# Alternative Authentication
GetCandy installation instructions default to using Laravel Sanctum, however you can use which ever authentication method you like. Two obvious alternatives are Laravel Passport and JWT Tokens.
# Laravel Passport
Laravel makes API authentication a breeze using Laravel Passport, which provides a full OAuth2 server implementation for your Laravel application in a matter of minutes.
Install Laravel Passport (opens new window) as per their documentation and update your RouteServiceProvider.php to use the below.
use GetCandy;
//...
public function boot()
{
$this->configureRateLimiting();
$this->routes(function () {
GetCandy::router([
'prefix' => 'api/v1'
], function ($registrar) {
Route::group([
'middleware' => ['auth:api', 'api']
], function () use ($registrar) {
$registrar->auth();
});
Route::group([
'middleware' => ['api']
], function () use ($registrar) {
$registrar->guest();
});
});
// ...
});
}
# Guest routes and client credentials
Previously, GetCandy used an altered version of the Laravel\Passport\Http\Middleware\CheckClientCredentials
middleware, but since removing Passport from the core, we found this would have been too opinionated.
The issue with the original middleware was this allowed access tokens created via the client_credentials
grant to access the API, but also meant that even if a user with an authenticated access token pinged the API, they wouldn't be bound to the request.
There seems to be some debate on this, which you can see here (opens new window), we currently do not have a solution that wouldn't require opinionated changes to the core GetCandy middleware, so for now we suggest reading the thread linked above and make a conscious decision based on your own needs.
If we figure out a solid solution we will post it either here or in the forum (opens new window) for discussion.
# JWT Tokens
Not something GetCandy supports in our documentation, but if you would like to go this route please check jwt-auth (opens new window).