Laravel 5.4
Awesome Laravel
- Awesome Laravel (Chirag Gude)
Prologue
- Release Notes
- Upgrade Guide
Getting Started
- Installation
- Configuration
- Directory Structure
- Laravel Homestead
- valet
Architecture Concepts
- Request Lifecycle
- Service Container
- Service Providers
- Facades
The Basics
- Routing
- Errors & Logging
- Middleware
- CSRF Protection
- Controllers
- HTTP Requests
- HTTP Responses
- Views
- HTTP Session
- Validation
Frontend
- Blade Templates
- Localization
- JavaScript & CSS Scaffolding
- Compiling Assets (Laravel Mix)
Security
- Authentication
- API Authentication (Passport)
- Authorization
- Encryption
- Hashing
- Resetting Passwords
Digging Deeper
- Artisan Console
- Queues
- Package Development
- Task Scheduling
- Broadcasting
- Cache
- Collections
- Events
- File Storage
- helpers
- Notifications
Database
- Database Getting Started
- Database Query Builder
- Database Pagination
- Database Migrations
- Database Seeding
- Redis
Eloquent ORM
- Eloquent Getting Started
- Eloquent Relationships
- Eloquent Collections
- Eloquent Mutators
- Eloquent Serialization
Testing
- Testing Getting Started
- HTTP Tests
- Browser Tests (Laravel Dusk)
- Database Testing
- Mocking
- redirect
Official Packages
- Laravel Cashier
- Envoy Task Runner
- Laravel Scout
Authorization
Introduction
In addition to providing authentication services out of the box, Laravel also provides a simple way to authorize user actions against a given resource. Like authentication, Laravel’s approach to authorization is simple, and there are two primary ways of authorizing actions: gates and policies.
Think of gates and policies like routes and controllers. Gates provide a simple, Closure based approach to authorization while policies, like controllers, group their logic around a particular model or resource. We’ll explore gates first and then examine policies.
You do not need to choose between exclusively using gates or exclusively using policies when building an application. Most applications will most likely contain a mixture of gates and policies, and that is perfectly fine! Gates are most applicable to actions which are not related to any model or resource, such as viewing an administrator dashboard. In contrast, policies should be used when you wish to authorize an action for a particular model or resource.
Gates
Writing Gates
Gates are Closures that determine if a user is authorized to perform a given action and are typically defined in the App\Providers\AuthServiceProvider
class using the Gate
facade. Gates always receive a user instance as their first argument, and may optionally receive additional arguments such as a relevant Eloquent model:
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Gates may also be defined using a Class@method
style callback string, like controllers:
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Authorizing Actions
To authorize an action using gates, you should use the allows
or denies
methods. Note that you are not required to pass the currently authenticated user to these methods. Laravel will automatically take care of passing the user into the gate Closure:
If you would like to determine if a particular user is authorized to perform an action, you may use the forUser
method on the Gate
facade:
Creating Policies
Generating Policies
Policies are classes that organize authorization logic around a particular model or resource. For example, if your application is a blog, you may have a Post
model and a corresponding PostPolicy
to authorize user actions such as creating or updating posts.
You may generate a policy using the make:policy
artisan command. The generated policy will be placed in the app/Policies
directory. If this directory does not exist in your application, Laravel will create it for you:
The make:policy
command will generate an empty policy class. If you would like to generate a class with the basic “CRUD” policy methods already included in the class, you may specify a --model
when executing the command:
All policies are resolved via the Laravel service container, allowing you to type-hint any needed dependencies in the policy’s constructor to have them automatically injected.
Registering Policies
Once the policy exists, it needs to be registered. The AuthServiceProvider
included with fresh Laravel applications contains a policies
property which maps your Eloquent models to their corresponding policies. Registering a policy will instruct Laravel which policy to utilize when authorizing actions against a given model:
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Writing Policies
Policy Methods
Once the policy has been registered, you may add methods for each action it authorizes. For example, let’s define an update
method on our PostPolicy
which determines if a given User
can update a given Post
instance.
The update
method will receive a User
and a Post
instance as its arguments, and should return true
or false
indicating whether the user is authorized to update the given Post
. So, for this example, let’s verify that the user’s id
matches the user_id
on the post:
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You may continue to define additional methods on the policy as needed for the various actions it authorizes. For example, you might define view
or delete
methods to authorize various Post
actions, but remember you are free to give your policy methods any name you like.
If you used the --model
option when generating your policy via the Artisan console, it will already contain methods for the view
, create
, update
, and delete
actions.
Methods Without Models
Some policy methods only receive the currently authenticated user and not an instance of the model they authorize. This situation is most common when authorizing create
actions. For example, if you are creating a blog, you may wish to check if a user is authorized to create any posts at all.
When defining policy methods that will not receive a model instance, such as a create
method, it will not receive a model instance. Instead, you should define the method as only expecting the authenticated user:
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Policy Filters
For certain users, you may wish to authorize all actions within a given policy. To accomplish this, define a before
method on the policy. The before
method will be executed before any other methods on the policy, giving you an opportunity to authorize the action before the intended policy method is actually called. This feature is most commonly used for authorizing application administrators to perform any action:
If you would like to deny all authorizations for a user you should return false
from the before
method. If null
is returned, the authorization will fall through to the policy method.
Authorizing Actions Using Policies
Via The User Model
The User
model that is included with your Laravel application includes two helpful methods for authorizing actions: can
and cant
. The can
method receives the action you wish to authorize and the relevant model. For example, let’s determine if a user is authorized to update a given Post
model:
If a policy is registered for the given model, the can
method will automatically call the appropriate policy and return the boolean result. If no policy is registered for the model, the can
method will attempt to call the Closure based Gate matching the given action name.
Actions That Don’t Require Models
Remember, some actions like create
may not require a model instance. In these situations, you may pass a class name to the can
method. The class name will be used to determine which policy to use when authorizing the action:
Via Middleware
Laravel includes a middleware that can authorize actions before the incoming request even reaches your routes or controllers. By default, the Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\Authorize
middleware is assigned the can
key in your App\Http\Kernel
class. Let’s explore an example of using the can
middleware to authorize that a user can update a blog post:
In this example, we’re passing the can
middleware two arguments. The first is the name of the action we wish to authorize and the second is the route parameter we wish to pass to the policy method. In this case, since we are using implicit model binding, a Post
model will be passed to the policy method. If the user is not authorized to perform the given action, a HTTP response with a 403
status code will be generated by the middleware.
Actions That Don’t Require Models
Again, some actions like create
may not require a model instance. In these situations, you may pass a class name to the middleware. The class name will be used to determine which policy to use when authorizing the action:
Via Controller Helpers
In addition to helpful methods provided to the User
model, Laravel provides a helpful authorize
method to any of your controllers which extend the App\Http\Controllers\Controller
base class. Like the can
method, this method accepts the name of the action you wish to authorize and the relevant model. If the action is not authorized, the authorize
method will throw an Illuminate\Auth\Access\AuthorizationException
, which the default Laravel exception handler will convert to an HTTP response with a 403
status code:
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Actions That Don’t Require Models
As previously discussed, some actions like create
may not require a model instance. In these situations, you may pass a class name to the authorize
method. The class name will be used to determine which policy to use when authorizing the action:
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Via Blade Templates
When writing Blade templates, you may wish to display a portion of the page only if the user is authorized to perform a given action. For example, you may wish to show an update form for a blog post only if the user can actually update the post. In this situation, you may use the @can
and @cannot
family of directives:
These directives are convenient shortcuts for writing @if
and @unless
statements. The @can
and @cannot
statements above respectively translate to the following statements:
Actions That Don’t Require Models
Like most of the other authorization methods, you may pass a class name to the @can
and @cannot
directives if the action does not require a model instance: