This middleware implements HTTP Basic Authentication. It was originally developed for Slim but can be used with all frameworks using PSR-7 or PSR-15 style middlewares. It has been tested with Slim Framework and Zend Expressive.
Heads up! You are reading documentation for 3.x branch which is PHP 7.1 and up only. If you are using older version of PHP see the 2.x branch. These two branches are not backwards compatible, see UPGRADING for instructions how to upgrade.
Install latest version using composer.
$ composer require tuupola/slim-basic-auth
Configuration options are passed as an array. Only mandatory parameter is users
. This is an array where you pass one or more "username" => "password"
combinations. Username is the key and password is the value.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
Same with Zend Expressive.
$app = Zend\Expressive\AppFactory::create();
$app->pipe(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"user" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
Rest of the examples assume you are using Slim Framework.
Cleartext passwords are only good for quick testing. You probably want to use hashed passwords. Hashed password can be generated with htpasswd
command line tool or password_hash() PHP function
$ htpasswd -nbBC 10 root t00r
root:$2y$10$1lwCIlqktFZwEBIppL4ak.I1AHxjoKy9stLnbedwVMrt92aGz82.O
$ htpasswd -nbBC 10 somebody passw0rd
somebody:$2y$10$6/vGXuMUoRlJUeDN.bUWduge4GhQbgPkm6pfyGxwgEWT0vEkHKBUW
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"users" => [
"root" => '$2y$10$1lwCIlqktFZwEBIppL4ak.I1AHxjoKy9stLnbedwVMrt92aGz82.O',
"somebody" => '$2y$10$6/vGXuMUoRlJUeDN.bUWduge4GhQbgPkm6pfyGxwgEWT0vEkHKBUW'
]
]));
Even if you are using hashed passwords it is not the best idea to store credentials in the code. Instead you could store them in environment or external file which is not committed to GitHub.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"users" => [
"admin" => getenv("ADMIN_PASSWORD")
]
]));
The optional path
parameter allows you to specify the protected part of your website. It can be either a string or an array. You do not need to specify each URL. Instead think of path
setting as a folder. In the example below everything starting with /api
will be authenticated.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/api", /* or ["/admin", "/api"] */
"realm" => "Protected",
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
With optional ignore
parameter you can make exceptions to path
parameter. In the example below everything starting with /api
and /admin
will be authenticated with the exception of /api/token
and /admin/ping
which will not be authenticated.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => ["/api", "/admin"],
"ignore" => ["/api/token", "/admin/ping"],
"realm" => "Protected",
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
Before function is called only when authentication succeeds but before the next incoming middleware is called. You can use this to alter the request before passing it to the next incoming middleware in the stack. If it returns anything else than \Psr\Http\Message\RequestInterface
the return value will be ignored.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"realm" => "Protected",
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
],
"before" => function ($request, $arguments) {
return $request->withAttribute("user", $arguments["user"]);
}
]));
After function is called only when authentication succeeds and after the incoming middleware stack has been called. You can use this to alter the response before passing it next outgoing middleware in the stack. If it returns anything else than \Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface
the return value will be ignored.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"realm" => "Protected",
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
],
"after" => function ($request, $response, $arguments) {
return $response->withHeader("X-Brawndo", "plants crave");
}
]));
Basic authentication transmits credentials in clear text. For this reason HTTPS should always be used together with basic authentication. If the middleware detects insecure usage over HTTP it will throw a RuntimeException
with the following message: Insecure use of middleware over HTTP denied by configuration
.
By default, localhost is allowed to use HTTP. The security behavior of HttpBasicAuthentication
can also be configured to allow:
You can list hosts to allow access insecurely. For example, to allow HTTP traffic from your development host dev.example.com
, add the hostname to the relaxed
config key:
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"secure" => true,
"relaxed" => ["localhost", "dev.example.com"],
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
If public traffic terminates SSL on a load balancer or proxy and forwards to the application host insecurely, HttpBasicAuthentication
can inspect request headers to ensure that the original client request was initiated securely. To enable, add the string headers
to the relaxed
config key:
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"secure" => true,
"relaxed" => ["localhost", "headers"],
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
To allow insecure usage by any host, you must enable it manually by setting secure
to false
:
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"secure" => false,
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
]
]));
Sometimes passing users in an array is not enough. To authenticate against custom datasource you can pass a callable as authenticator
parameter. This can be either a class which implements AuthenticatorInterface or anonymous function. Callable receives an array containing user
and password
as argument. In both cases authenticator must return either true
or false
.
If you are creating an Enterpriseā¢ software which randomly lets people log in you could use the following.
use Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication\AuthenticatorInterface;
use Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication;
class RandomAuthenticator implements AuthenticatorInterface {
public function __invoke(array $arguments) {
return (bool)rand(0,1);
}
}
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"realm" => "Protected",
"authenticator" => new RandomAuthenticator
]));
Same thing can also be accomplished with anonymous function.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"realm" => "Protected",
"authenticator" => function ($arguments) {
return (bool)rand(0,1);
}
]));
By default plugin returns an empty response body with 401 response. You can return custom body using by providing an error handler. This is useful for example when you need additional information why authentication failed.
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/api",
"realm" => "Protected",
"users" => [
"root" => "t00r",
"somebody" => "passw0rd"
],
"error" => function ($response, $arguments) {
$data = [];
$data["status"] = "error";
$data["message"] = $arguments["message"];
return $response->write(json_encode($data, JSON_UNESCAPED_SLASHES));
}
]));
For those in hurry there is a ready made PDO authenticator. It covers most of the use cases. You probably end up implementing your own though.
use Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication\PdoAuthenticator;
$pdo = new PDO("sqlite:/tmp/users.sqlite");
$app = new Slim\App;
$app->add(new Tuupola\Middleware\HttpBasicAuthentication([
"path" => "/admin",
"realm" => "Protected",
"authenticator" => new PdoAuthenticator([
"pdo" => $pdo
])
]));
For better explanation see Basic Authentication from Database blog post.
By default Apache does not pass credentials to FastCGI process. If you are using mod_fcgi you can configure authorization headers with:
FastCgiExternalServer /usr/lib/cgi-bin/php5-fcgi -host 127.0.0.1:9000 -pass-header Authorization
You can run tests either manually or automatically on every code change. Automatic tests require entr to work.
$ make test
$ brew install entr
$ make watch
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you discover any security related issues, please email tuupola@appelsiini.net instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.