Authentication ============== Authentication is the act of verifying who a user is, and is the basis of the login process. Typically, authentication uses an identifier--a username or email address--and password, submitted through a form. The application then compares this information against that previously stored. In Yii all this is done semi-automatically, leaving the developer to merely implement [[\yii\web\IdentityInterface]]. Typically, implementation is accomplished using the `User` model. You can find a full featured example in the [advanced application template](installation.md). Below only the interface methods are listed: ```php class User extends ActiveRecord implements IdentityInterface { // ... /** * Finds an identity by the given ID. * * @param string|integer $id the ID to be looked for * @return IdentityInterface|null the identity object that matches the given ID. */ public static function findIdentity($id) { return static::find($id); } /** * @return int|string current user ID */ public function getId() { return $this->id; } /** * @return string current user auth key */ public function getAuthKey() { return $this->auth_key; } /** * @param string $authKey * @return boolean if auth key is valid for current user */ public function validateAuthKey($authKey) { return $this->getAuthKey() === $authKey; } } ``` Two of the outlined methods are simple: `findIdentity` is provided with an ID and returns a model instance represented by that ID. The `getId` method returns the ID itself. Two of the other methods--`getAuthKey` and `validateAuthKey`--are used to provide extra security to the "remember me" cookie. `getAuthKey` should return a string that is unique for each user. A good idea is to save this value when the user is created by using Yii's `Security::generateRandomKey()`: ```php public function beforeSave($insert) { if (parent::beforeSave($insert)) { if ($this->isNewRecord) { $this->auth_key = Security::generateRandomKey(); } return true; } return false; } ``` The `validateAuthKey` method just compares the `$authKey` variable, passed as parameter (itself retrieved from a cookie), with the value fetched from database.