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
Resetting Passwords
Introduction
{tip} Want to get started fast? Just run
php artisan make:authin a fresh Laravel application and navigate your browser tohttp://your-app.dev/registeror any other URL that is assigned to your application. This single command will take care of scaffolding your entire authentication system, including resetting passwords!
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.
{note} Before using the password reset features of Laravel, your user must use the
Illuminate\Notifications\Notifiabletrait.
Database Considerations
To get started, verify that your App\User model implements the Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\CanResetPassword contract. Of course, the App\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 Reset Token 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 run your database migrations:
Routing
Laravel includes Auth\ForgotPasswordController and Auth\ResetPasswordController classes that contains the logic necessary to e-mail password reset links and reset user passwords. All of the routes needed to perform password resets may be generated using the make:auth Artisan command:
Views
Again, Laravel will generate all of the necessary views for password reset when the make:auth command is executed. These views are placed in resources/views/auth/passwords. You are free to customize them as needed for your application.
After Resetting Passwords
Once you have defined the routes and views to reset your user’s passwords, you may simply access the route in your browser at /password/reset. The ForgotPasswordController included with the framework already includes the logic to send the password reset link e-mails, while the ResetPasswordController includes the logic to reset user passwords.
After a password is reset, the user will automatically be logged into the application and redirected to /home. You can customize the post password reset redirect location by defining a redirectTo property on the ResetPasswordController:
{note} By default, password reset tokens expire after one hour. You may change this via the password reset
expireoption in yourconfig/auth.phpfile.
Customization
Authentication Guard Customization
In your auth.php configuration file, you may configure multiple “guards”, which may be used to define authentication behavior for multiple user tables. You can customize the included ResetPasswordController to use the guard of your choice by overriding the guard method on the controller. This method should return a guard instance:
Password Broker Customization
In your auth.php configuration file, you may configure multiple password “brokers”, which may be used to reset passwords on multiple user tables. You can customize the included ForgotPasswordController and ResetPasswordController to use the broker of your choice by overriding the broker method:
Reset Email Customization
You may easily modify the notification class used to send the password reset link to the user. To get started, override the sendPasswordResetNotification method on your User model. Within this method, you may send the notification using any notification class you choose. The password reset $token is the first argument received by the method: