samfrm / lumen-passport
Making Laravel Passport work with Lumen
Requires
- php: >=8.0
- illuminate/database: ^8.0|^9.5
- illuminate/support: ^8.0|^9.5
- laravel/passport: ^10.3
Requires (Dev)
- fakerphp/faker: ^1.19
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.3
README
A fork from: lumen-passport for Lumen > 9.x
Making Laravel Passport work with Lumen
A simple service provider that makes Laravel Passport work with Lumen
Dependencies
- PHP >= 8.0
- Lumen >= 9.0
Installation via Composer
First install Lumen if you don't have it yet:
$ composer create-project --prefer-dist laravel/lumen lumen-app
Then install Lumen Passport (it will fetch Laravel Passport along):
$ cd lumen-app
$ composer require samfrm/lumen-passport
Or if you prefer, edit composer.json
manually:
{ "require": { "samfrm/lumen-passport": "^0.1" } }
Modify the bootstrap flow (bootstrap/app.php
file)
We need to enable both Laravel Passport provider and Lumen-specific provider:
// Enable Facades $app->withFacades(); // Enable Eloquent $app->withEloquent(); // Enable auth middleware (shipped with Lumen) $app->routeMiddleware([ 'auth' => App\Http\Middleware\Authenticate::class, ]); // Finally register two service providers - original one and Lumen adapter $app->register(Laravel\Passport\PassportServiceProvider::class); $app->register(Samfrm\LumenPassport\PassportServiceProvider::class);
Using with Laravel Passport 7.3.2 and newer
Laravel Passport 7.3.2 had a breaking change - new method introduced on Application class that
exists in Laravel but not in Lumen. You could either lock in to an older version or
swap the Application class like follows at the top of your bootstrap/app.php
file:
$app = new \Samfrm\LumenPassport\Lumen7Application( dirname(__DIR__) );
If you look inside this class - all it does is adding an extra method configurationIsCached() that always returns false.
Migrate and install Laravel Passport
# Create new tables for Passport php artisan migrate # Install encryption keys and other necessary stuff for Passport php artisan passport:install
Installed routes
This package mounts the following routes after you call routes() method (see instructions below):
Please note that some of the Laravel Passport's routes had to 'go away' because they are web-related and rely on sessions (eg. authorise pages). Lumen is an API framework so only API-related routes are present.
Configuration
Edit config/auth.php to suit your needs. A simple example:
return [ 'defaults' => [ 'guard' => 'api', 'passwords' => 'users', ], 'guards' => [ 'api' => [ 'driver' => 'passport', 'provider' => 'users', ], ], 'providers' => [ 'users' => [ 'driver' => 'eloquent', 'model' => \App\User::class ] ] ];
Load the config in bootstrap/app.php
since Lumen doesn't load config files automatically:
$app->configure('auth');
Registering Routes
Next, you should call the LumenPassport::routes method within the boot method of your application (one of your service providers). This method will register the routes necessary to issue access tokens and revoke access tokens, clients, and personal access tokens:
\Samfrm\LumenPassport\LumenPassport::routes($this->app);
You can add that into an existing group, or add use this route registrar independently like so;
\Samfrm\LumenPassport\LumenPassport::routes($this->app, ['prefix' => 'v1/oauth']);
User model
Make sure your user model uses Passport's HasApiTokens
trait, eg.:
class User extends Model implements AuthenticatableContract, AuthorizableContract { use HasApiTokens, Authenticatable, Authorizable; /* rest of the model */ }
Extra features
There are a couple of extra features that aren't present in Laravel Passport
Allowing multiple tokens per client
Sometimes it's handy to allow multiple access tokens per password grant client. Eg. user logs in from several browsers simultaneously. Currently Laravel Passport does not allow that.
use Samfrm\LumenPassport\LumenPassport; // Somewhere in your application service provider or bootstrap process LumenPassport::allowMultipleTokens();
Different TTLs for different password clients
Laravel Passport allows to set one global TTL for access tokens, but it may be useful sometimes to set different TTLs for different clients (eg. mobile users get more time than desktop users).
Simply do the following in your service provider:
// Second parameter is the client Id LumenPassport::tokensExpireIn(Carbon::now()->addYears(50), 2);
If you don't specify client Id, it will simply fall back to Laravel Passport implementation.
Console command for purging expired tokens
Simply run php artisan passport:purge
to remove expired refresh tokens and their corresponding access tokens from the database.
Running with Apache httpd
If you are using Apache web server, it may strip Authorization headers and thus break Passport.
Add the following either to your config directly or to .htaccess
:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Authorization} ^(.*)
RewriteRule .* - [e=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%1]
License
The MIT License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2016 Denis Mysenko
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.