nigelheap / roles
Powerful package for handling roles and permissions in Laravel 5.3 and 5.6
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pkg:composer/nigelheap/roles
Requires
- php: >=5.6.4
- illuminate/support: >=5.4
- dev-master
- 6.0.0
- 5.4.5
- 5.4.4
- 5.4.3
- 5.4.2
- 5.4.1
- 5.3.5
- 5.3.4
- 5.3.3
- 5.3.2
- 5.3.1
- 3.0.5
- 3.0.4
- 3.0.3
- 3.0.2
- 3.0.1
- 2.1.7
- 2.1.6
- 2.1.5
- 2.1.4
- 2.1.3
- 2.1.2
- 2.1.1
- 2.1.0
- 2.0.2
- 2.0.1
- 2.0.0
- 1.7.1
- 1.7.0
- 1.6.0
- 1.5.4
- 1.5.3
- 1.5.2
- 1.5.1
- 1.5.0
- 1.4.1
- 1.4.0
- 1.3.0
- 1.2.4
- 1.2.3
- 1.2.2
- 1.2.1
- 1.2.0
- 1.1
- v1.0.3
- v1.0.2
- v1.0.1
- v1.0.0
- 0.9
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2025-10-16 04:10:28 UTC
README
This is a direct clone of https://github.com/romanbican/roles with the 5.3, 5.4, 5.5 and 5.6 fixes added
Powerful package for handling roles and permissions in Laravel 5.3 and 5.4.
Installation
This package is very easy to set up. There are only couple of steps.
Composer
Pull this package in through Composer (file composer.json).
{ "require": { "php": ">=5.6.4", "laravel/framework": "5.4.*", "nigelheap/roles": "5.4.*" } }
If you are still using Laravel 5.0, you must pull in version
1.7.*.
Run this command inside your terminal.
composer update
Service Provider
Add the package to your application service providers in config/app.php file.
'providers' => [ /* * Laravel Framework Service Providers... */ Illuminate\Foundation\Providers\ArtisanServiceProvider::class, Illuminate\Auth\AuthServiceProvider::class, ... /** * Third Party Service Providers... */ NigelHeap\Roles\RolesServiceProvider::class, ],
Config File And Migrations
Publish the package config file and migrations to your application. Run these commands inside your terminal.
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="NigelHeap\Roles\RolesServiceProvider" --tag=config
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="NigelHeap\Roles\RolesServiceProvider" --tag=migrations
And also run migrations.
php artisan migrate
This uses the default users table which is in Laravel. You should already have the migration file for the users table available and migrated.
HasRoleAndPermission Trait And Contract
Include HasRoleAndPermission trait and also implement HasRoleAndPermission contract inside your User model.
use NigelHeap\Roles\Traits\HasRoleAndPermission; use NigelHeap\Roles\Contracts\HasRoleAndPermission as HasRoleAndPermissionContract; class User extends Model implements AuthenticatableContract, CanResetPasswordContract, HasRoleAndPermissionContract { use Authenticatable, CanResetPassword, HasRoleAndPermission;
And that's it!
Usage
Creating Roles
use NigelHeap\Roles\Models\Role; $adminRole = Role::create([ 'name' => 'Admin', 'slug' => 'admin', 'description' => '', // optional 'level' => 1, // optional, set to 1 by default ]); $moderatorRole = Role::create([ 'name' => 'Forum Moderator', 'slug' => 'forum.moderator', ]);
Because of
Slugabletrait, if you make a mistake and for example leave a space in slug parameter, it'll be replaced with a dot automatically, because ofstr_slugfunction.
Attaching And Detaching Roles
It's really simple. You fetch a user from database and call attachRole method. There is BelongsToMany relationship between User and Role model.
use App\User; $user = User::find($id); $user->attachRole($adminRole); // you can pass whole object, or just an id
$user->detachRole($adminRole); // in case you want to detach role $user->detachAllRoles(); // in case you want to detach all roles
Checking For Roles
You can now check if the user has required role.
if ($user->isRole('admin')) { // you can pass an id or slug // or alternatively $user->hasRole('admin') }
You can also do this:
if ($user->isAdmin()) { // }
And of course, there is a way to check for multiple roles:
if ($user->isRole('admin|moderator')) { /* | Or alternatively: | $user->isRole('admin, moderator'), $user->isRole(['admin', 'moderator']), | $user->isOne('admin|moderator'), $user->isOne('admin, moderator'), $user->isOne(['admin', 'moderator']) */ // if user has at least one role } if ($user->isRole('admin|moderator', true)) { /* | Or alternatively: | $user->isRole('admin, moderator', true), $user->isRole(['admin', 'moderator'], true), | $user->isAll('admin|moderator'), $user->isAll('admin, moderator'), $user->isAll(['admin', 'moderator']) */ // if user has all roles }
Levels
When you are creating roles, there is optional parameter level. It is set to 1 by default, but you can overwrite it and then you can do something like this:
if ($user->level() > 4) { // }
If user has multiple roles, method
levelreturns the highest one.
Level has also big effect on inheriting permissions. About it later.
Creating Permissions
It's very simple thanks to Permission model.
use NigelHeap\Roles\Models\Permission; $createUsersPermission = Permission::create([ 'name' => 'Create users', 'slug' => 'create.users', 'description' => '', // optional ]); $deleteUsersPermission = Permission::create([ 'name' => 'Delete users', 'slug' => 'delete.users', ]);
Attaching And Detaching Permissions
You can attach permissions to a role or directly to a specific user (and of course detach them as well).
use App\User; use NigelHeap\Roles\Models\Role; $role = Role::find($roleId); $role->attachPermission($createUsersPermission); // permission attached to a role $user = User::find($userId); $user->attachPermission($deleteUsersPermission); // permission attached to a user
$role->detachPermission($createUsersPermission); // in case you want to detach permission $role->detachAllPermissions(); // in case you want to detach all permissions $user->detachPermission($deleteUsersPermission); $user->detachAllPermissions();
Checking For Permissions
if ($user->can('create.users') { // you can pass an id or slug // } if ($user->canDeleteUsers()) { // }
You can check for multiple permissions the same way as roles. You can make use of additional methods like canOne, canAll or hasPermission.
Permissions Inheriting
Role with higher level is inheriting permission from roles with lower level.
There is an example of this magic:
You have three roles: user, moderator and admin. User has a permission to read articles, moderator can manage comments and admin can create articles. User has a level 1, moderator level 2 and admin level 3. It means, moderator and administrator has also permission to read articles, but administrator can manage comments as well.
If you don't want permissions inheriting feature in you application, simply ignore
levelparameter when you're creating roles.
Entity Check
Let's say you have an article and you want to edit it. This article belongs to a user (there is a column user_id in articles table).
use App\Article; use NigelHeap\Roles\Models\Permission; $editArticlesPermission = Permission::create([ 'name' => 'Edit articles', 'slug' => 'edit.articles', 'model' => 'App\Article', ]); $user->attachPermission($editArticlesPermission); $article = Article::find(1); if ($user->allowed('edit.articles', $article)) { // $user->allowedEditArticles($article) // }
This condition checks if the current user is the owner of article. If not, it will be looking inside user permissions for a row we created before.
if ($user->allowed('edit.articles', $article, false)) { // now owner check is disabled // }
Blade Extensions
There are four Blade extensions. Basically, it is replacement for classic if statements.
@role('admin') // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->is('admin')) // user is admin @endrole @permission('edit.articles') // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->can('edit.articles')) // user can edit articles @endpermission @level(2) // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->level() >= 2) // user has level 2 or higher @endlevel @allowed('edit', $article) // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->allowed('edit', $article)) // show edit button @endallowed @role('admin|moderator', 'all') // @if(Auth::check() && Auth::user()->is('admin|moderator', 'all')) // user is admin and also moderator @else // something else @endrole
Middleware
This package comes with VerifyRole, VerifyPermission and VerifyLevel middleware. You must add them inside your app/Http/Kernel.php file.
/** * The application's route middleware. * * @var array */ protected $routeMiddleware = [ 'auth' => \App\Http\Middleware\Authenticate::class, 'auth.basic' => \Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\AuthenticateWithBasicAuth::class, 'guest' => \App\Http\Middleware\RedirectIfAuthenticated::class, 'role' => \NigelHeap\Roles\Middleware\VerifyRole::class, 'permission' => \NigelHeap\Roles\Middleware\VerifyPermission::class, 'level' => \NigelHeap\Roles\Middleware\VerifyLevel::class, ];
Now you can easily protect your routes.
$router->get('/example', [ 'as' => 'example', 'middleware' => 'role:admin', 'uses' => 'ExampleController@index', ]); $router->post('/example', [ 'as' => 'example', 'middleware' => 'permission:edit.articles', 'uses' => 'ExampleController@index', ]); $router->get('/example', [ 'as' => 'example', 'middleware' => 'level:2', // level >= 2 'uses' => 'ExampleController@index', ]);
It throws \NigelHeap\Roles\Exceptions\RoleDeniedException, \NigelHeap\Roles\Exceptions\PermissionDeniedException or \NigelHeap\Roles\Exceptions\LevelDeniedException exceptions if it goes wrong.
You can catch these exceptions inside app/Exceptions/Handler.php file and do whatever you want.
/** * Render an exception into an HTTP response. * * @param \Illuminate\Http\Request $request * @param \Exception $e * @return \Illuminate\Http\Response */ public function render($request, Exception $e) { if ($e instanceof \NigelHeap\Roles\Exceptions\RoleDeniedException) { // you can for example flash message, redirect... return redirect()->back(); } return parent::render($request, $e); }
Config File
You can change connection for models, slug separator, models path and there is also a handy pretend feature. Have a look at config file for more information.
More Information
For more information, please have a look at HasRoleAndPermission contract.
License
This package is free software distributed under the terms of the MIT license.