Skip to content

Using Expressions in Security Access Controls

Warning: You are browsing the documentation for Symfony 6.0, which is no longer maintained.

Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.2 (the current stable version).

Using Expressions in Security Access Controls

See also

The best solution for handling complex authorization rules is to use the Voter System.

In addition to a role like ROLE_ADMIN, the isGranted() method also accepts an Expression object:

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
// src/Controller/MyController.php
namespace App\Controller;

use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController;
use Symfony\Component\ExpressionLanguage\Expression;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;

class MyController extends AbstractController
{
    public function index(): Response
    {
        $this->denyAccessUnlessGranted(new Expression(
            '"ROLE_ADMIN" in role_names or (is_authenticated() and user.isSuperAdmin())'
        ));

        // ...
    }
}

In this example, if the current user has ROLE_ADMIN or if the current user object's isSuperAdmin() method returns true, then access will be granted (note: your User object may not have an isSuperAdmin() method, that method is invented for this example).

The security expression must use any valid expression language syntax and can use any of these variables created by Symfony:

user
An instance of UserInterface that represents the current user or null if you're not authenticated.
role_names
An array with the string representation of the roles the user has. This array includes any roles granted indirectly via the role hierarchy but it does not include the IS_AUTHENTICATED_* attributes (see the functions below).
object
The object (if any) that's passed as the second argument to isGranted().
subject
It stores the same value as object, so they are equivalent.
token
The token object.
trust_resolver
The AuthenticationTrustResolverInterface, object: you'll probably use the is_*() functions below instead.

Additionally, you have access to a number of functions inside the expression:

is_authenticated()
Returns true if the user is authenticated via "remember-me" or authenticated "fully" - i.e. returns true if the user is "logged in".
is_remember_me()
Similar, but not equal to IS_AUTHENTICATED_REMEMBERED, see below.
is_fully_authenticated()
Equal to checking if the user has the IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY role.
is_granted()
Checks if the user has the given permission. Optionally accepts a second argument with the object where permission is checked on. It's equivalent to using the isGranted() method from the security service.

The is_remember_me() and is_fully_authenticated() functions are similar to using IS_AUTHENTICATED_REMEMBERED and IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY with the isGranted() function - but they are not the same. The following controller snippet shows the difference:

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
use Symfony\Component\ExpressionLanguage\Expression;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\AuthorizationCheckerInterface;
// ...

public function index(AuthorizationCheckerInterface $authorizationChecker): Response
{
    $access1 = $authorizationChecker->isGranted('IS_AUTHENTICATED_REMEMBERED');

    $access2 = $authorizationChecker->isGranted(new Expression(
        'is_remember_me() or is_fully_authenticated()'
    ));
}

Here, $access1 and $access2 will be the same value. Unlike the behavior of IS_AUTHENTICATED_REMEMBERED and IS_AUTHENTICATED_FULLY, the is_remember_me() function only returns true if the user is authenticated via a remember-me cookie and is_fully_authenticated() only returns true if the user has actually logged in during this session (i.e. is full-fledged).

This work, including the code samples, is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.
TOC
    Version