NAME
    Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Database - authenticate via
    a database

DESCRIPTION
    This class is an authentication provider designed to authenticate users
    against a database, using Dancer2::Plugin::Database to access a
    database.

    Crypt::SaltedHash is used to handle hashed passwords securely; you
    wouldn't want to store plain text passwords now, would you? (If your
    answer to that is yes, please reconsider; you really don't want to do
    that, when it's so easy to do things right!)

    See Dancer2::Plugin::Database for how to configure a database connection
    appropriately; see the "CONFIGURATION" section below for how to
    configure this authentication provider with database details.

    See Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible for details on how to use the
    authentication framework, including how to pick a more useful
    authentication provider.

CONFIGURATION
    This provider tries to use sensible defaults, so you may not need to
    provide much configuration if your database tables look similar to those
    in the "SUGGESTED SCHEMA" section below.

    The most basic configuration, assuming defaults for all options, and
    defining a single authentication realm named 'users':

        plugins:
            Auth::Extensible:
                realms:
                    users:
                        provider: 'Database'

    You would still need to have provided suitable database connection
    details to Dancer2::Plugin::Database, of course; see the docs for that
    plugin for full details, but it could be as simple as, e.g.:

        plugins:
            Auth::Extensible:
                realms:
                    users:
                        provider: 'Database'
            Database:
                driver: 'SQLite'
                database: 'test.sqlite'

    A full example showing all options:

        plugins:
            Auth::Extensible:
                realms:
                    users:
                        provider: 'Database'
                        # optionally set DB connection name to use (see named 
                        # connections in Dancer2::Plugin::Database docs)
                        db_connection_name: 'foo'

                        # Optionally disable roles support, if you only want to check
                        # for successful logins but don't need to use role-based access:
                        disable_roles: 1

                        # optionally specify names of tables if they're not the defaults
                        # (defaults are 'users', 'roles' and 'user_roles')
                        users_table: 'users'
                        roles_table: 'roles'
                        user_roles_table: 'user_roles'

                        # optionally set the column names (see the SUGGESTED SCHEMA
                        # section below for the default names; if you use them, they'll
                        # Just Work)
                        users_id_column: 'id'
                        users_username_column: 'username'
                        users_password_column: 'password'
                        roles_id_column: 'id'
                        roles_role_column: 'role'
                        user_roles_user_id_column: 'user_id'
                        user_roles_role_id_column: 'roles_id'

    See the main Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible documentation for how to
    configure multiple authentication realms.

SUGGESTED SCHEMA
    If you use a schema similar to the examples provided here, you should
    need minimal configuration to get this authentication provider to work
    for you.

    The examples given here should be MySQL-compatible; minimal changes
    should be required to use them with other database engines.

  users table
    You'll need a table to store user accounts in, of course. A suggestion
    is something like:

        CREATE TABLE users (
            id       INTEGER     AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
            username VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL       UNIQUE KEY,
            password VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL
        );

    You will quite likely want other fields to store e.g. the user's name,
    email address, etc; all columns from the users table will be returned by
    the "logged_in_user" keyword for your convenience.

  roles table
    You'll need a table to store a list of available roles in (unless you're
    not using roles - in which case, disable role support (see the
    "CONFIGURATION" section).

        CREATE TABLE roles (
            id    INTEGER     AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
            role  VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL
        );

  user_roles table
    Finally, (unless you've disabled role support) you'll need a table to
    store user <-> role mappings (i.e. one row for every role a user has; so
    adding extra roles to a user consists of adding a new role to this
    table). It's entirely up to you whether you use an "id" column in this
    table; you probably shouldn't need it.

        CREATE TABLE user_roles (
            user_id  INTEGER  NOT NULL,
            role_id  INTEGER  NOT NULL,
            UNIQUE KEY user_role (user_id, role_id)
        );

    If you're using InnoDB tables rather than the default MyISAM, you could
    add a foreign key constraint for better data integrity; see the MySQL
    documentation for details, but a table definition using foreign keys
    could look like:

        CREATE TABLE user_roles (
            user_id  INTEGER, FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES users (id),
            role_id  INTEGER, FOREIGN_KEY (role_id) REFERENCES roles (id),
            UNIQUE KEY user_role (user_id, role_id)
        ) ENGINE=InnoDB;

ATTRIBUTES
  dancer2_plugin_database
    Lazy-loads the correct instance of Dancer2::Plugin::Database which
    handles the following methods:

    *   plugin_database

        This corresponds to the "database" keyword from
        Dancer2::Plugin::Database.

  database
    The connected "plugin_database" using "db_connection_name".

  db_connection_name
    Optional.

  users_table
    Defaults to 'users'.

  users_id_column
    Defaults to 'id'.

  users_username_column
    Defaults to 'username'.

  users_password_column
    Defaults to 'password'.

  roles_table
    Defaults to 'roles'.

  roles_id_column
    Defaults to 'id'.

  roles_role_column
    Defaults to 'role'.

  user_roles_table
    Defaults to 'user_roles'.

  user_roles_user_id_column
    Defaults to 'user_id'.

  user_roles_role_id_column
    Defaults to 'role_id'.

METHODS
  authenticate_user $username, $password
  create_user
  get_user_details $username
  get_user_roles $username
  set_user_details
  set_user_password
AUTHOR
    David Precious, "<davidp at preshweb.co.uk>"

    Dancer2 port of Dancer::Plugin::Auth::Extensible by:

    Stefan Hornburg (Racke), "<racke at linuxia.de>"

    Conversion to Dancer2's new plugin system in 2016 by:

    Peter Mottram (SysPete), "<peter at sysnix.com>"

BUGS / FEATURE REQUESTS
    This is an early version; there may still be bugs present or features
    missing.

    This is developed on GitHub - please feel free to raise issues or pull
    requests against the repo at:
    <https://github.com/PerlDancer/Dancer2-Plugin-Auth-Extensible-Provider-D
    atabase>

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    From Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible:

    Valuable feedback on the early design of this module came from many
    people, including Matt S Trout (mst), David Golden (xdg), Damien
    Krotkine (dams), Daniel Perrett, and others.

    Configurable login/logout URLs added by Rene (hertell)

    Regex support for require_role by chenryn

    Support for user_roles looking in other realms by Colin Ewen (casao)

    LDAP provider added by Mark Meyer (ofosos)

    Documentation fix by Vince Willems.

    Henk van Oers (GH #8, #13).

    Andrew Beverly (GH #6, #7, #10, #17, #22, #24, #25, #26). This includes
    support for creating and editing users and manage user passwords.

    Gabor Szabo (GH #11, #16, #18).

    Evan Brown (GH #20, #32).

    Jason Lewis (Unix provider problem).

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
    Copyright 2012-16 David Precious.

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published
    by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

    See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.