156 lines
5.3 KiB
PHP
156 lines
5.3 KiB
PHP
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<?php
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/*
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* This file is part of the Symfony package.
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*
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* (c) Fabien Potencier <fabien@symfony.com>
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*
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* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE
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* file that was distributed with this source code.
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*/
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namespace Symfony\Component\Security\Guard;
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use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
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use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\TokenInterface;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\AuthenticationException;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserInterface;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserProviderInterface;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Guard\Token\GuardTokenInterface;
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use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\EntryPoint\AuthenticationEntryPointInterface;
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/**
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* The interface for all "guard" authenticators.
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*
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* The methods on this interface are called throughout the guard authentication
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* process to give you the power to control most parts of the process from
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* one location.
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*
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* @author Ryan Weaver <ryan@knpuniversity.com>
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* @author Amaury Leroux de Lens <amaury@lerouxdelens.com>
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*
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* @deprecated since Symfony 5.3, use the new authenticator system instead
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*/
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interface AuthenticatorInterface extends AuthenticationEntryPointInterface
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{
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/**
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* Does the authenticator support the given Request?
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*
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* If this returns false, the authenticator will be skipped.
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*
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* @return bool
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*/
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public function supports(Request $request);
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/**
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* Get the authentication credentials from the request and return them
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* as any type (e.g. an associate array).
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*
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* Whatever value you return here will be passed to getUser() and checkCredentials()
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*
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* For example, for a form login, you might:
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*
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* return [
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* 'username' => $request->request->get('_username'),
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* 'password' => $request->request->get('_password'),
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* ];
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*
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* Or for an API token that's on a header, you might use:
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*
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* return ['api_key' => $request->headers->get('X-API-TOKEN')];
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*
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* @return mixed Any non-null value
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*
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* @throws \UnexpectedValueException If null is returned
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*/
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public function getCredentials(Request $request);
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/**
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* Return a UserInterface object based on the credentials.
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*
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* The *credentials* are the return value from getCredentials()
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*
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* You may throw an AuthenticationException if you wish. If you return
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* null, then a UserNotFoundException is thrown for you.
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*
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* @param mixed $credentials
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*
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* @throws AuthenticationException
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*
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* @return UserInterface|null
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*/
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public function getUser($credentials, UserProviderInterface $userProvider);
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/**
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* Returns true if the credentials are valid.
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*
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* If false is returned, authentication will fail. You may also throw
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* an AuthenticationException if you wish to cause authentication to fail.
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*
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* The *credentials* are the return value from getCredentials()
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*
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* @param mixed $credentials
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*
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* @return bool
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*
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* @throws AuthenticationException
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*/
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public function checkCredentials($credentials, UserInterface $user);
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/**
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* Create an authenticated token for the given user.
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*
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* If you don't care about which token class is used or don't really
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* understand what a "token" is, you can skip this method by extending
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* the AbstractGuardAuthenticator class from your authenticator.
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*
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* @see AbstractGuardAuthenticator
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*
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* @return GuardTokenInterface
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*/
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public function createAuthenticatedToken(UserInterface $user, string $providerKey);
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/**
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* Called when authentication executed, but failed (e.g. wrong username password).
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*
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* This should return the Response sent back to the user, like a
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* RedirectResponse to the login page or a 401 response.
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*
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* If you return null, the request will continue, but the user will
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* not be authenticated. This is probably not what you want to do.
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*
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* @return Response|null
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*/
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public function onAuthenticationFailure(Request $request, AuthenticationException $exception);
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/**
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* Called when authentication executed and was successful!
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*
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* This should return the Response sent back to the user, like a
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* RedirectResponse to the last page they visited.
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*
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* If you return null, the current request will continue, and the user
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* will be authenticated. This makes sense, for example, with an API.
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*
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* @return Response|null
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*/
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public function onAuthenticationSuccess(Request $request, TokenInterface $token, string $providerKey);
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/**
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* Does this method support remember me cookies?
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*
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* Remember me cookie will be set if *all* of the following are met:
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* A) This method returns true
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* B) The remember_me key under your firewall is configured
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* C) The "remember me" functionality is activated. This is usually
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* done by having a _remember_me checkbox in your form, but
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* can be configured by the "always_remember_me" and "remember_me_parameter"
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* parameters under the "remember_me" firewall key
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* D) The onAuthenticationSuccess method returns a Response object
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*
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* @return bool
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*/
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public function supportsRememberMe();
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}
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