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invoiceninja/app/Http/Controllers/Auth/ResetPasswordController.php
David Bomba ba75a44eb8
Laravel 7.x Shift (#40)
* Adopt Laravel coding style

The Laravel framework adopts the PSR-2 coding style with some additions.
Laravel apps *should* adopt this coding style as well.

However, Shift allows you to customize the adopted coding style by
adding your own [PHP CS Fixer][1] `.php_cs` config to your project.

You may use [Shift's .php_cs][2] file as a base.

[1]: https://github.com/FriendsOfPHP/PHP-CS-Fixer
[2]: https://gist.github.com/laravel-shift/cab527923ed2a109dda047b97d53c200

* Shift bindings

PHP 5.5.9+ adds the new static `class` property which provides the fully qualified class name. This is preferred over using class name strings as these references are checked by the parser.

* Shift core files

* Shift to Throwable

* Add laravel/ui dependency

* Unindent vendor mail templates

* Shift config files

* Default config files

In an effort to make upgrading the constantly changing config files
easier, Shift defaulted them so you can review the commit diff for
changes. Moving forward, you should use ENV variables or create a
separate config file to allow the core config files to remain
automatically upgradeable.

* Shift Laravel dependencies

* Shift cleanup

* Upgrade to Laravel 7

Co-authored-by: Laravel Shift <shift@laravelshift.com>
2020-09-06 19:38:10 +10:00

95 lines
2.8 KiB
PHP

<?php
/**
* Invoice Ninja (https://invoiceninja.com).
*
* @link https://github.com/invoiceninja/invoiceninja source repository
*
* @copyright Copyright (c) 2020. Invoice Ninja LLC (https://invoiceninja.com)
*
* @license https://opensource.org/licenses/AAL
*/
namespace App\Http\Controllers\Auth;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\ResetsPasswords;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Password;
class ResetPasswordController extends Controller
{
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Password Reset Controller
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This controller is responsible for handling password reset requests
| and uses a simple trait to include this behavior. You're free to
| explore this trait and override any methods you wish to tweak.
|
*/
use ResetsPasswords;
/**
* Where to redirect users after resetting their password.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $redirectTo = '/';
/**
* Create a new controller instance.
*
* @return void
*/
public function __construct()
{
$this->middleware('guest');
}
public function showResetForm(Request $request, $token = null)
{
return $this->render('auth.passwords.reset', ['root' => 'themes', 'token' => $token]);
}
/**
* Reset the given user's password.
*
* @param \Illuminate\Http\Request $request
* @return \Illuminate\Http\RedirectResponse|\Illuminate\Http\JsonResponse
*/
public function reset(Request $request)
{
$request->validate($this->rules(), $this->validationErrorMessages());
// Here we will attempt to reset the user's password. If it is successful we
// will update the password on an actual user model and persist it to the
// database. Otherwise we will parse the error and return the response.
$response = $this->broker()->reset(
$this->credentials($request),
function ($user, $password) {
$this->resetPassword($user, $password);
}
);
// Added this because it collides the session between
// client & main portal giving unlimited redirects.
auth()->logout();
// If the password was successfully reset, we will redirect the user back to
// the application's home authenticated view. If there is an error we can
// redirect them back to where they came from with their error message.
return $response == Password::PASSWORD_RESET
? $this->sendResetResponse($request, $response)
: $this->sendResetFailedResponse($request, $response);
}
public function afterReset()
{
auth()->logout();
return redirect('/');
}
}