This package is no longer being developed or maintained. We recommend using the more up-to-date and actively maintained package nuxt-auth-sanctum instead. Thank you for your understanding.
This is a simple package for integrating Laravel Sanctum auth with Nuxt3. This package is in developement and for now works only in SPA or Hybrid mode. No full SSR support, yet.
yarn add nuxt-sanctum-auth
# or
npm i nuxt-sanctum-auth
Import the module into the nuxt.config.[js,ts]
and disable ssr
.
Or alternatively disable ssr
via routeRules
, only for pages where auth
or guest
middlewares are needed. Typically account section and login page.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
ssr: false,
// or
routeRules: {
'/account/**': { ssr: false },
'/auth/**': { ssr: false }
},
modules: [
'nuxt-sanctum-auth'
// ...
]
})
You can also define options as below (defaults in example):
export default defineNuxtConfig({
// ...
modules: [
'nuxt-sanctum-auth'
// ...
],
nuxtSanctumAuth: {
token: false, // set true to use jwt-token auth instead of cookie. default is false
baseUrl: 'http://localhost:8000',
endpoints: {
csrf: '/sanctum/csrf-cookie',
login: '/login',
logout: '/logout',
user: '/user'
},
csrf: {
headerKey: 'X-XSRF-TOKEN',
cookieKey: 'XSRF-TOKEN',
tokenCookieKey: 'nuxt-sanctum-auth-token'
},
redirects: {
home: '/account',
login: '/auth/login',
logout: '/'
}
}
})
Package provides you with $sanctumAuth
plugin, which contains login
and logout
methods.
When you log in using the module, it automatically redirects you to the home
route as defined in the configuration. However, you can also pass a callback function as the second parameter, which will receive the response data as an argument. This can be useful, for example, if you want to fetch additional user data before redirecting them to the application. Just keep in mind that you'll need to handle the redirection manually.
<script setup>
const { $sanctumAuth } = useNuxtApp()
const router = useRouter()
const errors = ref([])
async function login() {
try {
await $sanctumAuth.login(
{
email: 'email@example.com',
password: 'supersecretpassword'
},
// optional callback function
(data) => {
console.log(data)
router.push('/account')
}
)
} catch (e) {
// your error handling
errors.value = e.errors
}
}
</script>
When you log out, the module will automatically redirect you to the logout
route as defined in the configuration. However, you can also choose to pass a callback function to handle the redirect yourself. The callback function will receive the response data from the logout request as an argument. Please note that all session data will be deleted by the time the callback is executed.
<script setup>
const { $sanctumAuth } = useNuxtApp()
const router = useRouter()
const logout = async () => {
await $sanctumAuth.logout(
// optional callback function
(data) => {
console.log(data)
router.push('/')
}
)
}
</script>
The module creates a useAuth()
composable that utilizes useState('auth')
in the background. You can use it to get access to a user.
<script setup>
const { user, loggedIn } = useAuth() // or useState('auth').value
</script>
<template>
<div>
Is user logged in?
<span>{{ loggedIn ? 'yes' : 'no' }}</span>
</div>
<div v-if="loggedIn">
What is users name?
<span>{{ user.name }}</span>
</div>
</template>
Package automatically provides two middlewares for you to use: auth
and guest
.
If you are using routeRules
make sure to set ssr: false
for all pages that will be using those middlewares. Please note that those middlewares are not global and are needed to be included on every protected page. Global middlewares are not possible for now, beacuse of avaliability of hybrid
mode.
<script setup>
definePageMeta({
middleware: 'guest'
})
</script>
<script setup>
definePageMeta({
middleware: 'auth'
})
</script>
If you want to use Laravel Sanctum with JWT token authentication method,
set the token
property to true in the module configuration.
nuxtSanctumAuth: {
token: true
// other properties
}
Your Laravel backend should respond on the login endpoint with a json containing property token
:
{
"token": "1|p1tEPICErFs9TpGKjfkz5QcWDi5M4YqJpVLGUwqM"
}
Once logged in, the token will be saved in a cookie.
If you need to access the token, use property of useAuth()
<script setup>
const { token } = useAuth()
</script>
<template>
<div>
What is auth jwt token?
<span>{{ token }}</span>
</div>
</template>
In guarded pages, you will have to use special fetching method inside useAsyncData
. This methods is responsible for carrying the XSRF or JWT auth token.
<script setup>
const { $apiFetch } = useNuxtApp()
const { data: posts } = await useAsyncData('posts', () => $apiFetch(`posts`))
</script>
You absolutely can use user information on all pages, even on those that are not guarded by auth
midleware.
Only downside is that you have to handle potential empty states your self. Typically on ssr pages, because user info is accessable only on client.
<script setup>
const { $sanctumAuth } = useNuxtApp()
const loading = ref(true)
const auth = useAuth() // return auth state
onMounted(async () => {
await $sanctumAuth.getUser() // fetch and set user data
loading.value = false
})
</script>
<template>
<div v-if="loading">Loading...</div>
<div v-else>
<NuxtLink to="/auth/login" v-if="!auth.loggedIn"> Login </NuxtLink>
<NuxtLink to="/account" v-else> My Account </NuxtLink>
</div>
</template>
- Run
npm run dev:prepare
to generate type stubs. - Use
npm run dev
to start playground in development mode.