authentication
A rails gem/plugin that handles authentication
Installation
gem install shuber-authentication --source http://gems.github.com
OR
script/plugin install git://github.com/shuber/authentication.git
Usage
Model
Simply call uses_authentication
in your model like so:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
# Accepts an optional hash of options
# :login_field - The field to use for logins (e.g. username or email) (defaults to :email)
# :password_field - (defaults to :password)
# :hashed_password_field - (defaults to :hashed_password)
# :salt_field - (defaults to :salt)
uses_authentication :login_field => :username
end
A few helpful methods will now be available for your model:
# Class method that authenticates a user based on a login and password - returns a user instance or false
User.authenticate(login, password)
# Checks if the password passed to it matches the current user instance's password
authenticated?(password)
# Checks if the current user instance's password has just been changed
password_changed?
# Resets the password - will generate a new random password if one is not specified
reset_password(new_password = nil)
# Resets the password and saves - will generate a new random password if one is not specified
reset_password!(new_password = nil)
Controller
Simply add before_filter :authentication_required
for any actions that require authentication. The :model
will then be searched
for a record with the id found in the session[options[:session_field]
. The result of that query is stored in a controller instance
method called current_user
. If a record could not be found, the controller's unauthenticated
instance method is called which simply
redirects with a flash message. You can overwrite this method to change this behavior.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
before_filter :authentication_required, :only => [:index]
def index
render :text => current_user.id.to_s
end
end
A few helpful instance methods are available for your controller:
# Returns the current user or nil if a user is not logged in
current_user
# Checks if the current user is authenticated
logged_in?
# Login a user
login(user)
# Logout the current user
logout
current_user
and logged_in?
are also helper methods so you can use them in your views.
Controller options
Your controller has a class method called authentication_options
which contains a hash with default options. You can change
these like so:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
self.authentication_options.merge!{ :message => 'You are not authenticated', :redirect_to => :new_session_path }
end
The default controller authentication_options are:
# The type of flash message to use when authentication fails. Defaults to :error.
:flash_type
# The flash message to use when authentication fails. If set to false, no flash is set. Defaults to 'Login to continue'.
:message
# The model to authenticate with. Defaults to 'User'
:model
# The session field name to store the current_user's id. Defaults to "#{options[:model].to_s.underscore}_id".to_sym (e.g. :user_id)
:session_field
# The path to redirect to if authentication fails. Accepts a string or a symbol representing an instance method to call.
# Defaults to '/'
:redirect_to
Contact
Problems, comments, and suggestions all welcome: shuber@huberry.com