Skip to content

This package contains bindings between the Mouf and HybridAuth, a great library to implement social logins (on Facebook, Twitter, etc...).

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

xiaolongchen/integration.hybridauth

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

26 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

What is this package?

This package contains a wrapper around the HybridAuth library, binding it to the Splash MVC framework (or to Druplash).

Use this package to add Facebook/Twitter/Google+/you_name_it connections capability to your application, with minimal effort (about 10 lines of code).

Installation

This package comes with an advanced Mouf install wizard. To install this package, you must first have a working Mouf environment. You should also have installed the UserService package. Basically, you should have a running environment where you can log in the "usual" way, using a login and a password.

Ready? Then let's get started. First step is to add this package to your composer.json and run php composer.phar update.

{
	...
	"require" : {
		"mouf/integration.hybridauth" : "~1.0",
	}
}

Once install is done, log into Mouf UI. You will see there is an install process to be run. Run it.

The install process will propose to configure Facebook, Google or Twitter authentication. HybridAuth supports many other login processes. If you are interested by another login mechanism, you can configure it later.

At the end of the install process, the Mouf status screen will display an error:

Do not panic! This is expected. It only means that we need to explain to HybridAuth how to create a user in our database. We will do that later. First, let's review quickly the database model.

Database model

Note: as long as no patch system is available in Mouf, you will have to manually apply a SQL patch to your database. Go in vendor/mouf/integration.hybridauth/database/up, and run the create_authentications.sql file.

This package will add an authentications table to your database. This table will point to your users table. For each user, we might have several authentications. For instance, a user might have a Facebook authentication and a Google authentication.

Setting up HybridAuth

The last install task we have to do is explain to HybridAuth how to create a user. HybridAuth already knows how to write in the authentications table, but it certainly does not know how to write in your "users" table.

For this, we will need to create an instance of a class that implements the UserManagerServiceInterface interface and feed it to the PerformSocialLoginAction instance that was created by the install process.

The UserManagerServiceInterface requires only one method to be coded:

interface UserManagerServiceInterface {
	
	/**
	 * Creates or update the user $user.
	 * The User ID (in database) is returned.
	 * 
	 * @param AdvancedUserInterface $user The user to save
	 * @return string The user ID
	 */
	public function saveUser(AdvancedUserInterface $user);
}

Basically, this method takes a $user variable in parameter and should save it in the database. It MUST return the user ID.

Here is a typical implementation, using TDBM:

	public function saveUser(\Hybrid_User_Profile $user) {
		// Let's assume we fetch the userDao in the class
		$userDao = $this->userDao;
		if ($user->identifier) {
			// If we have an ID provided, let's fetch it
			$userBean = $userDao->getUserByLogin($user->identifier);
		}
        if(!$userBean) {
			// Else, let's create a new bean
			$userBean = $userDao->create();
			$userBean->setLogin($user->identifier);
		}
		
		// Let's map the fields from $user to the fields of $userBean
		$userBean->setEmail($user->email);
		$userBean->setFirstName($user->firstName);
		$userBean->setName($user->lastName);
		
		// And let's save.
		$userDao->save($userBean);
		return $userBean->getId();
	}

That's the only 10 lines of codes you will have to write.

How to use this package

Let's test! The first thing you want to do is try to log in. Try to access this URL: http://[yourserver]/[yourapp]/authenticate?provider=Facebook

(replace Facebook with the provider you choose, for instance Google or Twitter).

The package should redirect you to Facebook and will ask you the authorization to log in. Click OK. You should be back to your application. You are logged in! Congratulations!

Utility classes and instances

This package comes with a number of utility instances you can use straight out of the box.

  • facebookConnectButton (or xxxConnectButton depending on your provider): This is a connect button. You can drag'n'drop this instance in your template (it implements HtmlElementInterface).
  • socialProfilePicture: This is a profile picture of the user currently connected. You can drag'n'drop this instance in your template (it implements HtmlElementInterface).

Mouf package

This package is part of Mouf, an effort to ensure good developing practices by providing a graphical dependency injection framework.

About

This package contains bindings between the Mouf and HybridAuth, a great library to implement social logins (on Facebook, Twitter, etc...).

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 99.6%
  • HTML 0.4%