You can add new roles in the FOSUserBundle
on the go. There is no need for you to initially add it in the security.yml
file.
To do this you can do something like this:
$user = new User();
$user->addRole('ROLE_NEWUSER'); //Role Name should begin with 'ROLE_'
or in your controller you can get current or any user
$this->getUser();
$user->addRole('ROLE_NEWUSER'); //Role Name should begin with 'ROLE_'
This answers your first and second part.
For the third part, Roles can be used as permissions. I have implemented a structure previously where I was restricting access to pages based on the user role also restricting what data they can change based on their role.
UPDATE I implemented an Event Listener for this which would listen to all the kernel requests which is called onKernelRequest
. I have partially done the access management on the SQL side since I have my roles stored in SQL side as well but one can do the same on the Server side. My Event Listener looked like this: (This is a trimmed down version of what I have)
class TokenListener
{
protected $em;
protected $token_storage;
protected $templating;
protected $router;
protected $resolver;
public function __construct($em,TokenStorageInterface $token_storage, TwigEngine $templating, Router $router, ControllerResolver $resolver)
{
$this->em = $em;
$this->token_storage = $token_storage;
$this->templating = $templating;
$this->router = $router;
$this->resolver = $resolver;
}
public function onKernelRequest(GetResponseEvent $event)
{
$request = $event->getRequest();
$route = $request->attributes->get('_route');
$routeArr = array('fos_js_routing_js', 'fos_user_security_login', '_wdt'); //These are excluded routes. These are always allowed. Required for login page
if(!is_int(array_search($route, $routeArr)) && false)
{
$userRoles = $this->token_storage->getToken()->getUser()->getRoles();
if(!in_array('ROLE_NEWUSER', $userRoles))
{
$event->setResponse(new RedirectResponse($this->router->generate('user_management_unauthorized_user', array())));
}
}
}
}
My services.yml looks like this
services:
app.tokens.action_listener:
class: EventListenerBundleEventListenerTokenListener
arguments:
entityManager: "@doctrine.orm.entity_manager"
token_storage: "@security.token_storage"
templating: "@templating"
router: "@router"
resolver: "@controller_resolver"
tags:
- { name: kernel.event_listener, event: kernel.request, method: onKernelRequest }
UPDATE To answer your update part of the question, what you can do is have another roles
entity and you could populate the roles you want in advance and then have a one to many relationship with the original User
table. You can then have something like prePersist or preUpdate Doctrine Lifecycle Events
to check when adding a new if the role already exists in your roles entity. That should precisely solve your problem. All this will involve a little tweaking though. There is no straight way to do this.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…