articles", "edit")) {
    // permit eve to edit articles
} else {
    // deny the request, show an error
}

Using Enforcer Api

It provides a very rich api to facilitate various operations on the Policy:

Gets all roles:

Enforcer::getAllRoles(); // ['writer', 'reader']

Gets all the authorization rules in the policy.:

Enforcer::getPolicy();

Gets the roles that a user has.

Enforcer::getRolesForUser('eve'); // ['writer']

Gets the users that has a role.

Enforcer::getUsersForRole('writer'); // ['eve']

Determines whether a user has a role.

Enforcer::hasRoleForUser('eve', 'writer'); // true or false

Adds a role for a user.

Enforcer::addRoleForUser('eve', 'writer');

Adds a permission for a user or role.

// to user
Enforcer::addPermissionForUser('eve', 'articles', 'read');
// to role
Enforcer::addPermissionForUser('writer', 'articles','edit');

Deletes a role for a user.

Enforcer::deleteRoleForUser('eve', 'writer');

Deletes all roles for a user.

Enforcer::deleteRolesForUser('eve');

Deletes a role.

Enforcer::deleteRole('writer');

Deletes a permission.

Enforcer::deletePermission('articles', 'read'); // returns false if the permission does not exist (aka not affected).

Deletes a permission for a user or role.

Enforcer::deletePermissionForUser('eve', 'articles', 'read');

Deletes permissions for a user or role.

// to user
Enforcer::deletePermissionsForUser('eve');
// to role
Enforcer::deletePermissionsForUser('writer');

Gets permissions for a user or role.

Enforcer::getPermissionsForUser('eve'); // return array

Determines whether a user has a permission.

Enforcer::hasPermissionForUser('eve', 'articles', 'read');  // true or false

See Casbin API for more APIs.

Using a middleware

This package comes with EnforcerMiddleware, RequestMiddleware middlewares. You can add them inside your app/Http/Kernel.php file.

protected $routeMiddleware = [
    // ...
    // a basic Enforcer Middleware
    'enforcer' => \Lauthz\Middlewares\EnforcerMiddleware::class,
    // an HTTP Request Middleware
    'http_request' => \Lauthz\Middlewares\RequestMiddleware::class,
];

basic Enforcer Middleware

Then you can protect your routes using middleware rules:

Route::group(['middleware' => ['enforcer:articles,read']], function () {
    // pass
});

HTTP Request Middleware ( RESTful is also supported )

If you need to authorize a Request,you need to define the model configuration first in config/lauthz-rbac-model.conf:

[request_definition]
r = sub, obj, act

[policy_definition]
p = sub, obj, act

[role_definition]
g = _, _

[policy_effect]
e = some(where (p.eft == allow))

[matchers]
m = g(r.sub, p.sub) && keyMatch2(r.obj, p.obj) && regexMatch(r.act, p.act)

Then, using middleware rules:

Route::group(['middleware' => ['http_request']], function () {
    Route::resource('photo', 'PhotoController');
});

Multiple enforcers

If you need multiple permission controls in your project, you can configure multiple enforcers.

In the lauthz file, it should be like this:

return [
    'default' => 'basic',

    'basic' => [
        'model' => [
            // ...
        ],

        'adapter' => Lauthz\Adapters\DatabaseAdapter::class,
        // ...
    ],

    'second' => [
        'model' => [
            // ...
        ],

        'adapter' => Lauthz\Adapters\DatabaseAdapter::class,
        // ...
    ],
];

Then you can choose which enforcers to use.

Enforcer::guard('second')->enforce("eve", "articles", "edit");

Using artisan commands

You can create a policy from a console with artisan commands.

To user:

php artisan policy:add eve,articles,read

To Role:

php artisan policy:add writer,articles,edit

Adds a role for a user:

php artisan role:assign eve writer

Using cache

Authorization rules are cached to speed up performance. The default is off.

Sets your own cache configs in Laravel's config/lauthz.php.

'cache' => [
    // changes whether Lauthz will cache the rules.
    'enabled' => false,

    // cache store
    'store' => 'default',

    // cache Key
    'key' => 'rules',

    // ttl \DateTimeInterface|\DateInterval|int|null
    'ttl' => 24 * 60,
],

Thinks

Casbin in Laravel. You can find the full documentation of Casbin on the website.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.

laravel-authz's People

Contributors

leeqvip avatar osindex avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.