To prevent abuse, you should consider adding rate limiting to your APIs. For example, you may want to limit the API usage of each user to be at most 100 API calls within a period of 10 minutes. If too many requests are received from a user within the stated period of the time, a response with status code 429 (meaning "Too Many Requests") should be returned.
To enable rate limiting, the user identity class should implement yii\filters\RateLimitInterface. This interface requires implementation of three methods:
getRateLimit()
: returns the maximum number of allowed requests and the time period (e.g., [100, 600]
means there can be at most 100 API calls within 600 seconds).loadAllowance()
: returns the number of remaining requests allowed and the corresponding UNIX timestamp when the rate limit was last checked.saveAllowance()
: saves both the number of remaining requests allowed and the current UNIX timestamp.You may want to use two columns in the user table to record the allowance and timestamp information. With those defined, then loadAllowance()
and saveAllowance()
can be implemented to read and save the values of the two columns corresponding to the current authenticated user. To improve performance, you may also consider storing these pieces of information in a cache or NoSQL storage.
Implementation in the User
model could look like the following:
public function getRateLimit($request, $action) { return [$this->rateLimit, 1]; // $rateLimit requests per second } public function loadAllowance($request, $action) { return [$this->allowance, $this->allowance_updated_at]; } public function saveAllowance($request, $action, $allowance, $timestamp) { $this->allowance = $allowance; $this->allowance_updated_at = $timestamp; $this->save(); }
Once the identity class implements the required interface, Yii will automatically use yii\filters\RateLimiter configured as an action filter for yii\rest\Controller to perform rate limiting check. The rate limiter will throw a yii\web\TooManyRequestsHttpException when the rate limit is exceeded.
You may configure the rate limiter as follows in your REST controller classes:
public function behaviors() { $behaviors = parent::behaviors(); $behaviors['rateLimiter']['enableRateLimitHeaders'] = false; return $behaviors; }
When rate limiting is enabled, by default every response will be sent with the following HTTP headers containing the current rate limiting information:
X-Rate-Limit-Limit
, the maximum number of requests allowed with a time periodX-Rate-Limit-Remaining
, the number of remaining requests in the current time periodX-Rate-Limit-Reset
, the number of seconds to wait in order to get the maximum number of allowed requestsYou may disable these headers by configuring yii\filters\RateLimiter::$enableRateLimitHeaders to be false
, as shown in the above code example.
© 2008–2017 by Yii Software LLC
Licensed under the three clause BSD license.
http://www.yiiframework.com/doc-2.0/guide-rest-rate-limiting.html