Authentication is the act of verifying who a user is, and is the basis of the login process. Typically, authentication uses the combination of an identifier--a username or email address--and a password. The user submits these values through a form, and the application then compares the submitted information against that previously stored (e.g., upon registration).
In Yii, this entire process is performed semi-automatically, leaving the developer to merely implement [[yii\web\IdentityInterface]], the most important class in the authentication system. Typically, implementation of IdentityInterface
is accomplished using the User
model.
You can find a fully featured example of authentication in the advanced application template. Below, only the interface methods are listed:
class User extends ActiveRecord implements IdentityInterface
{
// ...
/**
* Finds an identity by the given ID.
*
* @param string|integer $id the ID to be looked for
* @return IdentityInterface|null the identity object that matches the given ID.
*/
public static function findIdentity($id)
{
return static::findOne($id);
}
/**
* Finds an identity by the given token.
*
* @param string $token the token to be looked for
* @return IdentityInterface|null the identity object that matches the given token.
*/
public static function findIdentityByAccessToken($token)
{
return static::findOne(['access_token' => $token]);
}
/**
* @return int|string current user ID
*/
public function getId()
{
return $this->id;
}
/**
* @return string current user auth key
*/
public function getAuthKey()
{
return $this->auth_key;
}
/**
* @param string $authKey
* @return boolean if auth key is valid for current user
*/
public function validateAuthKey($authKey)
{
return $this->getAuthKey() === $authKey;
}
}
Two of the outlined methods are simple: findIdentity
is provided with an ID value and returns a model instance associated with that ID. The getId
method returns the ID itself.
Two of the other methods--getAuthKey
and validateAuthKey
--are used to provide extra security to the "remember me" cookie. The getAuthKey
method should return a string that is unique for each user. You can create reliably create a unique string using Security::generateRandomKey()
. It's a good idea to also save this as part of the user's record:
public function beforeSave($insert)
{
if (parent::beforeSave($insert)) {
if ($this->isNewRecord) {
$this->auth_key = Security::generateRandomKey();
}
return true;
}
return false;
}
The validateAuthKey
method just needs to compare the $authKey
variable, passed as parameter (itself retrieved from a cookie), with the value fetched from database.