Authorization
Nova leverages Laravel policies to authorize incoming requests.
When Nova is accessed only by you or your development team, you may not need additional authorization before Nova handles incoming requests. However, if you provide access to Nova to your clients or a large team of developers, you may wish to authorize certain requests. For example, perhaps only administrators may delete records. Thankfully, Nova takes a simple approach to authorization that leverages many of the Laravel features you are already familiar with.
Policies
To limit which users may view, create, update, or delete resources, Nova leverages Laravel’s authorization policies. Policies are simple PHP classes that organize authorization logic for a particular model or resource. For example, if your application is a blog, you may have a Post
model and a corresponding PostPolicy
within your application.
When manipulating a resource within Nova, Nova will automatically attempt to find a corresponding policy for the model. If Nova detects a policy has been registered for the model, it will automatically check that policy’s relevant authorization methods before performing their respective actions, such as:
viewAny
view
create
update
replicate
delete
restore
forceDelete
No additional configuration is required! So, for example, to determine which users are allowed to update a Post
model, you simply need to define an update
method on the model’s corresponding policy class:
Undefined Policy Methods
If a policy exists but is missing a method for a particular action, Nova will use the following default permission for each actions:
Policy Action | Default Permission |
---|---|
viewAny | Allowed |
view | Forbidden |
create | Forbidden |
update | Forbidden |
replicate | Fallback to create and update |
delete | Forbidden |
forceDelete | Forbidden |
restore | Forbidden |
add{Model} | Allowed |
attach{Model} | Allowed |
attachAny{Model} | Allowed |
detach{Model} | Allowed |
runAction | Fallback to update |
runDestructiveAction | Fallback to delete |
So, if you have defined a policy, don’t forget to define all of its relevant authorization methods so that the authorization rules for a given resource are explicit.
Hiding Entire Resources
If you would like to hide an entire Nova resource from a subset of your dashboard’s users, you may define a viewAny
method on the model’s policy class. If no viewAny
method is defined for a given policy, Nova will assume that the user can view the resource:
When Nova & Application Authorization Logic Differs
If you need to authorize actions differently when a request is initiated from within Nova versus your primary application, you may utilize Nova’s whenServing
method within your policy. This method allows you to only execute the given callback if the request is a Nova request. An additional callback may be provided that will be executed for non-Nova requests:
Relationships
We have already learned how to authorize the typical view, create, update, and delete actions, but what about relationship interactions? For example, if you are building a podcasting application, perhaps you would like to specify that only certain Nova users may add comments to podcasts. Again, Nova makes this simple by leveraging Laravel’s policies.
When working with relationships, Nova uses a simple policy method naming convention. To illustrate this convention, lets assume your application has Podcast
resources and Comment
resources. If you would like to authorize which users can add comments to a podcast, you should define an addComment
method on your podcast model’s policy class:
As you can see, Nova uses a simple add{Model}
policy method naming convention for authorizing relationship actions.
Authorizing Attaching / Detaching
For many-to-many relationships, Nova uses a similar naming convention. However, instead of add{Model}
, you should use an attach{Model}
/ detach{Model}
naming convention. For example, imagine a Podcast
model has a many-to-many relationship with the Tag
model. If you would like to authorize which users can attach “tags” to a podcast, you may add an attachTag
method to your podcast policy. In addition, you will likely want to define the inverse attachPodcast
on the tag policy:
In the previous examples, we are determining if a user is authorized to attach one model to another. If certain types of users are never allowed to attach a given type of model, you may define a attachAny{Model}
method on your policy class. This will prevent the “Attach” button from displaying in the Nova UI entirely:
When working with many-to-many relationships, make sure you define the proper authorization policy methods on each of the related resource’s policy classes.
Disabling Authorization
If one of your Nova resources’ models has a corresponding policy, but you want to disable Nova authorization for that resource (thus allowing all actions), you may override the authorizable
method on the Nova resource:
Fields
Sometimes you may want to hide certain fields from a group of users. You may easily accomplish this by chaining the canSee
method onto your field definition. The canSee
method accepts a closure which should return true
or false
. The closure will receive the incoming HTTP request:
In the example above, we are using Laravel’s Authorizable
trait’s can
method on our User
model to determine if the authorized user is authorized for the viewProfile
action. However, since proxying to authorization policy methods is a common use-case for canSee
, you may use the canSeeWhen
method to achieve the same behavior. The canSeeWhen
method has the same method signature as the Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\Access\Authorizable
trait’s can
method:
To learn more about Laravel’s authorization helpers and the can
method, check out the full Laravel authorization documentation.
Index Filtering
You may notice that returning false
from a policy’s view
method does not stop a given resource from appearing in the resource index. To filter models from the resource index query, you may override the indexQuery
method on the resource’s class.
This method is already defined in your application’s App\Nova\Resource
base class; therefore, you may simply copy and paste the method into a specific resource and then modify the query based on how you would like to filter the resource’s index results:
Relatable Filtering
If you would like to filter the queries that are used to populate relationship model selection menus, you may override the relatableQuery
method on your resource.
For example, if your application has a Comment
resource that belongs to a Podcast
resource, Nova will allow you to select the parent Podcast
when creating a Comment
. To limit the podcasts that are available in that selection menu, you should override the relatableQuery
method on your Podcast
resource:
Dynamic Relatable Methods
You can customize the “relatable” query for individual relationships by using a dynamic, convention based method name that is suffixed with the pluralized name of the model. For example, if your application has a Post
resource, in which posts can be tagged, but the Tag
resource is associated with different types of models, you may define a relatableTags
method to customize the relatable query for this relationship:
If necessary, you may access the resource
and resourceId
for the request via the NovaRequest
instance that is passed to your method:
Relationship Types
When a Nova resource depends on another resource via multiple fields, you will often assign the fields different names such as:
In these situations, you should supply a third argument when defining the relationship to specify which Nova resource the relationship should utilize, since Nova may not be able to determine this via convention:
Scout Filtering
If your application is leveraging the power of Laravel Scout for search, you may also customize the Laravel\Scout\Builder
query instance before it is sent to your search provider. To accomplish this, override the scoutQuery
method on your resource class: