petyots / api-guard
A simple way of authenticating your APIs with API keys using Laravel. Forked from chrisbjr/api-guard And Working with L5.3.*
Requires
- php: >=5.5.9
- ellipsesynergie/api-response: *
- illuminate/auth: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- illuminate/contracts: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- illuminate/database: *
- illuminate/http: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- illuminate/support: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- nesbot/carbon: ^1.0
Requires (Dev)
- cartalyst/sentinel: 2.0.*
- illuminate/console: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- illuminate/database: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- illuminate/routing: 5.1.* || 5.2.* || 5.3.*
- mockery/mockery: 0.9.*
- october/rain: dev-stable
- phpunit/phpunit: ^4.0 || ^5.0
README
A simple way of authenticating your APIs with API keys using Laravel. This package uses the following libraries:
- philsturgeon's Fractal
- maximebeaudoin's api-response
The concept for managing API keys is also taken from Phil Sturgeon's codeigniter-restserver. I've been looking for an equivalent for Laravel but did not find any so this is an implementation for that.
PATCHED TO WORK WITH LARAVEL 5.3.*
Laravel 5 is finally supported!
**Laravel 5.1.x to 5.3.x: ~3.*
**Laravel 5.1.x: ~2.*
**Laravel 4.2.x: ~1.*
(Recently updated version for Laravel 4. Please note that there are namespace changes here)
**Laravel 4.2.x: 0.*
(The version that most of you are using)
Quick start
Laravel 5.1.x to 5.2.x
Run composer require petyots/api-guard
In your config/app.php
add Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Providers\ApiGuardServiceProvider
to the end of the providers
array
'providers' => array( ... Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Providers\ApiGuardServiceProvider::class, ),
Add the ApiGuardAuth
facade to the end of the aliases
array as well
'aliases' => array( ... 'ApiGuardAuth' => \Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Facades\ApiGuardAuth::class, ),
Add the following middleware inside your app/Http/Kernel.php
file:
protected $routeMiddleware = [ ... 'apiguard' => \Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Middleware\ApiGuard::class, ];
Now publish the migration and configuration files for api-guard:
$ php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Providers\ApiGuardServiceProvider"
Then run the migration:
$ php artisan migrate
It will setup two tables - api_keys and api_logs.
Laravel 5.0.x to 5.1.x (old users)
Note: Documentation for use with Laravel 5.0.x and 5.1.x differs from Laravel 5.2.x. Please refer to the README here.
Laravel 4.2.x
Note: Documentation for use with Laravel 4.2.x differs from Laravel 5.0.x. Please refer to the README here. If you are using version 0.*
you can find the README here
Generating your first API key
Once you're done with the required setup, you can now generate your first API key.
Run the following command to generate an API key:
php artisan api-key:generate
Generally, you will want to generate API keys for each user in your application. The api_keys
table has a user_id
field which you can populate for your users.
To generate an API key that is linked to a user, you can do the following:
php artisan api-key:generate --user-id=1
To generate an API key from within your application, you can use the following method in the ApiKey
model:
$apiKey = Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Models\ApiKey::make()
Usage
Basic usage of ApiGuard is to create a controller and extend that class to use the ApiGuardController
.
Note: The namespace of the ApiGuardController
differs from previous versions.
<?php use Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Controllers\ApiGuardController; class BooksController extends ApiGuardController { public function all() { $books = Book::all(); return $this->response->withCollection($books, new BookTransformer); } public function show($id) { try { $book = Book::findOrFail($id); return $this->response->withItem($book, new BookTransformer); } catch (ModelNotFoundException $e) { return $this->response->errorNotFound(); } } }
You should be able to use the api-response object by using $this->response
. More examples can be found on the Github page: https://github.com/ellipsesynergie/api-response.
You can access the above controller by creating a basic route in your app/routes.php
:
Route::get('api/v1/books', 'BooksController@all'); Route::get('api/v1/books/{id}', 'BooksController@show');
You will need to use your API key and put it in the header to access it. By default, the header value is using the X-Authorization
parameter. You can change this in the config file.
Try calling this route using curl
curl --header "X-Authorization: 2ed9d72e5596800bf805ca1c735e446df72019ef" http://localhost:8000/api/v1/books
You should get the following response:
{ "data": { "id": 1, "title": "The Great Adventures of Chris", "created_at": { "date": "2014-03-25 18:54:18", "timezone_type": 3, "timezone": "UTC" }, "updated_at": { "date": "2014-03-25 18:54:18", "timezone_type": 3, "timezone": "UTC" }, "deleted_at": null } }
API Options
There are various options that can be specified for each method in your controller. These options can be specified inside the $apiMethods
variable. Examples can be found below.
Turning off API key authentication for a specific method
By default, all the methods in the ApiGuardController will be authenticated. To turn this off for a specific method, use the keyAuthentication
option.
<?php use Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Controllers\ApiGuardController; class BooksController extends ApiGuardController { protected $apiMethods = [ 'show' => [ 'keyAuthentication' => false ], ]; ... }
This above example will turn off key authentication for the show
method.
Specifying access levels for API methods
If you take a look at the api_keys
table in your database, you will notice that there is a level
field.
This will allow you to specify a level for your API key and if the method has a higher level than the API key, access will be restricted. Here is an example on how to set the level on a method:
<?php use Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Controllers\ApiGuardController; class BooksController extends ApiGuardController { protected $apiMethods = [ 'show' => [ 'level' => 10 ], ]; ... }
Now if your API key has a level of 9 or lower, then access to the show
method will be restricted.
Limiting API key access rate
You can limit the rate at which an API key can have access to a particular method by using the limits.key
option.
<?php use Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Controllers\ApiGuardController; class BooksController extends ApiGuardController { protected $apiMethods = [ 'show' => [ 'limits' => [ 'key' => [ 'increment' => '1 hour', 'limit' => 100 ] ] ], ]; ... }
The above example will limit the access to the show
method of an API key to 100 requests for every hour.
Note: The increment
option can be any value that is accepted by the strtotime()
method.
Limiting access to a method
There is also an option to limit the request rate for a given method no matter what API key is used. For this, we use the limits.method
option.
<?php use Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Controllers\ApiGuardController; class BooksController extends ApiGuardController { protected $apiMethods = [ 'show' => [ 'limits' => [ 'method' => [ 'increment' => '1 day', 'limit' => 1000 ] ] ], ]; ... }
The above example will limit the request rate to the show
method to 1000 requests per day.
Note: The increment
option can be any value that is accepted by the strtotime()
method.
Logging at method level
You can set logging at method level by using the logged
option.
<?php use Chrisbjr\ApiGuard\Http\Controllers\ApiGuardController; class BooksController extends ApiGuardController { protected $apiMethods = [ 'show' => [ 'logged' => true ] ]; ... }
By default for all methods in api-guard, the option logged
is set to true. Set it to false
to exclude that method for logging.