| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081 | <?phpreturn array(	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Retrieve The Current User	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| This closure is called by the Auth class' "user" method when trying to	| retrieve a user by the ID that is stored in their session. If you find	| the user, just return the user object, but make sure it has an "id"	| property. If you can't find the user, just return null.	|	| Of course, a simple and elegant authentication solution has already	| been provided for you using the query builder and hashing engine.	| We love making your life as easy as possible.	|	*/	'user' => function($id)	{		if (filter_var($id, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT) !== false)		{			return DB::table('users')->find($id);		} 	},	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Authenticate User Credentials	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| This closure is called by the Auth::attempt() method when attempting to	| authenticate a user that is logging into your application. It's like a	| super buff bouncer to your application.	|	| If the provided credentials are correct, simply return an object that	| represents the user being authenticated. As long as it has a property	| for the "id", any object will work. If the credentials are not valid,	| you don't meed to return anything.	|	*/	'attempt' => function($username, $password)	{		$user = DB::table('users')->where_username($username)->first();		if ( ! is_null($user) and Hash::check($password, $user->password))		{			return $user;		}	},	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| Logout The Current User	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| Here you may do anything that needs to be done when a user logs out of	| your application, such as call the logout method on a third-party API	| you are using for authentication or anything else you desire.	|	*/	'logout' => function($user) {},	/*	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	| "Remember Me" Cookie Name	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------	|	| Here you may specify the cookie name that will be used for the cookie	| that serves as the "remember me" token. Of course, a sensible default	| has been set for you, so you probably don't need to change it.	|	*/	'cookie' => 'laravel_remember',);
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