dev-master
9999999-devPowerful package for handling roles and permissions in Laravel 5.
MIT
The Requires
- php >=5.5.9
- illuminate/support ~5.0
by Francisco Marasco Quiroga
laravel acl auth roles permissions illuminate
Powerful package for handling roles and permissions in Laravel 5.
Powerful package for handling roles and permissions in Laravel 5 (5.1 and also 5.0)., (*1)
This package is very easy to set up. There are only couple of steps., (*2)
Pull this package in through Composer (file composer.json
)., (*3)
{ "require": { "php": ">=5.5.9", "laravel/framework": "5.1.*", "bican/roles": "2.1.*" } }
If you are still using Laravel 5.0, you must pull in version
1.7.*
., (*4)
Run this command inside your terminal., (*5)
composer update
Add the package to your application service providers in config/app.php
file., (*6)
'providers' => [ /* * Laravel Framework Service Providers... */ Illuminate\Foundation\Providers\ArtisanServiceProvider::class, Illuminate\Auth\AuthServiceProvider::class, ... /** * Third Party Service Providers... */ Bican\Roles\RolesServiceProvider::class, ],
Publish the package config file and migrations to your application. Run these commands inside your terminal., (*7)
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Bican\Roles\RolesServiceProvider" --tag=config php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Bican\Roles\RolesServiceProvider" --tag=migrations
And also run migrations., (*8)
php artisan migrate
This uses the default users table which is in Laravel. You should already have the migration file for the users table available and migrated., (*9)
Include HasRoleAndPermission
trait and also implement HasRoleAndPermission
contract inside your User
model., (*10)
use Bican\Roles\Traits\HasRoleAndPermission; use Bican\Roles\Contracts\HasRoleAndPermission as HasRoleAndPermissionContract; class User extends Model implements AuthenticatableContract, CanResetPasswordContract, HasRoleAndPermissionContract { use Authenticatable, CanResetPassword, HasRoleAndPermission;
And that's it!, (*11)
use Bican\Roles\Models\Role; $adminRole = Role::create([ 'name' => 'Admin', 'slug' => 'admin', 'description' => '', // optional 'level' => 1, // optional, set to 1 by default ]); $moderatorRole = Role::create([ 'name' => 'Forum Moderator', 'slug' => 'forum.moderator', ]);
Because of
Slugable
trait, if you make a mistake and for example leave a space in slug parameter, it'll be replaced with a dot automatically, because ofstr_slug
function., (*12)
It's really simple. You fetch a user from database and call attachRole
method. There is BelongsToMany
relationship between User
and Role
model., (*13)
use App\User; $user = User::find($id); $user->attachRole($adminRole); // you can pass whole object, or just an id
$user->detachRole($adminRole); // in case you want to detach role $user->detachAllRoles(); // in case you want to detach all roles
You can now check if the user has required role., (*14)
if ($user->is('admin')) { // you can pass an id or slug // or alternatively $user->hasRole('admin') }
You can also do this:, (*15)
if ($user->isAdmin()) { // }
And of course, there is a way to check for multiple roles:, (*16)
if ($user->is('admin|moderator')) { /* | Or alternatively: | $user->is('admin, moderator'), $user->is(['admin', 'moderator']), | $user->isOne('admin|moderator'), $user->isOne('admin, moderator'), $user->isOne(['admin', 'moderator']) */ // if user has at least one role } if ($user->is('admin|moderator', true)) { /* | Or alternatively: | $user->is('admin, moderator', true), $user->is(['admin', 'moderator'], true), | $user->isAll('admin|moderator'), $user->isAll('admin, moderator'), $user->isAll(['admin', 'moderator']) */ // if user has all roles }
When you are creating roles, there is optional parameter level
. It is set to 1
by default, but you can overwrite it and then you can do something like this:, (*17)
if ($user->level() > 4) { // }
If user has multiple roles, method
level
returns the highest one., (*18)
Level
has also big effect on inheriting permissions. About it later., (*19)
It's very simple thanks to Permission
model., (*20)
use Bican\Roles\Models\Permission; $createUsersPermission = Permission::create([ 'name' => 'Create users', 'slug' => 'create.users', 'description' => '', // optional ]); $deleteUsersPermission = Permission::create([ 'name' => 'Delete users', 'slug' => 'delete.users', ]);
You can attach permissions to a role or directly to a specific user (and of course detach them as well)., (*21)
use App\User; use Bican\Roles\Models\Role; $role = Role::find($roleId); $role->attachPermission($createUsersPermission); // permission attached to a role $user = User::find($userId); $user->attachPermission($deleteUsersPermission); // permission attached to a user
$role->detachPermission($createUsersPermission); // in case you want to detach permission $role->detachAllPermissions(); // in case you want to detach all permissions $user->detachPermission($deleteUsersPermission); $user->detachAllPermissions();
if ($user->can('create.users') { // you can pass an id or slug // } if ($user->canDeleteUsers()) { // }
You can check for multiple permissions the same way as roles. You can make use of additional methods like canOne
, canAll
or hasPermission
., (*22)
Role with higher level is inheriting permission from roles with lower level., (*23)
There is an example of this magic
:, (*24)
You have three roles: user
, moderator
and admin
. User has a permission to read articles, moderator can manage comments and admin can create articles. User has a level 1, moderator level 2 and admin level 3. It means, moderator and administrator has also permission to read articles, but administrator can manage comments as well., (*25)
If you don't want permissions inheriting feature in you application, simply ignore
level
parameter when you're creating roles., (*26)
Let's say you have an article and you want to edit it. This article belongs to a user (there is a column user_id
in articles table)., (*27)
use App\Article; use Bican\Roles\Models\Permission; $editArticlesPermission = Permission::create([ 'name' => 'Edit articles', 'slug' => 'edit.articles', 'model' => 'App\Article', ]); $user->attachPermission($editArticlesPermission); $article = Article::find(1); if ($user->allowed('edit.articles', $article)) { // $user->allowedEditArticles($article) // }
This condition checks if the current user is the owner of article. If not, it will be looking inside user permissions for a row we created before., (*28)
if ($user->allowed('edit.articles', $article, false)) { // now owner check is disabled // }
There are four Blade extensions. Basically, it is replacement for classic if statements., (*29)
@role('admin') // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->is('admin')) // user is admin @endrole @permission('edit.articles') // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->can('edit.articles')) // user can edit articles @endpermission @level(2) // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->level() >= 2) // user has level 2 or higher @endlevel @allowed('edit', $article) // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->allowed('edit', $article)) // show edit button @endallowed @role('admin|moderator', 'all') // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->is('admin|moderator', 'all')) // user is admin and also moderator @else // something else @endrole
This package comes with VerifyRole
, VerifyPermission
and VerifyLevel
middleware. You must add them inside your app/Http/Kernel.php
file., (*30)
/** * The application's route middleware. * * @var array */ protected $routeMiddleware = [ 'auth' => \App\Http\Middleware\Authenticate::class, 'auth.basic' => \Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\AuthenticateWithBasicAuth::class, 'guest' => \App\Http\Middleware\RedirectIfAuthenticated::class, 'role' => \Bican\Roles\Middleware\VerifyRole::class, 'permission' => \Bican\Roles\Middleware\VerifyPermission::class, 'level' => \Bican\Roles\Middleware\VerifyLevel::class, ];
Now you can easily protect your routes., (*31)
$router->get('/example', [ 'as' => 'example', 'middleware' => 'role:admin', 'uses' => 'ExampleController@index', ]); $router->post('/example', [ 'as' => 'example', 'middleware' => 'permission:edit.articles', 'uses' => 'ExampleController@index', ]); $router->get('/example', [ 'as' => 'example', 'middleware' => 'level:2', // level >= 2 'uses' => 'ExampleController@index', ]);
It throws \Bican\Roles\Exceptions\RoleDeniedException
, \Bican\Roles\Exceptions\PermissionDeniedException
or \Bican\Roles\Exceptions\LevelDeniedException
exceptions if it goes wrong., (*32)
You can catch these exceptions inside app/Exceptions/Handler.php
file and do whatever you want., (*33)
/** * Render an exception into an HTTP response. * * @param \Illuminate\Http\Request $request * @param \Exception $e * @return \Illuminate\Http\Response */ public function render($request, Exception $e) { if ($e instanceof \Bican\Roles\Exceptions\RoleDeniedException) { // you can for example flash message, redirect... return redirect()->back(); } return parent::render($request, $e); }
You can change connection for models, slug separator, models path and there is also a handy pretend feature. Have a look at config file for more information., (*34)
For more information, please have a look at HasRoleAndPermission contract., (*35)
This package is free software distributed under the terms of the MIT license., (*36)
Powerful package for handling roles and permissions in Laravel 5.
MIT
laravel acl auth roles permissions illuminate