41 KiB
Laravel Fortify
- Introduction
- What is Fortify?
- When Should I Use Fortify?
- Installation
- Fortify Features
- Disabling Views
- Authentication
- Customizing User Authentication
- Customizing the Authentication Pipeline
- Customizing Redirects
- Two Factor Authentication
- Enabling Two Factor Authentication
- Authenticating With Two Factor Authentication
- Disabling Two Factor Authentication
- Registration
- Customizing Registration
- Password Reset
- Requesting a Password Reset Link
- Resetting the Password
- Customizing Password Resets
- Email Verification
- Protecting Routes
- Password Confirmation
Introduction
Laravel Fortify is a frontend agnostic
authentication backend implementation for Laravel. Fortify registers the
routes and controllers needed to implement all of Laravel's authentication
features, including login, registration, password reset, email verification,
and more. After installing Fortify, you may run the route:list Artisan
command to see the routes that Fortify has registered.
Since Fortify does not provide its own user interface, it is meant to be paired with your own user interface which makes requests to the routes it registers. We will discuss exactly how to make requests to these routes in the remainder of this documentation.
Remember, Fortify is a package that is meant to give you a head start implementing Laravel's authentication features. You are not required to use it. You are always free to manually interact with Laravel's authentication services by following the documentation available in the authentication, password reset, and email verification documentation.
What is Fortify?
As mentioned previously, Laravel Fortify is a frontend agnostic authentication backend implementation for Laravel. Fortify registers the routes and controllers needed to implement all of Laravel's authentication features, including login, registration, password reset, email verification, and more.
You are not required to use Fortify in order to use Laravel's authentication features. You are always free to manually interact with Laravel's authentication services by following the documentation available in the authentication, password reset, and email verification documentation.
If you are new to Laravel, you may wish to explore our application starter kits before attempting to use Laravel Fortify. Our starter kits provide an authentication scaffolding for your application that includes a user interface built with Tailwind CSS. This allows you to study and get comfortable with Laravel's authentication features before allowing Laravel Fortify to implement these features for you.
Laravel Fortify essentially takes the routes and controllers of our application starter kits and offers them as a package that does not include a user interface. This allows you to still quickly scaffold the backend implementation of your application's authentication layer without being tied to any particular frontend opinions.
When Should I Use Fortify?
You may be wondering when it is appropriate to use Laravel Fortify. First, if you are using one of Laravel's [application starter kits](/docs/12.x/starter- kits), you do not need to install Laravel Fortify since all of Laravel's application starter kits already provide a full authentication implementation.
If you are not using an application starter kit and your application needs authentication features, you have two options: manually implement your application's authentication features or use Laravel Fortify to provide the backend implementation of these features.
If you choose to install Fortify, your user interface will make requests to Fortify's authentication routes that are detailed in this documentation in order to authenticate and register users.
If you choose to manually interact with Laravel's authentication services instead of using Fortify, you may do so by following the documentation available in the authentication, password reset, and email verification documentation.
Laravel Fortify and Laravel Sanctum
Some developers become confused regarding the difference between Laravel Sanctum and Laravel Fortify. Because the two packages solve two different but related problems, Laravel Fortify and Laravel Sanctum are not mutually exclusive or competing packages.
Laravel Sanctum is only concerned with managing API tokens and authenticating existing users using session cookies or tokens. Sanctum does not provide any routes that handle user registration, password reset, etc.
If you are attempting to manually build the authentication layer for an application that offers an API or serves as the backend for a single-page application, it is entirely possible that you will utilize both Laravel Fortify (for user registration, password reset, etc.) and Laravel Sanctum (API token management, session authentication).
Installation
To get started, install Fortify using the Composer package manager:
1composer require laravel/fortify
composer require laravel/fortify
Next, publish Fortify's resources using the fortify:install Artisan command:
1php artisan fortify:install
php artisan fortify:install
This command will publish Fortify's actions to your app/Actions directory,
which will be created if it does not exist. In addition, the
FortifyServiceProvider, configuration file, and all necessary database
migrations will be published.
Next, you should migrate your database:
1php artisan migrate
php artisan migrate
Fortify Features
The fortify configuration file contains a features configuration array.
This array defines which backend routes / features Fortify will expose by
default. We recommend that you only enable the following features, which are
the basic authentication features provided by most Laravel applications:
1'features' => [
2 Features::registration(),
3 Features::resetPasswords(),
4 Features::emailVerification(),
5],
'features' => [
Features::registration(),
Features::resetPasswords(),
Features::emailVerification(),
],
Disabling Views
By default, Fortify defines routes that are intended to return views, such as
a login screen or registration screen. However, if you are building a
JavaScript driven single-page application, you may not need these routes. For
that reason, you may disable these routes entirely by setting the views
configuration value within your application's config/fortify.php
configuration file to false:
1'views' => false,
'views' => false,
Disabling Views and Password Reset
If you choose to disable Fortify's views and you will be implementing password
reset features for your application, you should still define a route named
password.reset that is responsible for displaying your application's "reset
password" view. This is necessary because Laravel's
Illuminate\Auth\Notifications\ResetPassword notification will generate the
password reset URL via the password.reset named route.
Authentication
To get started, we need to instruct Fortify how to return our "login" view. Remember, Fortify is a headless authentication library. If you would like a frontend implementation of Laravel's authentication features that are already completed for you, you should use an application starter kit.
All of the authentication view's rendering logic may be customized using the
appropriate methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class.
Typically, you should call this method from the boot method of your
application's App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class. Fortify will take
care of defining the /login route that returns this view:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2
3/**
4 * Bootstrap any application services.
5 */
6public function boot(): void
7{
8 Fortify::loginView(function () {
9 return view('auth.login');
10 });
11
12 // ...
13}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::loginView(function () {
return view('auth.login');
});
// ...
}
Your login template should include a form that makes a POST request to
/login. The /login endpoint expects a string email / username and a
password. The name of the email / username field should match the username
value within the config/fortify.php configuration file. In addition, a
boolean remember field may be provided to indicate that the user would like
to use the "remember me" functionality provided by Laravel.
If the login attempt is successful, Fortify will redirect you to the URI
configured via the home configuration option within your application's
fortify configuration file. If the login request was an XHR request, a 200
HTTP response will be returned.
If the request was not successful, the user will be redirected back to the
login screen and the validation errors will be available to you via the shared
$errors [Blade template variable](/docs/12.x/validation#quick-displaying-
the-validation-errors). Or, in the case of an XHR request, the validation
errors will be returned with the 422 HTTP response.
Customizing User Authentication
Fortify will automatically retrieve and authenticate the user based on the
provided credentials and the authentication guard that is configured for your
application. However, you may sometimes wish to have full customization over
how login credentials are authenticated and users are retrieved. Thankfully,
Fortify allows you to easily accomplish this using the
Fortify::authenticateUsing method.
This method accepts a closure which receives the incoming HTTP request. The
closure is responsible for validating the login credentials attached to the
request and returning the associated user instance. If the credentials are
invalid or no user can be found, null or false should be returned by the
closure. Typically, this method should be called from the boot method of
your FortifyServiceProvider:
1use App\Models\User;
2use Illuminate\Http\Request;
3use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Hash;
4use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
5
6/**
7 * Bootstrap any application services.
8 */
9public function boot(): void
10{
11 Fortify::authenticateUsing(function (Request $request) {
12 $user = User::where('email', $request->email)->first();
13
14 if ($user &&
15 Hash::check($request->password, $user->password)) {
16 return $user;
17 }
18 });
19
20 // ...
21}
use App\Models\User;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Hash;
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::authenticateUsing(function (Request $request) {
$user = User::where('email', $request->email)->first();
if ($user &&
Hash::check($request->password, $user->password)) {
return $user;
}
});
// ...
}
Authentication Guard
You may customize the authentication guard used by Fortify within your
application's fortify configuration file. However, you should ensure that
the configured guard is an implementation of
Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\StatefulGuard. If you are attempting to use
Laravel Fortify to authenticate an SPA, you should use Laravel's default web
guard in combination with Laravel Sanctum.
Customizing the Authentication Pipeline
Laravel Fortify authenticates login requests through a pipeline of invokable
classes. If you would like, you may define a custom pipeline of classes that
login requests should be piped through. Each class should have an __invoke
method which receives the incoming Illuminate\Http\Request instance and,
like middleware, a $next variable that is invoked
in order to pass the request to the next class in the pipeline.
To define your custom pipeline, you may use the Fortify::authenticateThrough
method. This method accepts a closure which should return the array of classes
to pipe the login request through. Typically, this method should be called
from the boot method of your App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class.
The example below contains the default pipeline definition that you may use as a starting point when making your own modifications:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\AttemptToAuthenticate;
2use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\CanonicalizeUsername;
3use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\EnsureLoginIsNotThrottled;
4use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\PrepareAuthenticatedSession;
5use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\RedirectIfTwoFactorAuthenticatable;
6use Laravel\Fortify\Features;
7use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
8use Illuminate\Http\Request;
9
10Fortify::authenticateThrough(function (Request $request) {
11 return array_filter([
12 config('fortify.limiters.login') ? null : EnsureLoginIsNotThrottled::class,
13 config('fortify.lowercase_usernames') ? CanonicalizeUsername::class : null,
14 Features::enabled(Features::twoFactorAuthentication()) ? RedirectIfTwoFactorAuthenticatable::class : null,
15 AttemptToAuthenticate::class,
16 PrepareAuthenticatedSession::class,
17 ]);
18});
use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\AttemptToAuthenticate;
use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\CanonicalizeUsername;
use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\EnsureLoginIsNotThrottled;
use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\PrepareAuthenticatedSession;
use Laravel\Fortify\Actions\RedirectIfTwoFactorAuthenticatable;
use Laravel\Fortify\Features;
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
Fortify::authenticateThrough(function (Request $request) {
return array_filter([
config('fortify.limiters.login') ? null : EnsureLoginIsNotThrottled::class,
config('fortify.lowercase_usernames') ? CanonicalizeUsername::class : null,
Features::enabled(Features::twoFactorAuthentication()) ? RedirectIfTwoFactorAuthenticatable::class : null,
AttemptToAuthenticate::class,
PrepareAuthenticatedSession::class,
]);
});
Authentication Throttling
By default, Fortify will throttle authentication attempts using the
EnsureLoginIsNotThrottled middleware. This middleware throttles attempts
that are unique to a username and IP address combination.
Some applications may require a different approach to throttling
authentication attempts, such as throttling by IP address alone. Therefore,
Fortify allows you to specify your own [rate limiter](/docs/12.x/routing#rate-
limiting) via the fortify.limiters.login configuration option. Of course,
this configuration option is located in your application's
config/fortify.php configuration file.
Utilizing a mixture of throttling, two factor authentication, and an external web application firewall (WAF) will provide the most robust defense for your legitimate application users.
Customizing Redirects
If the login attempt is successful, Fortify will redirect you to the URI
configured via the home configuration option within your application's
fortify configuration file. If the login request was an XHR request, a 200
HTTP response will be returned. After a user logs out of the application, the
user will be redirected to the / URI.
If you need advanced customization of this behavior, you may bind
implementations of the LoginResponse and LogoutResponse contracts into the
Laravel service container. Typically, this should be
done within the register method of your application's
App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Contracts\LogoutResponse;
2
3/**
4 * Register any application services.
5 */
6public function register(): void
7{
8 $this->app->instance(LogoutResponse::class, new class implements LogoutResponse {
9 public function toResponse($request)
10 {
11 return redirect('/');
12 }
13 });
14}
use Laravel\Fortify\Contracts\LogoutResponse;
/**
* Register any application services.
*/
public function register(): void
{
$this->app->instance(LogoutResponse::class, new class implements LogoutResponse {
public function toResponse($request)
{
return redirect('/');
}
});
}
Two Factor Authentication
When Fortify's two factor authentication feature is enabled, the user is required to input a six digit numeric token during the authentication process. This token is generated using a time-based one-time password (TOTP) that can be retrieved from any TOTP compatible mobile authentication application such as Google Authenticator.
Before getting started, you should first ensure that your application's
App\Models\User model uses the Laravel\Fortify\TwoFactorAuthenticatable
trait:
1<?php
2
3namespace App\Models;
4
5use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
6use Illuminate\Notifications\Notifiable;
7use Laravel\Fortify\TwoFactorAuthenticatable;
8
9class User extends Authenticatable
10{
11 use Notifiable, TwoFactorAuthenticatable;
12}
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
use Illuminate\Notifications\Notifiable;
use Laravel\Fortify\TwoFactorAuthenticatable;
class User extends Authenticatable
{
use Notifiable, TwoFactorAuthenticatable;
}
Next, you should build a screen within your application where users can manage their two factor authentication settings. This screen should allow the user to enable and disable two factor authentication, as well as regenerate their two factor authentication recovery codes.
By default, the
featuresarray of thefortifyconfiguration file instructs Fortify's two factor authentication settings to require password confirmation before modification. Therefore, your application should implement Fortify's password confirmation feature before continuing.
Enabling Two Factor Authentication
To begin enabling two factor authentication, your application should make a
POST request to the /user/two-factor-authentication endpoint defined by
Fortify. If the request is successful, the user will be redirected back to the
previous URL and the status session variable will be set to two-factor- authentication-enabled. You may detect this status session variable within
your templates to display the appropriate success message. If the request was
an XHR request, 200 HTTP response will be returned.
After choosing to enable two factor authentication, the user must still "confirm" their two factor authentication configuration by providing a valid two factor authentication code. So, your "success" message should instruct the user that two factor authentication confirmation is still required:
1@if (session('status') == 'two-factor-authentication-enabled')
2 <div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm">
3 Please finish configuring two factor authentication below.
4 </div>
5@endif
@if (session('status') == 'two-factor-authentication-enabled')
<div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm">
Please finish configuring two factor authentication below.
</div>
@endif
Next, you should display the two factor authentication QR code for the user to
scan into their authenticator application. If you are using Blade to render
your application's frontend, you may retrieve the QR code SVG using the
twoFactorQrCodeSvg method available on the user instance:
1$request->user()->twoFactorQrCodeSvg();
$request->user()->twoFactorQrCodeSvg();
If you are building a JavaScript powered frontend, you may make an XHR GET
request to the /user/two-factor-qr-code endpoint to retrieve the user's two
factor authentication QR code. This endpoint will return a JSON object
containing an svg key.
Confirming Two Factor Authentication
In addition to displaying the user's two factor authentication QR code, you
should provide a text input where the user can supply a valid authentication
code to "confirm" their two factor authentication configuration. This code
should be provided to the Laravel application via a POST request to the
/user/confirmed-two-factor-authentication endpoint defined by Fortify.
If the request is successful, the user will be redirected back to the previous
URL and the status session variable will be set to two-factor- authentication-confirmed:
1@if (session('status') == 'two-factor-authentication-confirmed')
2 <div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm">
3 Two factor authentication confirmed and enabled successfully.
4 </div>
5@endif
@if (session('status') == 'two-factor-authentication-confirmed')
<div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm">
Two factor authentication confirmed and enabled successfully.
</div>
@endif
If the request to the two factor authentication confirmation endpoint was made
via an XHR request, a 200 HTTP response will be returned.
Displaying the Recovery Codes
You should also display the user's two factor recovery codes. These recovery codes allow the user to authenticate if they lose access to their mobile device. If you are using Blade to render your application's frontend, you may access the recovery codes via the authenticated user instance:
1(array) $request->user()->recoveryCodes()
(array) $request->user()->recoveryCodes()
If you are building a JavaScript powered frontend, you may make an XHR GET
request to the /user/two-factor-recovery-codes endpoint. This endpoint will
return a JSON array containing the user's recovery codes.
To regenerate the user's recovery codes, your application should make a POST
request to the /user/two-factor-recovery-codes endpoint.
Authenticating With Two Factor Authentication
During the authentication process, Fortify will automatically redirect the
user to your application's two factor authentication challenge screen.
However, if your application is making an XHR login request, the JSON response
returned after a successful authentication attempt will contain a JSON object
that has a two_factor boolean property. You should inspect this value to
know whether you should redirect to your application's two factor
authentication challenge screen.
To begin implementing two factor authentication functionality, we need to
instruct Fortify how to return our two factor authentication challenge view.
All of Fortify's authentication view rendering logic may be customized using
the appropriate methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class.
Typically, you should call this method from the boot method of your
application's App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2
3/**
4 * Bootstrap any application services.
5 */
6public function boot(): void
7{
8 Fortify::twoFactorChallengeView(function () {
9 return view('auth.two-factor-challenge');
10 });
11
12 // ...
13}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::twoFactorChallengeView(function () {
return view('auth.two-factor-challenge');
});
// ...
}
Fortify will take care of defining the /two-factor-challenge route that
returns this view. Your two-factor-challenge template should include a form
that makes a POST request to the /two-factor-challenge endpoint. The /two- factor-challenge action expects a code field that contains a valid TOTP
token or a recovery_code field that contains one of the user's recovery
codes.
If the login attempt is successful, Fortify will redirect the user to the URI
configured via the home configuration option within your application's
fortify configuration file. If the login request was an XHR request, a 204
HTTP response will be returned.
If the request was not successful, the user will be redirected back to the two
factor challenge screen and the validation errors will be available to you via
the shared $errors [Blade template variable](/docs/12.x/validation#quick-
displaying-the-validation-errors). Or, in the case of an XHR request, the
validation errors will be returned with a 422 HTTP response.
Disabling Two Factor Authentication
To disable two factor authentication, your application should make a DELETE
request to the /user/two-factor-authentication endpoint. Remember, Fortify's
two factor authentication endpoints require password confirmation prior to
being called.
Registration
To begin implementing our application's registration functionality, we need to instruct Fortify how to return our "register" view. Remember, Fortify is a headless authentication library. If you would like a frontend implementation of Laravel's authentication features that are already completed for you, you should use an application starter kit.
All of Fortify's view rendering logic may be customized using the appropriate
methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class. Typically, you
should call this method from the boot method of your
App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2
3/**
4 * Bootstrap any application services.
5 */
6public function boot(): void
7{
8 Fortify::registerView(function () {
9 return view('auth.register');
10 });
11
12 // ...
13}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::registerView(function () {
return view('auth.register');
});
// ...
}
Fortify will take care of defining the /register route that returns this
view. Your register template should include a form that makes a POST request
to the /register endpoint defined by Fortify.
The /register endpoint expects a string name, string email address /
username, password, and password_confirmation fields. The name of the
email / username field should match the username configuration value defined
within your application's fortify configuration file.
If the registration attempt is successful, Fortify will redirect the user to
the URI configured via the home configuration option within your
application's fortify configuration file. If the request was an XHR request,
a 201 HTTP response will be returned.
If the request was not successful, the user will be redirected back to the
registration screen and the validation errors will be available to you via the
shared $errors [Blade template variable](/docs/12.x/validation#quick-
displaying-the-validation-errors). Or, in the case of an XHR request, the
validation errors will be returned with a 422 HTTP response.
Customizing Registration
The user validation and creation process may be customized by modifying the
App\Actions\Fortify\CreateNewUser action that was generated when you
installed Laravel Fortify.
Password Reset
Requesting a Password Reset Link
To begin implementing our application's password reset functionality, we need to instruct Fortify how to return our "forgot password" view. Remember, Fortify is a headless authentication library. If you would like a frontend implementation of Laravel's authentication features that are already completed for you, you should use an application starter kit.
All of Fortify's view rendering logic may be customized using the appropriate
methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class. Typically, you
should call this method from the boot method of your application's
App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2
3/**
4 * Bootstrap any application services.
5 */
6public function boot(): void
7{
8 Fortify::requestPasswordResetLinkView(function () {
9 return view('auth.forgot-password');
10 });
11
12 // ...
13}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::requestPasswordResetLinkView(function () {
return view('auth.forgot-password');
});
// ...
}
Fortify will take care of defining the /forgot-password endpoint that
returns this view. Your forgot-password template should include a form that
makes a POST request to the /forgot-password endpoint.
The /forgot-password endpoint expects a string email field. The name of
this field / database column should match the email configuration value
within your application's fortify configuration file.
Handling the Password Reset Link Request Response
If the password reset link request was successful, Fortify will redirect the
user back to the /forgot-password endpoint and send an email to the user
with a secure link they can use to reset their password. If the request was an
XHR request, a 200 HTTP response will be returned.
After being redirected back to the /forgot-password endpoint after a
successful request, the status session variable may be used to display the
status of the password reset link request attempt.
The value of the $status session variable will match one of the translation
strings defined within your application's passwords language
file. If you would like to customize this value and
have not published Laravel's language files, you may do so via the
lang:publish Artisan command:
1@if (session('status'))
2 <div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm text-green-600">
3 {{ session('status') }}
4 </div>
5@endif
@if (session('status'))
<div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm text-green-600">
{{ session('status') }}
</div>
@endif
If the request was not successful, the user will be redirected back to the
request password reset link screen and the validation errors will be available
to you via the shared $errors Blade template
variable. Or,
in the case of an XHR request, the validation errors will be returned with a
422 HTTP response.
Resetting the Password
To finish implementing our application's password reset functionality, we need to instruct Fortify how to return our "reset password" view.
All of Fortify's view rendering logic may be customized using the appropriate
methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class. Typically, you
should call this method from the boot method of your application's
App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2use Illuminate\Http\Request;
3
4/**
5 * Bootstrap any application services.
6 */
7public function boot(): void
8{
9 Fortify::resetPasswordView(function (Request $request) {
10 return view('auth.reset-password', ['request' => $request]);
11 });
12
13 // ...
14}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::resetPasswordView(function (Request $request) {
return view('auth.reset-password', ['request' => $request]);
});
// ...
}
Fortify will take care of defining the route to display this view. Your
reset-password template should include a form that makes a POST request to
/reset-password.
The /reset-password endpoint expects a string email field, a password
field, a password_confirmation field, and a hidden field named token that
contains the value of request()->route('token'). The name of the "email"
field / database column should match the email configuration value defined
within your application's fortify configuration file.
Handling the Password Reset Response
If the password reset request was successful, Fortify will redirect back to
the /login route so that the user can log in with their new password. In
addition, a status session variable will be set so that you may display the
successful status of the reset on your login screen:
1@if (session('status'))
2 <div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm text-green-600">
3 {{ session('status') }}
4 </div>
5@endif
@if (session('status'))
<div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm text-green-600">
{{ session('status') }}
</div>
@endif
If the request was an XHR request, a 200 HTTP response will be returned.
If the request was not successful, the user will be redirected back to the
reset password screen and the validation errors will be available to you via
the shared $errors [Blade template variable](/docs/12.x/validation#quick-
displaying-the-validation-errors). Or, in the case of an XHR request, the
validation errors will be returned with a 422 HTTP response.
Customizing Password Resets
The password reset process may be customized by modifying the
App\Actions\ResetUserPassword action that was generated when you installed
Laravel Fortify.
Email Verification
After registration, you may wish for users to verify their email address
before they continue accessing your application. To get started, ensure the
emailVerification feature is enabled in your fortify configuration file's
features array. Next, you should ensure that your App\Models\User class
implements the Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\MustVerifyEmail interface.
Once these two setup steps have been completed, newly registered users will receive an email prompting them to verify their email address ownership. However, we need to inform Fortify how to display the email verification screen which informs the user that they need to go click the verification link in the email.
All of Fortify's view's rendering logic may be customized using the
appropriate methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class.
Typically, you should call this method from the boot method of your
application's App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2
3/**
4 * Bootstrap any application services.
5 */
6public function boot(): void
7{
8 Fortify::verifyEmailView(function () {
9 return view('auth.verify-email');
10 });
11
12 // ...
13}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::verifyEmailView(function () {
return view('auth.verify-email');
});
// ...
}
Fortify will take care of defining the route that displays this view when a
user is redirected to the /email/verify endpoint by Laravel's built-in
verified middleware.
Your verify-email template should include an informational message
instructing the user to click the email verification link that was sent to
their email address.
Resending Email Verification Links
If you wish, you may add a button to your application's verify-email
template that triggers a POST request to the /email/verification- notification endpoint. When this endpoint receives a request, a new
verification email link will be emailed to the user, allowing the user to get
a new verification link if the previous one was accidentally deleted or lost.
If the request to resend the verification link email was successful, Fortify
will redirect the user back to the /email/verify endpoint with a status
session variable, allowing you to display an informational message to the user
informing them the operation was successful. If the request was an XHR
request, a 202 HTTP response will be returned:
1@if (session('status') == 'verification-link-sent')
2 <div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm text-green-600">
3 A new email verification link has been emailed to you!
4 </div>
5@endif
@if (session('status') == 'verification-link-sent')
<div class="mb-4 font-medium text-sm text-green-600">
A new email verification link has been emailed to you!
</div>
@endif
Protecting Routes
To specify that a route or group of routes requires that the user has verified
their email address, you should attach Laravel's built-in verified
middleware to the route. The verified middleware alias is automatically
registered by Laravel and serves as an alias for the
Illuminate\Auth\Middleware\EnsureEmailIsVerified middleware:
1Route::get('/dashboard', function () {
2 // ...
3})->middleware(['verified']);
Route::get('/dashboard', function () {
// ...
})->middleware(['verified']);
Password Confirmation
While building your application, you may occasionally have actions that should
require the user to confirm their password before the action is performed.
Typically, these routes are protected by Laravel's built-in password.confirm
middleware.
To begin implementing password confirmation functionality, we need to instruct Fortify how to return our application's "password confirmation" view. Remember, Fortify is a headless authentication library. If you would like a frontend implementation of Laravel's authentication features that are already completed for you, you should use an application starter kit.
All of Fortify's view rendering logic may be customized using the appropriate
methods available via the Laravel\Fortify\Fortify class. Typically, you
should call this method from the boot method of your application's
App\Providers\FortifyServiceProvider class:
1use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
2
3/**
4 * Bootstrap any application services.
5 */
6public function boot(): void
7{
8 Fortify::confirmPasswordView(function () {
9 return view('auth.confirm-password');
10 });
11
12 // ...
13}
use Laravel\Fortify\Fortify;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Fortify::confirmPasswordView(function () {
return view('auth.confirm-password');
});
// ...
}
Fortify will take care of defining the /user/confirm-password endpoint that
returns this view. Your confirm-password template should include a form that
makes a POST request to the /user/confirm-password endpoint. The
/user/confirm-password endpoint expects a password field that contains the
user's current password.
If the password matches the user's current password, Fortify will redirect the user to the route they were attempting to access. If the request was an XHR request, a 201 HTTP response will be returned.
If the request was not successful, the user will be redirected back to the
confirm password screen and the validation errors will be available to you via
the shared $errors Blade template variable. Or, in the case of an XHR
request, the validation errors will be returned with a 422 HTTP response.