hydra-sql/vendor/symfony/security-http/Authenticator/AuthenticatorInterface.php

97 lines
3.9 KiB
PHP

<?php
/*
* This file is part of the Symfony package.
*
* (c) Fabien Potencier <fabien@symfony.com>
*
* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE
* file that was distributed with this source code.
*/
namespace Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\TokenInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\AuthenticationException;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator\Passport\Passport;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authenticator\Passport\PassportInterface;
/**
* The interface for all authenticators.
*
* @author Ryan Weaver <ryan@symfonycasts.com>
* @author Amaury Leroux de Lens <amaury@lerouxdelens.com>
* @author Wouter de Jong <wouter@wouterj.nl>
*
* @method TokenInterface createToken(Passport $passport, string $firewallName) Creates a token for the given user.
* If you don't care about which token class is used, you can skip this method by extending
* the AbstractAuthenticator class from your authenticator.
*/
interface AuthenticatorInterface
{
/**
* Does the authenticator support the given Request?
*
* If this returns true, authenticate() will be called. If false, the authenticator will be skipped.
*
* Returning null means authenticate() can be called lazily when accessing the token storage.
*/
public function supports(Request $request): ?bool;
/**
* Create a passport for the current request.
*
* The passport contains the user, credentials and any additional information
* that has to be checked by the Symfony Security system. For example, a login
* form authenticator will probably return a passport containing the user, the
* presented password and the CSRF token value.
*
* You may throw any AuthenticationException in this method in case of error (e.g.
* a UserNotFoundException when the user cannot be found).
*
* @throws AuthenticationException
*
* @return Passport
*/
public function authenticate(Request $request); /*: Passport;*/
/**
* Create an authenticated token for the given user.
*
* If you don't care about which token class is used or don't really
* understand what a "token" is, you can skip this method by extending
* the AbstractAuthenticator class from your authenticator.
*
* @see AbstractAuthenticator
*
* @param PassportInterface $passport The passport returned from authenticate()
*
* @deprecated since Symfony 5.4, use {@link createToken()} instead
*/
public function createAuthenticatedToken(PassportInterface $passport, string $firewallName): TokenInterface;
/**
* Called when authentication executed and was successful!
*
* This should return the Response sent back to the user, like a
* RedirectResponse to the last page they visited.
*
* If you return null, the current request will continue, and the user
* will be authenticated. This makes sense, for example, with an API.
*/
public function onAuthenticationSuccess(Request $request, TokenInterface $token, string $firewallName): ?Response;
/**
* Called when authentication executed, but failed (e.g. wrong username password).
*
* This should return the Response sent back to the user, like a
* RedirectResponse to the login page or a 403 response.
*
* If you return null, the request will continue, but the user will
* not be authenticated. This is probably not what you want to do.
*/
public function onAuthenticationFailure(Request $request, AuthenticationException $exception): ?Response;
}