Symfony SDK for Auth0 Authentication and Management APIs.
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- Docs site — explore our docs site and learn more about Auth0.
- PHP 8.1+
- Symfony 6.4 LTS or 7
- Symfony 7 support is community-contributed and presently experimental.
Please review our support policy to learn when language and framework versions will exit support in the future.
Add the dependency to your application with Composer:
composer require auth0/symfony
Create a Regular Web Application in the Auth0 Dashboard. Verify that the "Token Endpoint Authentication Method" is set to POST
.
Next, configure the callback and logout URLs for your application under the "Application URIs" section of the "Settings" page:
- Allowed Callback URLs: URL of your application where Auth0 will redirect to during authentication, e.g.,
http://localhost:8000/callback
. - Allowed Logout URLs: URL of your application where Auth0 will redirect to after logout, e.g.,
http://localhost:8000/login
.
Note the Domain, Client ID, and Client Secret. These values will be used later.
After installation, you should find a new file in your application, config/packages/auth0.yaml
. If this file isn't present, please create it manually.
The following is an example configuration that will use environment variables to assign values. You should avoid storing sensitive credentials directly in this file, as it will often be committed to version control.
auth0:
sdk:
domain: "%env(trim:string:AUTH0_DOMAIN)%"
client_id: "%env(trim:string:AUTH0_CLIENT_ID)%"
client_secret: "%env(trim:string:AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET)%"
cookie_secret: "%kernel.secret%"
# custom_domain: "%env(trim:string:AUTH0_CUSTOM_DOMAIN)%"
# audiences:
# - "%env(trim:string:AUTH0_API_AUDIENCE)%"
# token_cache: cache.auth0_token_cache
# management_token_cache: cache.auth0_management_token_cache
scopes:
- openid
- profile
- email
- offline_access
authenticator:
routes:
callback: "%env(string:AUTH0_ROUTE_CALLBACK)%"
success: "%env(string:AUTH0_ROUTE_SUCCESS)%"
failure: "%env(string:AUTH0_ROUTE_FAILURE)%"
login: "%env(string:AUTH0_ROUTE_LOGIN)%"
logout: "%env(string:AUTH0_ROUTE_LOGOUT)%"
Create or open a .env.local
file within your application directory, and add the following lines:
#
# ↓ Refer to your Auth0 application details (https://manage.auth0.com/#/applications) for these values.
#
# Your Auth0 application domain
AUTH0_DOMAIN=...
# Your Auth0 application client ID
AUTH0_CLIENT_ID=...
# Your Auth0 application client secret
AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET=...
# Optional. Your Auth0 custom domain, if you have one. (https://manage.auth0.com/#/custom_domains)
AUTH0_CUSTOM_DOMAIN=...
# Optional. Your Auth0 API identifier/audience, if used. (https://manage.auth0.com/#/apis)
AUTH0_API_AUDIENCE=...
#
# ↓ These routes will be used by the SDK to direct traffic during authentication.
#
# The route that SDK will redirect to after authentication:
AUTH0_ROUTE_CALLBACK=callback
# The route that will trigger the authentication process:
AUTH0_ROUTE_LOGIN=login
# The route that the SDK will redirect to after a successful authentication:
AUTH0_ROUTE_SUCCESS=private
# The route that the SDK will redirect to after a failed authentication:
AUTH0_ROUTE_FAILURE=public
# The route that the SDK will redirect to after a successful logout:
AUTH0_ROUTE_LOGOUT=public
Please ensure this .env.local
file is included in your .gitignore
. It should never be committed to version control.
Open your application's config/packages/security.yaml
file, and update it based on the following example:
security:
providers:
auth0_provider:
id: Auth0\Symfony\Security\UserProvider
firewalls:
auth0:
pattern: ^/private$ # A pattern example for stateful (session-based authentication) route requests
provider: auth0_provider
custom_authenticators:
- auth0.authenticator
api:
pattern: ^/api # A pattern example for stateless (token-based authorization) route requests
stateless: true
provider: auth0_provider
custom_authenticators:
- auth0.authorizer
dev:
pattern: ^/(_(profiler|wdt)|css|images|js)/
security: false
main:
lazy: true
access_control:
- { path: ^/api$, roles: PUBLIC_ACCESS } # PUBLIC_ACCESS is a special role that allows everyone to access the path.
- { path: ^/api/scoped$, roles: ROLE_USING_TOKEN } # The ROLE_USING_TOKEN role is added by the Auth0 SDK to any request that includes a valid access token.
- { path: ^/api/scoped$, roles: ROLE_READ_MESSAGES } # This route will expect the given access token to have the `read:messages` scope in order to access it.
The SDK bundle should be automatically detected and registered by Symfony Flex projects, but you may need to add the Auth0Bundle to your application's bundle registry. Either way, it's a good idea to register the bundle anyway, just to be safe.
<?php
return [
/*
* Leave any existing entries in this array as they are.
* You should just append this line to the end:
*/
Auth0\Symfony\Auth0Bundle::class => ['all' => true],
];
The SDK includes a number of pre-built HTTP controllers that can be used to handle authentication. These controllers are not required, but can be helpful in getting started. In many cases, these may provide all the functionality you need to integrate Auth0 into your application, providing a plug-and-play solution.
To use these, open your application's config/routes.yaml
file, and add the following lines:
login: # Send the user to Auth0 for authentication.
path: /login
controller: Auth0\Symfony\Controllers\AuthenticationController::login
callback: # This user will be returned here from Auth0 after authentication; this is a special route that completes the authentication process. After this, the user will be redirected to the route configured as `AUTH0_ROUTE_SUCCESS` in your .env file.
path: /callback
controller: Auth0\Symfony\Controllers\AuthenticationController::callback
logout: # This route will clear the user's session and return them to the route configured as `AUTH0_ROUTE_LOGOUT` in your .env file.
path: /logout
controller: Auth0\Symfony\Controllers\AuthenticationController::logout
The SDK provides two caching properties in it's configuration: token_cache
and management_token_cache
. These are compatible with any PSR-6 cache implementation, of which Symfony offers several out of the box.
These are used to store JSON Web Key Sets (JWKS) results for validating access token signatures and generated management API tokens, respectively. We recommended configuring this feature to improve your application's performance by reducing the number of network requests the SDK needs to make. It will also greatly help in avoiding hitting rate-limiting conditions, if you're making frequent Management API requests.
The following is an example config/packages/cache.yaml
file that would configure the SDK to use a Redis backend for caching:
framework:
cache:
prefix_seed: auth0_symfony_sample
app: cache.adapter.redis
default_redis_provider: redis://localhost
pools:
auth0_token_cache: { adapter: cache.adapter.redis }
auth0_management_token_cache: { adapter: cache.adapter.redis }
Please review the Symfony cache documentation for adapter-specific configuration options. Please note that the SDK does not currently support Symfony's "Cache Contract" adapter type.
The following example shows how to retrieve the authenticated user within a controller. For this example, we'll create a mock ExampleController
class that is accessible from a route at /private
.
Add a route to your application's config/routes.yaml
file:
private:
path: /private
controller: App\Controller\ExampleController::private
Now update or create a src/Controller/ExampleController.php
class to include the following code:
<?php
namespace App\Controller;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
class ExampleController extends AbstractController
{
public function private(): Response
{
return new Response(
'<html><body><pre>' . print_r($this->getUser(), true) . '</pre> <a href="/logout">Logout</a></body></html>'
);
}
}
If you visit the /private
route in your browser, you should see the authenticated user's details. If you are not already authenticated, you will be redirected to the /login
route to login, and then back to /private
afterward.
Our support windows are determined by the Symfony release support and PHP release support schedules, and support ends when either the Symfony framework or PHP runtime outlined below stop receiving security fixes, whichever may come first.
SDK Version | Symfony Version | PHP Version | Support Ends |
---|---|---|---|
5.3 | 7.0* | 8.2 | Jul 31 2024 |
5 | 6.2 | 8.2 | Jul 31 2023 |
8.1 | Jul 31 2023 | ||
6.1 | 8.2 | Jan 31 2023 | |
8.1 | Jan 31 2023 |
Deprecations of EOL'd language or framework versions are not considered a breaking change, as Composer handles these scenarios elegantly. Legacy applications will stop receiving updates from us, but will continue to function on those unsupported SDK versions.
Note: We do not currently support Symfony LTS versions, but anticipate adding support for this when Symfony's 6.x branch enters it's LTS window.
Note: Symfony 7 support is community-contributed, and currently considered experimental.
We appreciate feedback and contribution to this repo! Before you get started, please see the following:
To provide feedback or report a bug, please raise an issue on our issue tracker.
Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public Github issue tracker. The Responsible Disclosure Program details the procedure for disclosing security issues.
Auth0 is an easy to implement, adaptable authentication and authorization platform.
To learn more checkout Why Auth0?
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.