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Package mongodb-laravel-permission
Short Description Permission handling for Laravel 11 and up using mongodb
License MIT
Homepage https://github.com/brahimrizqHireme/laravel-permission-mongodb
Informations about the package mongodb-laravel-permission
laravel-permission-mongodb
This package allows you to manage user permissions and roles in a database. It is inspired from laravel-permission. Same code same every thing but it is compatible with laravel-mongodb
Once installed you can do stuff like this:
If you're using multiple guards we've got you covered as well. Every guard will have its own set of permissions and roles that can be assigned to the guard's users. Read about it in the using multiple guards section of the readme.
Because all permissions will be registered on Laravel's gate, you can test if a user has a permission with Laravel's default can
function:
Table of contents
- Installation
- Laravel Compatibility
- Laravel
- Lumen
- Usage
- Using "direct" permissions
- Using permissions via roles
- Using Blade directives
- Using multiple guards
- Using permissions and roles with multiple guards
- Assigning permissions and roles to guard users
- Using blade directives with multiple guards
- Using a middleware
- Using artisan commands
- Unit Testing
- Database Seeding
- Extending
- Cache
- Manual cache reset
- Cache Identifier
- Need a UI?
- Change log
- Testing
- Contributing
- Security
- Credits
- License
Installation
Laravel Compatibility
Laravel | Package |
---|---|
5.x | 1.x or 2.x or 3.x |
6.x | 2.x or 3.x |
7.x | 3.x |
8.x | 3.1.x |
9.x | 4.x |
Laravel
You can install the package via composer:
For laravel 11.x use
You can publish the migration with:
You can publish the config file with:
When published, the config/permission.php
config file contains:
Lumen
You can install the package via Composer:
Copy the required files:
You will also need to create another configuration file at config/auth.php
. Get it on the Laravel repository or just run the following command:
Then, in bootstrap/app.php
, register the middlewares:
As well as the configuration and the service provider:
Now, run your migrations:
Usage
First, add the Houssam\Permission\Traits\HasRoles
trait to your User
model(s):
Note: that if you need to use
HasRoles
trait with another model ex.Page
you will also need to addprotected $guard_name = 'web';
as well to that model or you would get an error
This package allows for users to be associated with permissions and roles. Every role is associated with multiple permissions.
A Role
and a Permission
are regular Moloquent models. They require a name
and can be created like this:
A permission can be assigned to a role using 1 of these methods:
Multiple permissions can be synced to a role using 1 of these methods:
A permission can be removed from a role using 1 of these methods:
If you're using multiple guards the guard_name
attribute needs to be set as well. Read about it in the using multiple guards section of the readme.
The HasRoles
trait adds Moloquent relationships to your models, which can be accessed directly or used as a base query:
The HasRoles
trait also adds a role
scope to your models to scope the query to certain roles or permissions:
The scope can accept a string, a \Houssam\Permission\Models\Role
object, a \Houssam\Permission\Models\Permission
object or an \Illuminate\Support\Collection
object.
Using "direct" permissions
A permission can be given to any user with the HasRoles
trait:
A permission can be revoked from a user:
Or revoke & add new permissions in one go:
You can test if a user has a permission:
...or if a user has multiple permissions:
Saved permissions will be registered with the Illuminate\Auth\Access\Gate
class for the default guard. So you can
test if a user has a permission with Laravel's default can
function:
Using permissions via roles
A role can be assigned to any user:
A role can be removed from a user:
Roles can also be synced:
You can determine if a user has a certain role:
You can also determine if a user has any of a given list of roles:
You can also determine if a user has all of a given list of roles:
The assignRole
, hasRole
, hasAnyRole
, hasAllRoles
and removeRole
functions can accept a
string, a \Houssam\Permission\Models\Role
object or an \Illuminate\Support\Collection
object.
A permission can be given to a role:
You can determine if a role has a certain permission:
A permission can be revoked from a role:
The givePermissionTo
and revokePermissionTo
functions can accept a
string or a Houssam\Permission\Models\Permission
object.
Permissions are inherited from roles automatically. Additionally, individual permissions can be assigned to the user too.
For instance:
In the above example, a role is given permission to edit articles and this role is assigned to a user.
Now the user can edit articles and additionally delete articles. The permission of delete articles
is the user's direct permission because it is assigned directly to them.
When we call $user->hasDirectPermission('delete articles')
it returns true
, but false
for $user->hasDirectPermission('edit articles')
.
This method is useful if one builds a form for setting permissions for roles and users in an application and wants to restrict or change inherited permissions of roles of the user, i.e. allowing to change only direct permissions of the user.
You can list all of these permissions:
All these responses are collections of Houssam\Permission\Models\Permission
objects.
If we follow the previous example, the first response will be a collection with the delete article
permission, the
second will be a collection with the edit article
permission and the third will contain both.
Using Blade directives
This package also adds Blade directives to verify whether the currently logged in user has all or any of a given list of roles.
Optionally you can pass in the guard
that the check will be performed on as a second argument.
Blade and Roles
Test for a specific role:
is the same as
Test for any role in a list:
Test for all roles:
Blade and Permissions
This package doesn't add any permission-specific Blade directives. Instead, use Laravel's native @can
directive to check if a user has a certain permission.
or
Using multiple guards
When using the default Laravel auth configuration all of the above methods will work out of the box, no extra configuration required.
However when using multiple guards they will act like namespaces for your permissions and roles. Meaning every guard has its own set of permissions and roles that can be assigned to their user model.
Using permissions and roles with multiple guards
When creating new permissions and roles, if no guard is specified, then the first defined guard in auth.guards
config array will be used. When creating permissions and roles for specific guards you'll have to specify their guard_name
on the model:
Note: When determining whether a role/permission is valid on a given model, it chooses the guard in this order: first the
$guard_name
property of the model; then the guard in the config (through a provider); then the first-defined guard in theauth.guards
config array; then theauth.defaults.guard
config.
Assigning permissions and roles to guard users
You can use the same methods to assign permissions and roles to users as described above in using permissions via roles. Just make sure the guard_name
on the permission or role matches the guard of the user, otherwise a GuardDoesNotMatch
exception will be thrown.
Using blade directives with multiple guards
You can use all of the blade directives listed in using blade directives by passing in the guard you wish to use as the second argument to the directive:
Using a middleware
This package comes with RoleMiddleware
and PermissionMiddleware
middleware. You can add them inside your app/Http/Kernel.php
file.
Then you can protect your routes using middleware rules:
You can protect your controllers similarly, by setting desired middleware in the constructor:
You can add something in Laravel exception handler:
Using artisan commands
You can create a role or permission from a console with artisan commands.
When creating permissions and roles for specific guards you can specify the guard names as a second argument:
Unit Testing
In your application's tests, if you are not seeding roles and permissions as part of your test setUp()
then you may run into a chicken/egg situation where roles and permissions aren't registered with the gate (because your tests create them after that gate registration is done). Working around this is simple: In your tests simply add a setUp()
instruction to re-register the permissions, like this:
Database Seeding
Two notes about Database Seeding:
-
It is best to flush the
maklad.permission.cache
before seeding, to avoid cache conflict errors. This can be done from an Artisan command (see Troubleshooting: Cache section, later) or directly in a seeder class (see example below). - Here's a sample seeder, which clears the cache, creates permissions, and then assigns permissions to roles:
Extending
If you need to EXTEND the existing Role
or Permission
models note that:
- Your
Role
model needs to extend theHoussam\Permission\Models\Role
model - Your
Permission
model needs to extend theHoussam\Permission\Models\Permission
model
If you need to extend or replace the existing Role
or Permission
models you just need to
keep the following things in mind:
- Your
Role
model needs to implement theHoussam\Permission\Contracts\Role
contract - Your
Permission
model needs to implement theHoussam\Permission\Contracts\Permission
contract
In BOTH cases, whether extending or replacing, you will need to specify your new models in the configuration. To do this you must update the models.role
and models.permission
values in the configuration file after publishing the configuration with this command:
Cache
Role and Permission data are cached to speed up performance.
When you use the supplied methods for manipulating roles and permissions, the cache is automatically reset for you:
HOWEVER, if you manipulate permission/role data directly in the database instead of calling the supplied methods, then you will not see the changes reflected in the application unless you manually reset the cache.
Manual cache reset
To manually reset the cache for this package, run:
Cache Identifier
Note: If you are leveraging a caching service such as
redis
ormemcached
and there are other sites running on your server, you could run into cache clashes. It is prudent to set your own cacheprefix
in/config/cache.php
for each application uniquely. This will prevent other applications from accidentally using/changing your cached data.
Need a UI?
As we are based on laravel-permission. The package doesn't come with any screens out of the box, you should build that yourself. To get started check out this extensive tutorial by Caleb Oki.
Change log
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Testing
Contributing
Please see CONDUCT for details.
Security
If you discover any security-related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.
Credits
- Freek Van der Herten
- Mostafa Maklad
- All Contributors
License
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
All versions of mongodb-laravel-permission with dependencies
illuminate/auth Version ^11.0
illuminate/container Version ^11.0
illuminate/contracts Version ^11.0
mongodb/laravel-mongodb Version ^4.6