A container for user login and authentication code. ColdFusion runs the code in this tag if a user is not already logged in. You put code in the tag that authenticates the user and identifies the user with a set of roles. Used with cfloginuser tag.
<cflogin applicationToken = "token
" cookieDomain = "domain
" idletimeout = "value
"> ... <cfloginuser name = "name
" password = "password
" roles = "roles
"> </cflogin>
cfloginuser, cflogout, GetAuthUser, GetUserRoles, IsUserInAnyRole, IsUserInRole , IsUserLoggedIn, "Securing Applications" in the ColdFusion Developer's Guide
ColdFusion 8: The applicationtoken attribute lets you specify a unique application identifier for each application, or the same value for multiple applications.
ColdFusion MX 6.1: Changed behavior: the cflogin variable exists when ColdFusion receives a request with NTLM or Digest (HTTP Negotiated header) authentication information.
ColdFusion MX: Added this tag.
Attribute |
Req/Opt |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|---|
applicationtoken |
Optional |
The current application name |
The login that applies to the application. To let users log in to only one application, specify a unique value for that application. To let users log in to multiple applications, specify the same value for those applications. If you do not set a value for the applicationtoken attribute, the default value is CFAUTHORIZATION_ |
cookiedomain |
Optional |
|
Domain of the cookie that is used to mark a user as logged in. Use this attribute to enable a user login cookie to work with multiple clustered servers in the same domain. |
idletimeout |
Optional |
1800 |
Time interval, in seconds, after which ColdFusion logs off the user. |
The body of this tag executes only if there is no logged-in user. When using application-based security, you put code in the body of the cflogin tag to check the user-provided ID and password against a data source, LDAP directory, or other repository of login identification. The body must include a cfloginuser tag to establish the authenticated user's identity in ColdFusion.
You control the data source and are responsible for coding the SQL within the cflogin tag; you must make sure that the associated database has user, password, and role information.
The cflogin tag has a built-in cflogin structure that contains two variables, cflogin.name and cflogin.password, if the page is executing in response to any of the following:
You can use these values in the cflogin tag body to authenticate the user, and, in the cfloginuser tag, to log the user in. The structure is only available in the cflogin tag body.
The following example shows a simple authentication. This code is typically in the Application.cfc onRequestStart method or in the application.cfm page.
<cflogin> <cfif NOT IsDefined("cflogin")> <cfinclude template="loginform.cfm"> <cfabort> <cfelse> <cfif cflogin.name eq "admin"> <cfset roles = "user,admin"> <cfelse> <cfset roles = "user"> </cfif> <cfloginuser name = "#cflogin.name#" password = "#cflogin.password#" roles = "#roles#"/> </cfif> </cflogin>
The following view-only example checks the user ID and password against a data source:
<cfquery name="qSecurity" datasource="UserRolesDb"> SELECT Roles FROM SecurityRoles WHERE username=<cfqueryparam value='#cflogin.name#' CFSQLTYPE="CF_SQL_VARCHAR" AND password=<cfqueryparam value='#cflogin.password#' CFSQLTYPE='CF_SQL_VARCHAR' </cfquery> <cfif qSecurity.recordcount gt 0> <cfloginuser name = "#cflogin.name#" password = "#cflogin.password#" roles = "#trim(qSecurity.Roles)#" > </cfif>