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security - Symfony2 extending DefaultAuthenticationSuccessHandler

I want to alter default authentication process just after authentication success. I made a service that is called after authentication success and before redirect.

namespace PkrBlogUserBundleHandler;
use DoctrineORMEntityManager;
use PkrBlogUserBundleServiceEncoderWpTransitionalEncoder;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationRequest;
use SymfonyComponentHttpKernelLogLoggerInterface;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityCoreAuthenticationTokenTokenInterface;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityHttpAuthenticationAuthenticationSuccessHandlerInterface;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityHttpAuthenticationResponse;

class AuthenticationSuccessHandler implements AuthenticationSuccessHandlerInterface
{

    protected $entityManager = null;
    protected $logger = null;
    protected $encoder = null;

    public function __construct(EntityManager $entityManager, LoggerInterface $logger, WpTransitionalEncoder $encoder)
    {
        $this->entityManager = $entityManager;
        $this->logger = $logger;
        $this->encoder = $encoder;
    }

    /**
    * This is called when an interactive authentication attempt succeeds. This
    * is called by authentication listeners inheriting from
    * AbstractAuthenticationListener.
    *
    * @param Request $request
    * @param TokenInterface $token
    *
    * @return Response never null
    */
    public function onAuthenticationSuccess(Request $request, TokenInterface $token)
    {
        $user = $token->getUser();
        $newPass = $request->get('_password');
        $user->setUserPassword($this->encoder->encodePassword($newPass, null));
        $this->entityManager->persist($user);
        $this->entityManager->flush();
        //do redirect
    }
}

in services.yml

services:
    pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder:
        class: "%pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder.class%"
        arguments:
            cost: "%pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder.cost%"
            logger: @logger
    pkr_blog_user.login_success_handler:
        class: PkrBlogUserBundleHandlerAuthenticationSuccessHandler
        arguments:
            entity_manager: @doctrine.orm.entity_manager
            logger: @logger
            encoder: @pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder

and in security.yml

firewalls:
    dev:
        pattern:  ^/(_(profiler|wdt)|css|images|js)/
        security: false

    secured_area:
        pattern:   ^/
        anonymous: ~
        form_login:
            login_path:  pkr_blog_admin_login
            check_path:  pkr_blog_admin_login_check
            success_handler: pkr_blog_user.login_success_handler
        logout:
            path: pkr_blog_admin_logout
            target: /

What I'm trying achieve is to just alter default behavior a little so I think why not to extend DefaultAuthenticationSuccessHandler, add something to onSuccessHandler() and call parent::onSucessHandler(). I tried and the problem is that I have no clue how to add security parameters (set in security.yml) to my extended class constructor. DefaultAuthenticationSuccessHandler uses HttpUtils and $options array:

/**
 * Constructor.
 *
 * @param HttpUtils $httpUtils
 * @param array     $options   Options for processing a successful authentication attempt.
 */
public function __construct(HttpUtils $httpUtils, array $options)
{
    $this->httpUtils   = $httpUtils;

    $this->options = array_merge(array(
        'always_use_default_target_path' => false,
        'default_target_path'            => '/',
        'login_path'                     => '/login',
        'target_path_parameter'          => '_target_path',
        'use_referer'                    => false,
    ), $options);
}

So my extended class constructor should look like:

    // class extends DefaultAuthenticationSuccessHandler
    protected $entityManager = null;
    protected $logger = null;
    protected $encoder = null;

    public function __construct(HttpUtils $httpUtils, array $options, EntityManager $entityManager, LoggerInterface $logger, WpTransitionalEncoder $encoder)
    {
        $this->entityManager = $entityManager;
        $this->logger = $logger;
        $this->encoder = $encoder;
    }

It's quite easy to add HttpUtils service to my services.yml, but what with options argument?

services:
    pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder:
        class: "%pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder.class%"
        arguments:
            cost: "%pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder.cost%"
            logger: @logger
    pkr_blog_user.login_success_handler:
        class: PkrBlogUserBundleHandlerAuthenticationSuccessHandler
        arguments:
            httputils: @security.http_utils
            options: [] #WHAT TO ADD HERE ?
            entity_manager: @doctrine.orm.entity_manager
            logger: @logger
            encoder: @pkr_blog_user.wp_transitional_encoder
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1 Answer

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If you only have one success / failure handler defined for your application, there's a slightly easier way to do this. Rather than define a new service for the success_handler and failure_handler, you can override security.authentication.success_handler and security.authentication.failure_handler instead.

Example:

services.yml

services:
    security.authentication.success_handler:
        class:  StatSidekickUserBundleHandlerAuthenticationSuccessHandler
        arguments:  ["@security.http_utils", {}]
        tags:
            - { name: 'monolog.logger', channel: 'security' }

    security.authentication.failure_handler:
        class:  StatSidekickUserBundleHandlerAuthenticationFailureHandler
        arguments:  ["@http_kernel", "@security.http_utils", {}, "@logger"]
        tags:
            - { name: 'monolog.logger', channel: 'security' }

AuthenticationSuccessHandler.php

<?php
namespace StatSidekickUserBundleHandler;

use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationJsonResponse;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationRequest;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityCoreAuthenticationTokenTokenInterface;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityHttpAuthenticationDefaultAuthenticationSuccessHandler;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityHttpHttpUtils;

class AuthenticationSuccessHandler extends DefaultAuthenticationSuccessHandler {

    public function __construct( HttpUtils $httpUtils, array $options ) {
        parent::__construct( $httpUtils, $options );
    }

    public function onAuthenticationSuccess( Request $request, TokenInterface $token ) {
        if( $request->isXmlHttpRequest() ) {
            $response = new JsonResponse( array( 'success' => true, 'username' => $token->getUsername() ) );
        } else {
            $response = parent::onAuthenticationSuccess( $request, $token );
        }
        return $response;
    }
}

AuthenticationFailureHandler.php

<?php
namespace StatSidekickUserBundleHandler;

use PsrLogLoggerInterface;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationJsonResponse;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationResponse;
use SymfonyComponentHttpFoundationRequest;
use SymfonyComponentHttpKernelHttpKernelInterface;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityCoreExceptionAuthenticationException;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityHttpAuthenticationDefaultAuthenticationFailureHandler;
use SymfonyComponentSecurityHttpHttpUtils;

class AuthenticationFailureHandler extends DefaultAuthenticationFailureHandler {

    public function __construct( HttpKernelInterface $httpKernel, HttpUtils $httpUtils, array $options, LoggerInterface $logger = null ) {
        parent::__construct( $httpKernel, $httpUtils, $options, $logger );
    }

    public function onAuthenticationFailure( Request $request, AuthenticationException $exception ) {
        if( $request->isXmlHttpRequest() ) {
            $response = new JsonResponse( array( 'success' => false, 'message' => $exception->getMessage() ) );
        } else {
            $response = parent::onAuthenticationFailure( $request, $exception );
        }
        return $response;
    }
}

In my case, I was just trying to set something up so that I could get a JSON response when I try to authenticate using AJAX, but the principle is the same.

The benefit of this approach is that without any additional work, all of the options that are normally passed into the default handlers should get injected correctly. This happens because of how SecurityBundleDependencyInjectionSecurityFactory is setup in the framework:

protected function createAuthenticationSuccessHandler($container, $id, $config)
{
    ...
    $successHandler = $container->setDefinition($successHandlerId, new DefinitionDecorator('security.authentication.success_handler'));    
    $successHandler->replaceArgument(1, array_intersect_key($config, $this->defaultSuccessHandlerOptions));
    ...
}

protected function createAuthenticationFailureHandler($container, $id, $config)
{
    ...
    $failureHandler = $container->setDefinition($id, new DefinitionDecorator('security.authentication.failure_handler'));
    $failureHandler->replaceArgument(2, array_intersect_key($config, $this->defaultFailureHandlerOptions));
    ...
}

It specifically looks for security.authentication.success_handler and security.authentication.failure_handler in order to merge options from your config into the arrays passed in. I'm sure there's a way to setup something similar for your own service, but I haven't looked into it yet.

Hope that helps.


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