Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | arunjoseph |
Maintainer Contact: | arunjoseph50@gmail.com (Arun Joseph) |
Package Create Date: | 2014-05-31 |
Package Last Update: | 2014-08-30 |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-12-18 03:02:08 |
Package Statistics | |
---|---|
Total Downloads: | 25 |
Monthly Downloads: | 0 |
Daily Downloads: | 0 |
Total Stars: | 2 |
Total Watchers: | 2 |
Total Forks: | 0 |
Total Open Issues: | 1 |
Rbac is a copy of rbac, modded for my need, provides a flexible way to add Role-based Permissions to Laravel4.
In the require
key of composer.json
file add the following
"joseph/rbac": "v1.0"
Run the Composer update comand
$ composer update
In your config/app.php
add 'Joseph\Rbac\RbacServiceProvider'
to the end of the $providers
array
'providers' => array(
'Illuminate\Foundation\Providers\ArtisanServiceProvider',
'Illuminate\Auth\AuthServiceProvider',
...
'Joseph\Rbac\RbacServiceProvider',
),
At the end of config/app.php
add 'Rbac' => 'Joseph\Rbac\RbacFacade'
to the $aliases
array
'aliases' => array(
'App' => 'Illuminate\Support\Facades\App',
'Artisan' => 'Illuminate\Support\Facades\Artisan',
...
'Rbac' => 'Joseph\Rbac\RbacFacade',
),
Set the propertly values to the config/auth.php
. These values will be used by rbac to refer to the correct user table and model.
Now generate the Rbac migration
$ php artisan rbac:migration
It will generate the <timestamp>_rbac_setup_tables.php
migration. You may now run it with the artisan migrate command:
$ php artisan migrate
After the migration, two new tables will be present: roles
which contain the existent roles and it's permissions and assigned_roles
which will represent the Many-to-Many relation between User
and Role
.
Create a Role model following the example at app/models/Role.php
:
<?php
use Joseph\Rbac\RbacRole;
class Role extends RbacRole
{
}
The Role
model has one main attributes: name
and permissions
.
name
, as you can imagine, is the name of the Role. For example: "Admin", "Owner", "Employee".
permissions
field has been deprecated in preference for the permission table. You should no longer use it.
It is an array that is automagically serialized and unserialized and the Model is saved. This array should contain the name of the permissions of the Role
. For example: array( "manage_posts", "manage_users", "manage_products" )
.
Create a Permission model following the example at app/models/Permission.php
:
<?php
use Joseph\Rbac\RbacPermission;
class Permission extends RbacPermission
{
}
The Permission
model has two attributes: name
and display_name
.
name
, as you can imagine, is the name of the Permission. For example: "Admin", "Owner", "Employee", "can_manage".
Display name is a viewer friendly version of the permission string. "Admin", "Can Manage", "Something Cool".
Next, use the HasRole
trait in your existing User
model. For example:
<?php
use Joseph\Rbac\HasRole;
class User extends Eloquent /* or ConfideUser 'wink' */{
use HasRole; // Add this trait to your user model
...
This will do the trick to enable the relation with Role
and the following methods roles
, hasRole( $name )
,
can( $permission )
, and ability($roles, $permissions, $options)
within your User
model.
Don't forget to dump composer autoload
$ composer dump-autoload
And you are ready to go.
Let's start by creating the following Role
s and Permission
s:
$owner = new Role;
$owner->name = 'Owner';
$owner->save();
$admin = new Role;
$admin->name = 'Admin';
$admin->save();
Next, with both roles created let's assign then to the users. Thanks to the HasRole
trait this are gonna be easy as:
$user = User::where('username','=','Joseph')->first();
/* role attach alias */
$user->attachRole( $admin ); // Parameter can be an Role object, array or id.
/* OR the eloquent's original: */
$user->roles()->attach( $admin->id ); // id only
Now we just need to add permissions to those Roles.
$managePosts = new Permission;
$managePosts->name = 'manage_posts';
$managePosts->display_name = 'Manage Posts';
$managePosts->save();
$manageUsers = new Permission;
$manageUsers->name = 'manage_users';
$manageUsers->display_name = 'Manage Users';
$manageUsers->save();
$owner->perms()->sync(array($managePosts->id,$manageUsers->id));
$admin->perms()->sync(array($managePosts->id));
Now we can check for roles and permissions simply by doing:
$user->hasRole("Owner"); // false
$user->hasRole("Admin"); // true
$user->can("manage_posts"); // true
$user->can("manage_users"); // false
You can have as many Role
s was you want in each User
and vice versa.
More advanced checking can be done using the awesome ability
function. It takes in three parameters (roles, permissions, options).
roles
is a set of roles to check. permissions
is a set of permissions to check.
Either of the roles or permissions variable can be a comma separated string or array.
$user->ability(array('Admin','Owner'), array('manage_posts','manage_users'));
//or
$user->ability('Admin,Owner', 'manage_posts,manage_users');
This will check whether the user has any of the provided roles and permissions. In this case it will return true since the user is an Admin and has the manage_posts permission.
The third parameter is an options array.
$options = array(
'validate_all' => true | false (Default: false),
'return_type' => boolean | array | both (Default: boolean)
);
validate_all
is a boolean flag to set whether to check all the values for true, or to return true if at least one role or permission is matched.
return_type
specifies whether to return a boolean, array of checked values, or both in an array.
Here's an example output.
$options = array(
'validate_all' => true,
'return_type' => 'both'
);
list($validate,$allValidations) = $user->ability(array('Admin','Owner'), array('manage_posts','manage_users'), $options);
// Output
var_dump($validate);
bool(false)
var_dump($allValidations);
array(4) {
['role'] => bool(true)
['role_2'] => bool(false)
['manage_posts'] => bool(true)
['manage_users'] => bool(false)
}
To filter a route by permission or role you can call the following in your app/filters.php
:
// Only users with roles that have the 'manage_posts' permission will
// be able to access any route within admin/post.
Rbac::routeNeedsPermission( 'admin/post*', 'manage_posts' );
// Only owners will have access to routes within admin/advanced
Rbac::routeNeedsRole( 'admin/advanced*', 'Owner' );
// Optionally the second parameter can be an array of permissions or roles.
// User would need to match all roles or permissions for that route.
Rbac::routeNeedsPermission( 'admin/post*', array('manage_posts','manage_comments') );
Rbac::routeNeedsRole( 'admin/advanced*', array('Owner','Writer') );
Both of these methods accepts a third parameter. If the third parameter is null then the return of a prohibited access will be App::abort(403)
. Otherwise the third parameter will be returned. So you can use it like:
Rbac::routeNeedsRole( 'admin/advanced*', 'Owner', Redirect::to('/home') );
Further both of these methods accept a fourth parameter. It defaults to true and checks all roles/permissions given. If you set it to false, the function will only fail if all roles/permissions fail for that user. Useful for admin applications where you want to allow access for multiple groups.
// If a user has `manage_posts`, `manage_comments` or both they will have access.
Rbac::routeNeedsPermission( 'admin/post*', array('manage_posts','manage_comments'), null, false );
// If a user is a member of `Owner`, `Writer` or both they will have access.
Rbac::routeNeedsRole( 'admin/advanced*', array('Owner','Writer'), null, false );
// If a user is a member of `Owner`, `Writer` or both, or user has `manage_posts`, `manage_comments` they will have access.
// You can set the 4th parameter to true then user must be member of Role and must has Permission.
Rbac::routeNeedsRoleOrPermission( 'admin/advanced*', array('Owner','Writer'), array('manage_posts','manage_comments'), null, false);
Rbac roles/permissions can be used in filters by simply using the can
and hasRole
methods from within the Facade.
Route::filter('manage_posts', function()
{
if (! Rbac::can('manage_posts') ) // Checks the current user
{
return Redirect::to('admin');
}
});
// Only users with roles that have the 'manage_posts' permission will
// be able to access any admin/post route.
Route::when('admin/post*', 'manage_posts');
Using a filter to check for a role:
Route::filter('owner_role', function()
{
if (! Rbac::hasRole('Owner') ) // Checks the current user
{
App::abort(404);
}
});
// Only owners will have access to routes within admin/advanced
Route::when('admin/advanced*', 'owner_role');
As you can see Rbac::hasRole()
and Rbac::can()
checks if the user is logged, and then if he has the role or permission. If the user is not logged the return will also be false
.
If you encounter an error when doing the migration that looks like:
SQLSTATE[HY000]: General error: 1005 Can't create table 'laravelbootstrapstarter.#sql-42c_f8' (errno: 150) (SQL: alter table `assigned_roles` add constraint assigned_roles_user_id_foreign foreign key (`
user_id`) references `users` (`id`)) (Bindings: array (
))
Then it's likely that the id
column in your user table does not match the user_id
column in assigned_roles
. Match sure both are INT(10)
.
Name is having issues saving.
RbacRole->name has a length limitation set within the rules variable of the RbacRole class.
You can adjust it by changing your Role Model.
<?php
use Joseph\Rbac\RbacRole;
class Role extends RbacRole
{
/**
* Ardent validation rules
*
* @var array
*/
public static $rules = array(
'name' => 'required|between:4,255'
);
}
Rbac is free software distributed under the terms of the MIT license
Any questions, feel free to contact me or ask here
Any issues, please report here