How to Create a Custom Access Denied Handler¶
When your application throws an AccessDeniedException
, you can handle this exception
with a service to return a custom response.
First, create a class that implements
AccessDeniedHandlerInterface
.
This interface defines one method called handle()
where you can implement whatever
logic that should execute when access is denied for the current user (e.g. send a
mail, log a message, or generally return a custom response):
namespace App\Security;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Exception\AccessDeniedException;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authorization\AccessDeniedHandlerInterface;
class AccessDeniedHandler implements AccessDeniedHandlerInterface
{
public function handle(Request $request, AccessDeniedException $accessDeniedException)
{
// ...
return new Response($content, 403);
}
}
If you’re using the default services.yaml configuration, you’re done! Symfony will automatically know about your new service. You can then configure it under your firewall:
- YAML
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# config/packages/security.yaml firewalls: # ... main: # ... access_denied_handler: App\Security\AccessDeniedHandler
- XML
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<!-- config/packages/security.xml --> <config> <firewall name="main"> <access_denied_handler>App\Security\AccessDeniedHandler</access_denied_handler> </firewall> </config>
- PHP
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// config/packages/security.php use App\Security\AccessDeniedHandler; $container->loadFromExtension('security', [ 'firewalls' => [ 'main' => [ // ... 'access_denied_handler' => AccessDeniedHandler::class, ], ], ]);
That’s it! Any AccessDeniedException
thrown by code under the main
firewall
will now be handled by your service.