I want to add a custom guard to Laravel that uses Passport but with different model (not User), but when I try to set the user for this guard it is not working.
config/auth.php:
<?php
return [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Authentication Defaults
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option controls the default authentication "guard" and password
| reset options for your application. You may change these defaults
| as required, but they're a perfect start for most applications.
|
*/
'defaults' => [
'guard' => 'web',
'passwords' => 'users',
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Authentication Guards
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Next, you may define every authentication guard for your application.
| Of course, a great default configuration has been defined for you
| here which uses session storage and the Eloquent user provider.
|
| All authentication drivers have a user provider. This defines how the
| users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage
| mechanisms used by this application to persist your user's data.
|
| Supported: "session", "token"
|
*/
'guards' => [
'web' => [
'driver' => 'session',
'provider' => 'users',
],
'api' => [
'driver' => 'passport',
'provider' => 'users',
],
'conference' => [
'driver' => 'passport',
'provider' => 'participants',
],
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| User Providers
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| All authentication drivers have a user provider. This defines how the
| users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage
| mechanisms used by this application to persist your user's data.
|
| If you have multiple user tables or models you may configure multiple
| sources which represent each model / table. These sources may then
| be assigned to any extra authentication guards you have defined.
|
| Supported: "database", "eloquent"
|
*/
'providers' => [
'users' => [
'driver' => 'eloquent',
'model' => App\Models\User::class,
],
'participants' => [
'driver' => 'eloquent',
'model' => App\Models\Participant::class,
],
// 'users' => [
// 'driver' => 'database',
// 'table' => 'users',
// ],
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Resetting Passwords
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may set the options for resetting passwords including the view
| that is your password reset e-mail. You may also set the name of the
| table that maintains all of the reset tokens for your application.
|
| You may specify multiple password reset configurations if you have more
| than one user table or model in the application and you want to have
| separate password reset settings based on the specific user types.
|
| The expire time is the number of minutes that the reset token should be
| considered valid. This security feature keeps tokens short-lived so
| they have less time to be guessed. You may change this as needed.
|
*/
'passwords' => [
'users' => [
'provider' => 'users',
'email' => 'spark::auth.emails.password',
'table' => 'password_resets',
'expire' => 60,
],
],
];
in the controller I am setting the user for the custom guard:
auth()->guard('conference')->setUser($participant);
api.php:
Route::group(['prefix' => '{activity}', 'middleware' => ['auth:conference', 'api']], function () { //
Route::group(['prefix' => 'participant/{participant}'], function () {
Route::any('join', 'API\ConferenceController@join');
});
});
Participant model:
use Laravel\Passport\HasApiTokens;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
class Participant extends Authenticatable
{
use Enums, SoftDeletes, RequiresUUID, HasApiTokens, Notifiable;
but I can't access the route I get 401. When I change the provider for the 'conference' guard to be 'users' it works without problem.
What I am missing?
Laravel JWT authentication vs. Sanctum offers both session-based and token-based authentication and is good for single-page application (SPA) authentications. Passport uses JWT authentication as standard but also implements full OAuth 2.0 authorization.
@vincent15000 Passport is an OAuth server implementation, and used to offer OAuth authorisation for your application. Sanctum is an authentication library for “simpler” token-based authentication for clients that need it (i.e. mobile apps) but also offers cookie-based authentication for SPAs.
If your application absolutely needs to support OAuth2, then you should use Laravel Passport. However, if you are attempting to authenticate a single-page application, mobile application, or issue API tokens, you should use Laravel Sanctum.
Introduction. It's a simple service provider that makes Laravel Passport work with Lumen.
This might help:
My AdminAPI Url: https://example.com/api/login My Customer API Url: https://example.com/api.customer/login
adding this to any ServiceProvider (I have added in RouteServiceProvider.php before custom route)
// Fix/Support for multiple user with different table by changing provider on api.customer circumstances
Config::set('auth.guards.api.provider', request()->input('provider', starts_with(request()->path(), 'api.customer') ? 'customers' : 'users'));`
and must add your custom provider in providers array in config/auth.php
'customers' => [
'driver' => 'eloquent',
'model' => App\Customer::class,
],
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