Using Laravel 9 with Breeze I want when a user with a specific role has been created, he should receive a custom welcome mail with a link to a view, where he needs to set a password
How can I just trigger the password reset without the default forgot password mail, but get the token that I can use in my custom mail for the link?
Create a random string of 35 characters.
Create an entry in the password_resets table comprising the user's email address, a hashed (bcrypt()) version of the token just created, and the current timestamp
Send the user an email with a link leading to /reset-password/{$token}
Example, assuming $user is the new user account;
$token = Str::random(35);
DB::table('password_resets')->insert([
'email' => $user->email,
'token' => bcrypt($token),
'created_at' => now(),
]);
$user->notify(new WelcomeNewUser($token));
and then in the notification class;
public $token;
public function __construct($token)
{
$this->token = $token;
}
//
public function toMail($notifiable)
{
return (new MailMessage)
->line('You have been invited to use our application')
->action('Set a password', url(route('password.reset',['token'=>$this->token])))
->line('Thank you for using our application!');
}
I am creating a student project in Laravel. I have created all my models including the student model. I want to use the student_number(index_number) and the students date_of_birth from the student model as login credential for the front end view instead of the default user login(email and password). I do not want users to register before they can login as in the default laravel welcome page.
There are so many tricks to do this.
Laravel ships with Authentication
In your Login Controller you can do this:
public function login() {
$user = User::where('index_number', request('index_number'))->first();
if($user->birthday != request('birthday')) {
return 'Invalid Credentials';
}
\Auth::login($user);
return 'login success'
}
Try Auth::attempt() method,
pass your credentials same as your user table.
for example;
public function login(Request $request)
{
$credentials = ['student_number' => $request->student_number,'date_of_birth' => $request->date_of_birth,'active' => 'Y'];//Database to check in User table
if (Auth::attempt($credentials)) {
return redirect('student/dashboard');
}
else
{
Session::flash('mess', "Invalid Credentials , Please try again.");
return redirect()->back();
}
}
Don't forgot to use
use Auth;
Hope this works
I'm currently using 2 projects. 1 front end (with laravel backend to communicate with API) and another laravel project (the API).
Now I use Laravel Passport to authenticate users and to make sure every API call is an authorized call.
Now when I want to log out my user, I send a post request to my API (with Bearer token) and try to log him out of the API (and clear session, cookies,...)
Then on the client I also refresh my session so the token is no longer known. Now when I go back to the login page, it automatically logs in my user. (Or my user is just still logged in).
Can someone explain me how to properly log out a user with Laravel passport?
Make sure that in User model, you have this imported
use Laravel\Passport\HasApiTokens;
and you're using the trait HasApiTokens in the User model class using
use HasApiTokens
inside the user class.
Now you create the log out route and in the controller,
do this
$user = Auth::user()->token();
$user->revoke();
return 'logged out'; // modify as per your need
This will log the user out from the current device where he requested to log out. If you want to log out from all the devices where he's logged in. Then do this instead
$tokens = $user->tokens->pluck('id');
Token::whereIn('id', $tokens)
->update(['revoked'=> true]);
RefreshToken::whereIn('access_token_id', $tokens)->update(['revoked' => true]);
Make sure to import these two at the top
use Laravel\Passport\RefreshToken;
use Laravel\Passport\Token;
This will revoke all the access and refresh tokens issued to that user. This will log the user out from everywhere. This really comes into help when the user changes his password using reset password or forget password option and you have to log the user out from everywhere.
You need to delete the token from the database table oauth_access_tokens
you can do that by creating a new model like OauthAccessToken
Run the command php artisan make:model OauthAccessToken to create the model.
Then create a relation between the User model and the new created OauthAccessToken Model , in User.php add :
public function AauthAcessToken(){
return $this->hasMany('\App\OauthAccessToken');
}
in UserController.php , create a new function for logout:
public function logoutApi()
{
if (Auth::check()) {
Auth::user()->AauthAcessToken()->delete();
}
}
In api.php router , create new route :
Route::post('logout','UserController#logoutApi');
Now you can logout by calling posting to URL /api/logout
This is sample code i'm used for log out
public function logout(Request $request)
{
$request->user()->token()->revoke();
return response()->json([
'message' => 'Successfully logged out'
]);
}
Create a route for logout:
$router->group(['middleware' => 'auth:api'], function () use ($router) {
Route::get('me/logout', 'UserController#logout');
});
Create a logout function in userController ( or as mentioned in your route)
public function logout() {
$accessToken = Auth::user()->token();
DB::table('oauth_refresh_tokens')
->where('access_token_id', $accessToken->id)
->update([
'revoked' => true
]);
$accessToken->revoke();
return response()->json(null, 204);
}
I am using Laravel 6.12.0, below function is working for me.
public function logout(Request $request){
$accessToken = Auth::user()->token();
$token= $request->user()->tokens->find($accessToken);
$token->revoke();
$response=array();
$response['status']=1;
$response['statuscode']=200;
$response['msg']="Successfully logout";
return response()->json($response)->header('Content-Type', 'application/json');
}
This is my first post.. and i find a clean solution (Laravel last Version)
/**
* Logout api
*
* #return \Illuminate\Http\Response
*/
public function logout(Request $request)
{
if (Auth::check()) {
$token = Auth::user()->token();
$token->revoke();
return $this->sendResponse(null, 'User is logout');
}
else{
return $this->sendError('Unauthorised.', ['error'=>'Unauthorised'] , Response::HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED);
}
}
Below is the simplest way I found to do it.
1. USE database SESSION INSTEAD OF file SESSION
Official documention
php artisan session:table
php artisan migrate
Replace SESSION_DRIVER=file by SESSION_DRIVER=database in your .env file.
2. DELETE USER SESSION RIGHT AFTER LOGIN
After a user is redirected to your frontend and logs in to finally get a token, you probably call a route in api/routes.php to get the user information, that's where I'm closing the user backend session before sending back user information to the frontend:
Route::middleware('auth:api')->get('/user', function (Request $request) {
// Close user session here
Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB::table('sessions')
->whereUserId($request->user()->id)
->delete();
return $request->user();
});
3. REVOKE TOKENS AT LOGOUT
Then, to "log out" (actually, revoke tokens) the user from the frontend, you just need to call another route to revoke the token and refresh_token:
Route::middleware('auth:api')->post('/logout', function (Request $request) {
// Revoke access token
// => Set oauth_access_tokens.revoked to TRUE (t)
$request->user()->token()->revoke();
// Revoke all of the token's refresh tokens
// => Set oauth_refresh_tokens.revoked to TRUE (t)
$refreshTokenRepository = app('Laravel\Passport\RefreshTokenRepository');
$refreshTokenRepository->revokeRefreshTokensByAccessTokenId($request->user()->token()->id);
return;
});
You may prefer to put these two closures in the UserController.
Hope help someone:
if (Auth::check()) {
$request->user()->tokens->each(function ($token, $key) {
$token->delete();
});
}
Good Luck.
I use this in my project to logout from multiple device.
public function logout(Request $request, $devices = FALSE)
{
$this->logoutMultiple(\Auth::user(), $devices);
return response()->json([], 204);
}
private function logoutMultiple(\App\Models\User $user, $devices = FALSE)
{
$accessTokens = $user->tokens();
if ($devices == 'all') {
} else if ($devices == 'other') {
$accessTokens->where('id', '!=', $user->token()->id);
} else {
$accessTokens->where('id', '=', $user->token()->id);
}
$accessTokens = $accessTokens->get();
foreach ($accessTokens as $accessToken) {
$refreshToken = \DB::table('oauth_refresh_tokens')
->where('access_token_id', $accessToken->id)
->update(['revoked' => TRUE]);
$accessToken->revoke();
}
}
Try this code to help you to logout from passport authentication.
Route::post('/logout', function(){
if (Auth::check()) {
Auth::user()->AauthAcessToken()->delete();
}
return response()->json([
'status' => 1,
'message' => 'User Logout',
], 200);
});
check whether your model contains OauthAccessToken which needs to connect with the database oauth_access_tokens. The access token is stored in the database table oauth_access_tokens. and makes a relation from users to oauth_access_tokens.
public function AauthAcessToken(){
return $this->hasMany(OauthAccessToken::class);
}
You can use following code to remove to token for logged in user.
$request->user()->token()->revoke();
If you want to learn about this in-depth then watch this tutorial:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKSQdg1uPbQ
public function logout(Request $request)
{
$request->user()->token()->revoke();
if ($request->everywhere) {
foreach ($request->user()->tokens()->whereRevoked(0)->get() as $token) {
$token->revoke();
}
}
return response()->json(['message' => 'success']);
}
I have some post about auth attempt failure but my case seems to be different. Still in dev phase so my password is in plain text. I try to login but i keep getting false and so redirected back to login page.
The error message says username/password does not match but dd reveals that both email and password are correct.
What could be responsible for this failure? PS: it's my first time working with laravel
web.php
Route::post('/login', 'AuthController#authenticate');
Route::get('/', 'PostController#index');
AuthController
public function auth()
{
//dd($request);
// attempt to login the user
if (! auth()->attempt(request(['email', 'password']))) {
return back()->withErrors([
'message' => 'Username/Password does not macth'
]);
}
return redirect('/');
}
PostController
public function index()
{
$posts = Post::latest()->limit(3)->get();
return view('post.index', compact('posts'));
}
Use this code in your User model and the password will be hashed automatically only if it needs:
public function setPasswordAttribute($value)
{
if( \Hash::needsRehash($value) ) {
$value = \Hash::make($value);
}
$this->attributes['password'] = $value;
}
and change your password after, so you have the hashed password in the database
Not sure i understand... but if you are using the Laravel Authentication (php artisan make:auth) you will not be storing the password in plain text... so if you are setting the password directly in your db it will not work as it will check the password field in the db with the assumption that it is stored with a dbcrypt hash...
So if you are using the default auth that comes with laravel, use the registration form to create your user account
Since it's your first time working with laravel i would recommend taking a look at https://laracasts.com/series/laravel-from-scratch-2017/episodes/17 as it covers the auth concept and gives you a quick walkthrough on setting up user auth
I am using Laravel 5.3 and customizing the Password Reset Email Template. I have done the following changes to create my own html email for the notification using a custom Mailable class. This is my progress so far:
ForgotPasswordController:
public function postEmail(Request $request)
{
$this->validate($request, ['email' => 'required|email']);
$response = Password::sendResetLink($request->only('email'), function (Message $message) {
$message->subject($this->getEmailSubject());
});
switch ($response) {
case Password::RESET_LINK_SENT:
return Response::json(['status' => trans($response)], 200);
case Password::INVALID_USER:
return Response::json(['email' => trans($response)], 400);
}
}
User Model:
public function sendPasswordResetNotification($token)
{
Mail::queue(new ResetPassword($token));
}
ResetPassword Mailable Class:
protected $token;
public function __construct($token)
{
$this->token = $token;
}
public function build()
{
$userEmail = 'something'; // How to add User Email??
$userName = 'Donald Trump'; // How to find out User's Name??
$subject = 'Password Reset';
return $this->view('emails.password')
->to($userEmail)
->subject($subject)
->with([
'token' => $this->token
'userEmail' => $userEmail,
'userName' => $userName
]);
}
If you noticed above, I am not sure how do I pass the user's name and find out the user's email address. Do I need to send this data from the User Model or do I query it from the Mailable class? Can someone show me how I can do that please?
Usually you ask for the user email in order to send a reset password email, that email should come as a request parameter to your route controller.
By default, L5.3 uses post('password/email) route to handle a reset password request. This route execute sendResetLinkEmail method which is defined in the 'SendsPasswordResetEmails' trait used by the App\Http\Controllers\Auth\ForgotPasswordController.
From here you can take one of 2 options:
1st: You could overwrite the route to call another function in the same controller (or any other controller, in this case could be your postEmail function) which search for the user model by the email you received, then you can pass the user model as function parameter to the method which execute the queue mail action (this may or may not require to overwrite the SendsPasswordResetEmails, depends on how you handle your reset password method).
This solution would looks something like this:
In routes/web.php
post('password/email', 'Auth\ForgotPasswordController#postEmail')
in app/Mail/passwordNotification.php (for instance)
protected $token;
protected $userModel;
public function __construct($token, User $userModel)
{
$this->token = $token;
$this->userModel = $userModel;
}
public function build()
{
$userEmail = $this->userModel->email;
$userName = $this->userModel->email
$subject = 'Password Reset';
return $this->view('emails.password')
->to($userEmail)
->subject($subject)
->with([
'token' => $this->token
'userEmail' => $userEmail,
'userName' => $userName
]);
}
in app/Http/Controllers/Auth/ForgotPasswordController
public function postEmail(Request $request)
{
$this->validate($request, ['email' => 'required|email']);
$userModel = User::where('email', $request->only('email'))->first();
Mail::queue(new ResetPassword($token));
//Manage here your response
}
2nd: You could just overwirte the trait SendsPasswordResetEmails to search for the user model by the email and use your customized function in sendResetLinkEmail function. There you could use your function but notice that you still have to handle somehow an status to create a response as you already have it on ForgotPasswordController.
I hope it helps!