An easy and flexible Laravel authorization and roles permission management
In many projects, we need to implement a role-based permissions management system for our users. Although Laravel has the best tools to manage users' permissions, I build this package to make it simpler, more flexible, and to avoid duplicate work in many web projects built on Laravel.
The idea is to use this package as easy and as flexible as possible.
This package creates a list of all your routes and assigns these permissions list to user roles.
Although the laravel-permission
package does most of the work, you could easily extend it and implement your authorization system.
Start with installing the package through the composer. Run this command in your terminal:
$ composer require amir/laravel-permission
After that, you need to run the migration files:
$ php artisan migrate
This package adds a role_id
to the users
table.
Roles are stored in the roles
table. You can assign a role to a user in your administrator panel or by creating a seed file.
Then, you only need to assign auth.role
middleware to your routes.
Besides middleware and other route settings, you can use a role
key in your route groups to assign a role to your routes.
You can put your routes for a role in a Route
group like this:
Route::group([
'middleware' => 'auth.role',
'prefix' => ...,
'role' => ['admin', 'customer'],
...
],function (){
...
Route::get('/home', 'HomeController@index')->name('home');
Route::get('/product', 'ProductController@index');
...
});
Of course, you can have as many as route groups like this.
Then you need to run this artisan command to register all permissions:
$ php artisan permissions:generate
This command will register all permissions and assign permissions to the roles.
If you add a fresh
option to this command, it will delete all data and generate fresh permissions data:
$ php artisan permissions:generate --fresh
Now only users with the proper role can access the route assigned to them.
Don't forget that this package does not handle assigning roles to the users. You need to handle this in your administration panel or anywhere else you handle your users.
Again, if you want to add permissions to the routes manually it is not necessary to add `role` key in your route group. You can easily assign permissions to the roles in your administration panel or create another seed file for that.
The php artisan permissions:generate
command will make all roles defined in the routes if they are not exist.
Also, You can create a seeder to fill the roles
table. It takes only a name
field.
Your RolesSeeser
file can look like this.
Role::firstOrCreate(['name' => 'admin']);
Role::firstOrCreate(['name' => 'customer']);
Don't forget to import the Role
model in your seeder.
use Amir\Permission\Models\Role;
To clear registered permissions you can run this command:
$ php artisan permissions:clear
You can use this command to clear all permissions data for a specific role
$ php artisan permissions:clear --roles role1 role2
To erase only permissions list, run permissions:clear
command with this option:
$ php artisan permissions:clear --tables permissions
To clear all roles:
$ php artisan permissions:clear --tables roles
To clear only permissions role relation:
$ php artisan permissions:clear --tables permission_role
This command erases all permissions assigned to roles, so you can regenerate permissions
Also, you can use these options in combination:
$ php artisan permissions:clear --roles admin --tables permission_role
I used this Laravel permission management method in my projects for a while. It made manging Laravel permission easy and flexible for me. I hope it helps you as well. All pull requests are welcome.
Most of the work is based on my article about Laravel authorization and roles permission management