fortify
breeze
fortify | breeze | |
---|---|---|
5 | 18 | |
1,540 | 2,604 | |
0.5% | 0.8% | |
7.4 | 8.7 | |
6 days ago | 8 days ago | |
PHP | PHP | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
fortify
-
Actions vs Jobs
I mean things like this: https://github.com/laravel/fortify/tree/1.x/src/Actions and this: https://stitcher.io/blog/laravel-queueable-actions
-
Time-based Laravel OTP Login
The main difference between my approach and theirs is that they save the code in the database while I rely on the same logic as Laravel Fortify to generate a Time-based One-time Password (TOTP) algorithm specified in RFC 6238. This is therefore not an option if your application does not use Laravel Fortify. I do not claim to offer the best solution and leaves the judgement to you the reader.
-
Laravel Fortify : Implement 2FA in a way that won't let users lock themselves out
That's really nice because it's an essential feature for any application that need decent security, and I wouldn't know where to start if I had to implement it from scratch. But as of now it has one major limitation : If you implement it by following the documentation to the letter, there's a good chance that your users will end up locked out of your app when they try to enable it. The issue is described in detail here, but it boils down to the fact that Fortify won't ask for the user to enter a code to confirm that they successfully installed the app and scanned the QR code, so if they activate 2FA and then fail to add your site to Google Authenticator (or their computer crashes or something), they wont be able to log into your site ever again.
-
Updating Laravel 8 User profile information using bootstrap livewire and fortify
To find out more about laravel fortify features you can go the the github respository Fortify and for livewire documentation you can go to livewire
-
Using Laravel Fortify to restore laravel/ui functionality
Fortify includes an interesting email verify feature; if you're interested you can take a look on the package documentation
breeze
-
Making the case for Laravel as a Next.js alternative
Going deeper than just blade files, Laravel is a full MVC framework and so includes things like Models and Controllers out of the box that can be used to organize your server-rendered code. Authentication is also baked in by default, and with first-party packages like Breeze, Sanctum, or Socialite, you can include user registration, login, API-based authentication, social sign-ups, and role-based permissions with near zero configuration.
-
Laravel Passwordless Authentication
Install Laravel Breeze to scaffold quick UI
-
Why don't you start writing tests?
Need more examples? Check this directory from the official Laravel repository for tests related to various modules.
-
"@vite(['resources/css/app.css', 'resources/js/app.js'])"?
laravel/breeze only has the branch '1.x', Vite support was added on 1.10.0 and its composer.json does not restrict the Framework version. So they added Vite support on a minor version, instead of bumping it to 2.x.
-
`npm run dev` not copying css or js files to public. Bug?
This legacy package is a very simple authentication scaffolding built on the Bootstrap CSS framework. While it continues to work with the latest version of Laravel, you should consider using Laravel Breeze for new projects. Or, for something more robust, consider Laravel Jetstream.
-
Is auth WAY too hard in .NET?
a react login component: https://github.com/laravel/breeze/blob/1.x/stubs/inertia-react/resources/js/Pages/Auth/Login.jsx
-
New Breeze options in Starter Kits
You don't have to wish, you can add svelte right here https://github.com/laravel/breeze
-
Is this a good reason to make a (private) package?
You should use Laravel Fortify, or Laravel Breeze for a frontend quickstart.
-
Introducing Laravel VILTify: a Vue CLI & Vuetify powered alternative to Breeze for the VILT stack
This package is actually heavily based on Laravel Breeze. A lot of code was simply ripped off that. But there's some advantages here:
-
Laravel rate limiting the login method, not working as expected
I know you found the solution, but if you want, the package laravel breeze have a nice way to handle it. https://github.com/laravel/breeze/blob/1.x/stubs/default/App/Http/Requests/Auth/LoginRequest.php
What are some alternatives?
laravel-fortify-demo - Demo of Laravel authentication using Fortify
sanctum - Laravel Sanctum provides a featherweight authentication system for SPAs and simple APIs.
laravel-2fa - An example implementation of Laravel Fortify Two Factor Authentication
jetstream - Tailwind scaffolding for the Laravel framework.
mvea - MVEA Architectural Pattern : Model View Endpoint Action
livewire - A full-stack framework for Laravel that takes the pain out of building dynamic UIs.
lara8auth - This is a simple auth starter setup for laravel 8 projects using bootstrap and laravel fortify
inertia-laravel - The Laravel adapter for Inertia.js.
laravel-queueable-action - Queueable actions in Laravel
vuetify - 🐉 Vue Component Framework
Laravel-Phone - Phone number functionality for Laravel
django-unicorn - The magical reactive component framework for Django ✨