The Laravel Hash facade provides secure Bcrypt and Argon2 hashing for storing user passwords. If you are using the Laravel Jetstream authentication scaffolding, Bcrypt will be used for registration and authentication by default.
Bcrypt is a great choice for hashing passwords because its "work factor" is adjustable, which means that the time it takes to generate a hash can be increased as hardware power increases.
The default hashing driver for your application is configured in the config/hashing.php configuration file. There are currently three supported drivers: Bcrypt and Argon2 (Argon2i and Argon2id variants).
The Argon2i driver requires PHP 7.2.0 or greater and the Argon2id driver requires PHP 7.3.0 or greater.
You may hash a password by calling the make method on the Hash facade:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Hash;
class UpdatePasswordController extends Controller
{
/**
* Update the password for the user.
*
* @param Request $request
* @return Response
*/
public function update(Request $request)
{
// Validate the new password length...
$request->user()->fill([
'password' => Hash::make($request->newPassword)
])->save();
}
} If you are using the Bcrypt algorithm, the make method allows you to manage the work factor of the algorithm using the rounds option; however, the default is acceptable for most applications:
$hashed = Hash::make('password', [
'rounds' => 12,
]); If you are using the Argon2 algorithm, the make method allows you to manage the work factor of the algorithm using the memory, time, and threads options; however, the defaults are acceptable for most applications:
$hashed = Hash::make('password', [
'memory' => 1024,
'time' => 2,
'threads' => 2,
]); For more information on these options, check out the official PHP documentation.
The check method allows you to verify that a given plain-text string corresponds to a given hash:
if (Hash::check('plain-text', $hashedPassword)) {
// The passwords match...
} The needsRehash function allows you to determine if the work factor used by the hasher has changed since the password was hashed:
if (Hash::needsRehash($hashed)) {
$hashed = Hash::make('plain-text');
}
© Taylor Otwell
Licensed under the MIT License.
Laravel is a trademark of Taylor Otwell.
https://laravel.com/docs/8.x/hashing