SecurityServiceProvider

The SecurityServiceProvider manages authentication and authorization for your applications.

Parameters

n/a

Services

  • security: The main entry point for the security provider. Use it to get the current user token.
  • security.authentication_manager: An instance of AuthenticationProviderManager, responsible for authentication.
  • security.access_manager: An instance of AccessDecisionManager, responsible for authorization.
  • security.session_strategy: Define the session strategy used for authentication (default to a migration strategy).
  • security.user_checker: Checks user flags after authentication.
  • security.last_error: Returns the last authentication errors when given a Request object.
  • security.encoder_factory: Defines the encoding strategies for user passwords (default to use a digest algorithm for all users).
  • security.encoder.digest: The encoder to use by default for all users.

Note

The service provider defines many other services that are used internally but rarely need to be customized.

Registering

$app->register(new Silex\Provider\SecurityServiceProvider(array(
    'security.firewalls' => // see below
)));

Note

The Symfony Security Component comes with the “fat” Silex archive but not with the regular one. If you are using Composer, add it as a dependency to your composer.json file:

"require": {
    "symfony/security": "2.1.*"
}

Caution

The security features are only available after the Application has been booted. So, if you want to use it outside of the handling of a request, don’t forget to call boot() first:

$application->boot();

Usage

The Symfony Security component is powerful. To learn more about it, read the Symfony2 Security documentation.

Tip

When a security configuration does not behave as expected, enable logging (with the Monolog extension for instance) as the Security Component logs a lot of interesting information about what it does and why.

Below is a list of recipes that cover some common use cases.

Accessing the current User

The current user information is stored in a token that is accessible via the security service:

$token = $app['security']->getToken();

If there is no information about the user, the token is null. If the user is known, you can get it with a call to getUser():

if (null !== $token) {
    $user = $token->getUser();
}

The user can be a string, and object with a __toString() method, or an instance of UserInterface.

Securing a Path with HTTP Authentication

The following configuration uses HTTP basic authentication to secure URLs under /admin/:

$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
    'admin' => array(
        'pattern' => '^/admin',
        'http' => true,
        'users' => array(
            // raw password is foo
            'admin' => array('ROLE_ADMIN', '5FZ2Z8QIkA7UTZ4BYkoC+GsReLf569mSKDsfods6LYQ8t+a8EW9oaircfMpmaLbPBh4FOBiiFyLfuZmTSUwzZg=='),
        ),
    ),
);

The pattern is a regular expression (it can also be a RequestMatcher instance); the http setting tells the security layer to use HTTP basic authentication and the users entry defines valid users.

Each user is defined with the following information:

  • The role or an array of roles for the user (roles are strings beginning with ROLE_ and ending with anything you want);
  • The user encoded password.

Caution

All users must at least have one role associated with them.

The default configuration of the extension enforces encoded passwords. To generate a valid encoded password from a raw password, use the security.encoder_factory service:

// find the encoder for a UserInterface instance
$encoder = $app['security.encoder_factory']->getEncoder($user);

// compute the encoded password for foo
$password = $encoder->encodePassword('foo', $user->getSalt());

When the user is authenticated, the user stored in the token is an instance of User

Securing a Path with a Form

Using a form to authenticate users is very similar to the above configuration. Instead of using the http setting, use the form one and define these two parameters:

  • login_path: The login path where the user is redirected when he is accessing a secured area without being authenticated so that he can enter his credentials;
  • check_path: The check URL used by Symfony to validate the credentials of the user.

Here is how to secure all URLs under /admin/ with a form:

$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
    'admin' => array(
        'pattern' => '^/admin/',
        'form' => array('login_path' => '/login', 'check_path' => '/admin/login_check'),
        'users' => array(
            'admin' => array('ROLE_ADMIN', '5FZ2Z8QIkA7UTZ4BYkoC+GsReLf569mSKDsfods6LYQ8t+a8EW9oaircfMpmaLbPBh4FOBiiFyLfuZmTSUwzZg=='),
        ),
    ),
);

Always keep in mind the following two golden rules:

  • The login_path path must always be defined outside the secured area (or if it is in the secured area, the anonymous authentication mechanism must be enabled – see below);
  • The check_path path must always be defined inside the secured area.

For the login form to work, create a controller like the following:

use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;

$app->get('/login', function(Request $request) use ($app) {
    return $app['twig']->render('login.html', array(
        'error'         => $app['security.last_error']($request),
        'last_username' => $app['session']->get('_security.last_username'),
    ));
});

The error and last_username variables contain the last authentication error and the last username entered by the user in case of an authentication error.

Create the associated template:

<form action="{{ path('admin_login_check') }}" method="post">
    {{ error }}
    <input type="text" name="_username" value="{{ last_username }}" />
    <input type="password" name="_password" value="" />
    <input type="submit" />
</form>

Note

The admin_login_check route is automatically defined by Silex and its name is derived from the check_path value (all / are replaced with _ and the leading / is stripped).

Defining more than one Firewall

You are not limited to define one firewall per project.

Configuring several firewalls is useful when you want to secure different parts of your website with different authentication strategies or for different users (like using an HTTP basic authentication for the website API and a form to secure your website administration area).

It’s also useful when you want to secure all URLs except the login form:

$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
    'login' => array(
        'pattern' => '^/login$',
    ),
    'secured' => array(
        'pattern' => '^.*$',
        'form' => array('login_path' => '/login', 'check_path' => '/login_check'),
        'users' => array(
            'admin' => array('ROLE_ADMIN', '5FZ2Z8QIkA7UTZ4BYkoC+GsReLf569mSKDsfods6LYQ8t+a8EW9oaircfMpmaLbPBh4FOBiiFyLfuZmTSUwzZg=='),
        ),
    ),
);

The order of the firewall configurations is significant as the first one to match wins. The above configuration first ensures that the /login URL is not secured (no authentication settings), and then it secures all other URLs.

Adding a Logout

When using a form for authentication, you can let users log out if you add the logout setting, where logout_path must match the main firewall pattern:

$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
    'secured' => array(
        'pattern' => '^/admin/',
        'form' => array('login_path' => '/login', 'check_path' => '/admin/login_check'),
        'logout' => array('logout_path' => '/admin/logout'),

        // ...
    ),
);

A route is automatically generated, based on the configured path (all / are replaced with _ and the leading / is stripped):

<a href="{{ path('logout') }}">Logout</a>

Allowing Anonymous Users

When securing only some parts of your website, the user information are not available in non-secured areas. To make the user accessible in such areas, enabled the anonymous authentication mechanism:

$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
    'unsecured' => array(
        'anonymous' => true,

        // ...
    ),
);

When enabling the anonymous setting, a user will always be accessible from the security context; if the user is not authenticated, it returns the anon. string.

Checking User Roles

To check if a user is granted some role, use the isGranted() method on the security context:

if ($app['security']->isGranted('ROLE_ADMIN') {
    // ...
}

You can check roles in Twig templates too:

{% if is_granted('ROLE_ADMIN') %}
    <a href="/secured?_switch_user=fabien">Switch to Fabien</a>
{% endif %}

You can check if a user is “fully authenticated” (not an anonymous user for instance) with the special IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY role:

{% if is_granted('IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY') %}
    <a href="{{ path('logout') }}">Logout</a>
{% else %}
    <a href="{{ path('login') }}">Login</a>
{% endif %}

Of course you will need to define a login route for this to work.

Tip

Don’t use the getRoles() method to check user roles.

Caution

isGranted() throws an exception when no authentication information is available (which is the case on non-secured area).

Impersonating a User

If you want to be able to switch to another user (without knowing the user credentials), enable the switch_user authentication strategy:

$app['security.firewalls'] = array(
    'unsecured' => array(
        'switch_user' => array('parameter' => '_switch_user', 'role' => 'ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH'),

        // ...
    ),
);

Switching to another user is now a matter of adding the _switch_user query parameter to any URL when logged in as a user who has the ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH role:

{% if is_granted('ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH') %}
    <a href="?_switch_user=fabien">Switch to user Fabien</a>
{% endif %}

You can check that you are impersonating a user by checking the special ROLE_PREVIOUS_ADMIN. This is useful for instance to allow the user to switch back to his primary account:

{% if is_granted('ROLE_PREVIOUS_ADMIN') %}
    You are an admin but you've switched to another user,
    <a href="?_switch_user=_exit"> exit</a> the switch.
{% endif %}

Defining a Role Hierarchy

Defining a role hierarchy allows to automatically grant users some additional roles:

$app['security.role_hierarchy'] = array(
    'ROLE_ADMIN' => array('ROLE_USER', 'ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH'),
);

With this configuration, all users with the ROLE_ADMIN role also automatically have the ROLE_USER and ROLE_ALLOWED_TO_SWITCH roles.

Defining Access Rules

Roles are a great way to adapt the behavior of your website depending on groups of users, but they can also be used to further secure some areas by defining access rules:

$app['security.access_rules'] = array(
    array('^/admin', 'ROLE_ADMIN', 'https'),
    array('^.*$', 'ROLE_USER'),
);

With the above configuration, users must have the ROLE_ADMIN to access the /admin section of the website, and ROLE_USER for everything else. Furthermore, the admin section can only be accessible via HTTPS (if that’s not the case, the user will be automatically redirected).

Note

The first argument can also be a RequestMatcher instance.

Defining a custom User Provider

Using an array of users is simple and useful when securing an admin section of a personal website, but you can override this default mechanism with you own.

The users setting can be defined as a service that returns an instance of UserProviderInterface:

'users' => $app->share(function () use ($app) {
    return new UserProvider($app['db']);
}),

Here is a simple example of a user provider, where Doctrine DBAL is used to store the users:

use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserProviderInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\UnsupportedUserException;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\UsernameNotFoundException;
use Doctrine\DBAL\Connection;

class UserProvider implements UserProviderInterface
{
    private $conn;

    public function __construct(Connection $conn)
    {
        $this->conn = $conn;
    }

    public function loadUserByUsername($username)
    {
        $stmt = $this->conn->executeQuery('SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = ?', array(strtolower($username)));

        if (!$user = $stmt->fetch()) {
            throw new UsernameNotFoundException(sprintf('Username "%s" does not exist.', $username));
        }

        return new User($user['username'], $user['password'], explode(',', $user['roles']), true, true, true, true);
    }

    public function refreshUser(UserInterface $user)
    {
        if (!$user instanceof User) {
            throw new UnsupportedUserException(sprintf('Instances of "%s" are not supported.', get_class($user)));
        }

        return $this->loadUserByUsername($user->getUsername());
    }

    public function supportsClass($class)
    {
        return $class === 'Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User';
    }
}

In this example, instances of the default User class are created for the users, but you can define your own class; the only requirement is that the class must implement UserInterface

And here is the code that you can use to create the database schema and some sample users:

use Doctrine\DBAL\Schema\Table;

$schema = $app['db']->getSchemaManager();
if (!$schema->tablesExist('users')) {
    $users = new Table('users');
    $users->addColumn('id', 'integer', array('unsigned' => true, 'autoincrement' => true));
    $users->setPrimaryKey(array('id'));
    $users->addColumn('username', 'string', array('length' => 32));
    $users->addUniqueIndex(array('username'));
    $users->addColumn('password', 'string', array('length' => 255));
    $users->addColumn('roles', 'string', array('length' => 255));

    $schema->createTable($users);

    $app['db']->executeQuery('INSERT INTO users (username, password, roles) VALUES ("fabien", "5FZ2Z8QIkA7UTZ4BYkoC+GsReLf569mSKDsfods6LYQ8t+a8EW9oaircfMpmaLbPBh4FOBiiFyLfuZmTSUwzZg==", "ROLE_USER")');
    $app['db']->executeQuery('INSERT INTO users (username, password, roles) VALUES ("admin", "5FZ2Z8QIkA7UTZ4BYkoC+GsReLf569mSKDsfods6LYQ8t+a8EW9oaircfMpmaLbPBh4FOBiiFyLfuZmTSUwzZg==", "ROLE_ADMIN")');
}

Tip

If you are using the Doctrine ORM, the Symfony bridge for Doctrine provides a user provider class that is able to load users from your entities.

Defining a custom Encoder

By default, Silex uses the sha512 algorithm to encode passwords. Additionally, the password is encoded multiple times and converted to base64. You can change these defaults by overriding the security.encoder.digest service:

use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Encoder\MessageDigestPasswordEncoder;

$app['security.encoder.digest'] = $app->share(function ($app) {
    // use the sha1 algorithm
    // don't base64 encode the password
    // use only 1 iteration
    return new MessageDigestPasswordEncoder('sha1', false, 1);
});

Defining a custom Authentication Provider

The Symfony Security component provides a lot of ready-to-use authentication providers (form, HTTP, X509, remember me, ...), but you can add new ones easily. To register a new authentication provider, create a service named security.authentication_listener.factory.XXX where XXX is the name you want to use in your configuration:

$app['security.authentication_listener.factory.wsse'] = $app->protect(function ($name, $options) use ($app) {
    // define the authentication provider object
    $app['security.authentication_provider.'.$name.'.wsse'] = $app->share(function () use ($app) {
        return new WsseProvider($app['security.user_provider.default'], __DIR__.'/security_cache');
    });

    // define the authentication listener object
    $app['security.authentication_listener.'.$name.'.wsse'] = $app->share(function () use ($app) {
        return new WsseListener($app['security'], $app['security.authentication_manager']);
    });

    return array(
        // the authentication provider id
        'security.authentication_provider.'.$name.'.wsse',
        // the authentication listener id
        'security.authentication_listener.'.$name.'.wsse',
        // the entry point id
        null,
        // the position of the listener in the stack
        'pre_auth'
    );
});

You can now use it in your configuration like any other built-in authentication provider:

$app->register(new Silex\Provider\SecurityServiceProvider(), array(
    'security.firewalls' => array(
        'default' => array(
            'wsse' => true,

            // ...
        ),
    ),
));

Instead of true, you can also define an array of options that customize the behavior of your authentication factory; it will be passed as the second argument of your authentication factory (see above).

This example uses the authentication provider classes as described in the Symfony cookbook.

Traits

Silex\Application\SecurityTrait adds the following shortcuts:

  • user: Returns the current user.
  • encodePassword: Encode a given password.
$user = $app->user();

$encoded = $app->encodePassword($user, 'foo');

Silex\Route\SecurityTrait adds the following methods to the controllers:

  • secure: Secures a controller for the given roles.
$app->get('/', function () {
    // do something but only for admins
})->secure('ROLE_ADMIN');