consilience/laravel-api-token-generator

Artisan command to generate API tokens for laravel applications

1.1.1 2019-11-27 15:11 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-11-28 03:05:41 UTC


README

Laravel supports API token authentication out of the box. When developing, and for internal (machine-to-machine) APIs, it is useful to be able to generate tokens for a user. This package provides a simple Artisan command to generate a token.

The token will be hashed using the sha256 algorithm.

This package does not provide a database migration for the api_token column. That is left to your application.

Installation

Installing with composer:

composer require consilience/laravel-api-token-generator

Lumen

For Laravel, the service provider and configuration file are registered automatically. With Lumen, additional entried are needed in bootstrap/app.php.

The service provider is registered:

$app->register(Consilience\Laravel\ApiTokenGenerator\Providers\ServiceProvider::class);

If the configuration file is published, add:

$app->configure('apitokens');

then copy apitokens.php:

cp vender/consilience/laravel-api-token-generator/apitokens.php config/apitokens.php

Publishing assets:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Consilience\ApiTokenGenerator\ApiTokenGeneratorServiceProvider"

Configuration

You can change the model that will hold the API tokens. By default this will be App\User, but yu may want App\Models\User for example.

'model' => App\Models\User::class,

The name_field is an alternative column to id that can be used to uniquely identify a model instance:

'name_field' => 'name'

The token column will be api_token by default, but can be changed:

'token_field' => 'my_api_token_column',

Note: this package does not add the API token column to your users table. That is a step for other packages or your application deployment.

Usage

Generate a new token or replace the existing token for a user:

php artisan apitoken:generate --id=123 --generate
php artisan apitoken:generate --id=5fd40c23-fcda-4bdc-a07c-f2bfeb56bb03 --generate

The id is normally an integer, but some this should also work if the id is a string such as UUID.

A generated token will only be displayed once. It is encrypted for saving against the model, so cannot be recovered if not recorded immediately.

Where users are uniquely identified by another column, then that column can be used to identify the model instance to update with a new token:

php artisan apitoken:generate --name=bloggs@example.com --generate

Rather than generating a random token, you can set your own explicit tokanes. Use the --token= option to do this instead of the --generate option.

php artisan apitoken:generate --id=123 --token=d8a928b2043db77e340b523547bf16cb4aa483f0645fe0a290ed1f20aab76257

If using for automated deployment, you may want to use the --no-ansi option to remove control characters.

The --check option will tell you whether an instance has a token set or not:

$ php artisan apitoken:generate --id=11 --check
App\Models\User::11 has no API token set
No explicit token supplied (--token=) and no token to be generated (--generate)