158

I am using the Symfony security setup. Everything works fine, but I don't know how to do one important thing:

In twig, I can reach the current user's info by doing:

Welcome, {{ app.user.username }}

or similar

How do I access this same information in the Controller? Specifically, I want to get the current user entity so I can store it relationally in another entity (one-to-one mapping).

I was really hoping it'd be

$this->get('security.context')->getToken()->getUser()

but that doesn't work. It gives me a class of type

Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User

and I want one of type

Acme\AuctionBundle\Entity\User

which is my entity....

1

7 Answers 7

248

Symfony 4+, 2019+ Approach

In symfony 4 (probably 3.3 also, but only real-tested in 4) you can inject the Security service via auto-wiring in the controller like this:

<?php

use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Security;

class SomeClass
{
    /**
     * @var Security
     */
    private $security;

    public function __construct(Security $security)
    {
       $this->security = $security;
    }

    public function privatePage() : Response
    {
        $user = $this->security->getUser(); // null or UserInterface, if logged in
        // ... do whatever you want with $user
    }
}

Symfony 2- Approach

As @ktolis says, you first have to configure your /app/config/security.yml.

Then with

$user = $this->get('security.token_storage')->getToken()->getUser();
$user->getUsername();

should be enougth!

$user is your User Object! You don't need to query it again.

Find out the way to set up your providers in security.yml from Sf2 Documentation and try again.

Best luck!

8
  • What if i need the user entity on a PHP template?
    – DomingoSL
    Jul 31, 2013 at 8:41
  • @DomingoSL Check the following link from the official documentation: symfony.com/doc/master/book/… Jul 31, 2013 at 20:23
  • 5
    Since Symfony 2.6, the security.context service has been deprecated and split into two new services: security.authorization_checker and security.token_storage. You can check the correct way to fetch current user here : symfony.com/blog/…
    – jmleroux
    Feb 14, 2015 at 14:48
  • 1
    I'm on Symfony 5.1.2 and on $user = $this->security->getUser();, $user is always null for me, whether logged in or not. Jul 13, 2020 at 23:45
  • Oh seems like it's because I'm doing this in an Event Subscriber, and this is not yet initialized this early in the request. Jul 14, 2020 at 2:36
69

Best practice

According to the documentation since Symfony 2.1 simply use this shortcut :

$user = $this->getUser();

The above is still working on Symfony 3.2 and is a shortcut for this :

$user = $this->get('security.token_storage')->getToken()->getUser();

The security.token_storage service was introduced in Symfony 2.6. Prior to Symfony 2.6, you had to use the getToken() method of the security.context service.

Example : And if you want directly the username :

$username = $this->getUser()->getUsername();

If wrong user class type

The user will be an object and the class of that object will depend on your user provider.

7

In Symfony version >= 5 and PHP >= 8.0 you can type hint the authenticated user using Attributes, only in controllers though:

public function indexAction(#[CurrentUser] User $user): Response
{
     // do something
}
1
6

The thread is a bit old but i think this could probably save someone's time ...

I ran into the same problem as the original question, that the type is showed as Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User

It eventually turned out that i was logged in using an in memory user

my security.yml looks something like this

security:
    providers:
        chain_provider:
            chain:
                providers: [in_memory, fos_userbundle]
        fos_userbundle:
            id: fos_user.user_manager
        in_memory:
            memory:
                users:
                    user:  { password: userpass, roles: [ 'ROLE_USER' ] }
                    admin: { password: adminpass, roles: [ 'ROLE_ADMIN', 'ROLE_SONATA_ADMIN' ] }

the in_memory user type is always Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\User if you want to use your own entity, log in using that provider's user.

Thanks, hj

6

In symfony >= 3.2, documentation states that:

An alternative way to get the current user in a controller is to type-hint the controller argument with UserInterface (and default it to null if being logged-in is optional):

use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\UserInterface\UserInterface;

public function indexAction(UserInterface $user = null)
{
    // $user is null when not logged-in or anon.
}

This is only recommended for experienced developers who don't extend from the Symfony base controller and don't use the ControllerTrait either. Otherwise, it's recommended to keep using the getUser() shortcut.

Blog post about it

1
  • This helped me a lot while trying to get current user in an EventSubscriber: i had to autowire (Security $security) as param in __construct then use $security->getUser() and voilà!
    – tsadiq
    Sep 5, 2018 at 14:56
2
$this->container->get('security.token_storage')->getToken()->getUser();
2
  • 3
    Welcome to stackoverflow. Please explain about answer. stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-answer Aug 4, 2016 at 10:07
  • While this code may solve the question, including an explanation of how and why this solves the problem would really help to improve the quality of your post, and probably result in more up-votes. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, not just the person asking now. Please edit your answer to add explanations and give an indication of what limitations and assumptions apply.
    – Ghost
    Aug 12, 2021 at 16:44
-39

Well, first you need to request the username of the user from the session in your controller action like this:

$username=$this->get('security.context')->getToken()->getUser()->getUserName();

then do a query to the db and get your object with regular dql like

$em = $this->get('doctrine.orm.entity_manager');    
"SELECT u FROM Acme\AuctionBundle\Entity\User u where u.username=".$username;
$q=$em->createQuery($query);
$user=$q->getResult();

the $user should now hold the user with this username ( you could also use other fields of course)

...but you will have to first configure your /app/config/security.yml configuration to use the appropriate field for your security provider like so:

security:
 provider:
  example:
   entity: {class Acme\AuctionBundle\Entity\User, property: username}

hope this helps!

3
  • Well Martin you either want the user OR the username. The choice is yours. It's your responsibility to get the object you need. And as you said you don't want the regular user but the Acme namespace user.
    – ktolis
    Oct 13, 2011 at 21:30
  • 10
    "SELECT u FROM Acme\AuctionBundle\Entity\User u where u.username=".$username; = YOU SHOULD USE PARAMETRIZED QUERIES!
    – CappY
    Nov 4, 2013 at 19:45
  • 1
    $this->get('security.context')->getToken()->getUser() itself gets you the logged in user object. You don't have to query it back again. In fact, which version were you using ?
    – Jeet
    Jan 20, 2015 at 7:32

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