This app is going to send emails to verify that an email address is real when users sign up. Before their account is active users need to click a special link that will verify their account and that they're in control of that email address. This is a common web functionality we've all experienced when signing up for new accounts online. The impetus for this project is that I deployed a Laravel app for people to use and put it behind a login form. Many people used garbage emails to sign up and access the app. This isn't protected by default with Laravel's auth scaffold, so let's add it real quick!

Draws heavily from this tutorial by Ahmed Khan (@ahmedkhan847)

Source code is available for free on Github.

Step 1

First step is to create a new Laravel app and generate the generic Laravel auth scaffold:

$ php artisan make:auth

Step 2

Head into the Laravel database migrations files and find the create_users_table migration. (Hint: it's in database/migrations.) From there, add two columns to the users table for a token and an is verified field. The verified will default to zero for false.

public function up() { Schema::create('users', function (Blueprint $table) { $table->increments('id'); $table->string('name'); $table->string('email')->unique(); $table->string('password'); $table->tinyInteger('verified')->default(0); $table->string('email_token')->nullable(); $table->rememberToken(); $table->timestamps(); }); }

Step 3

Add a queue table for queued jobs and failed jobs, then migrate the database to set it all up.

$ php artisan queue:table $ php artisan queue:failed-table $ php artisan migrate

If you get an error saying access denied, make sure you create a MySQL database for your Laravel app to connect to. You can do that by running mysql -uroot -p and then the sql command create database laravelemailverification; . Download something like Sequel Pro to view your tables and database content.

Step 4

For the migration to work you'll already have to have modified your .env file to connect to your database. Now we're going to modify it to connect to a queue driver and mail driver. This is going to use the database as a queue driver and gmail for verification emails.

APP_URL=http://localhost:8000 QUEUE_DRIVER=database MAIL_DRIVER=smtp MAIL_HOST=smtp.gmail.com MAIL_PORT=587 MAIL_USERNAME=connorleech@gmail.com MAIL_PASSWORD= MAIL_ENCRYPTION=tls MAIL_FROM_ADDRESS=connorleech@gmail.com MAIL_FROM_NAME="Connor"

For the new values to take effect you may need to run php artisan config:clear

If you are sending emails from Gmail you'll have to turn off additional protections. Head to https://www.google.com/settings/security/lesssecureapps and turn off this setting. Without this, Google will block your Laravel app's sign in attempts.

Step 5

Create the email that you want to send to the user. There is a handy artisan command for scaffolding emails:

$ php artisan make:mail EmailVerification

That file is in app/Mail and can be modified to look like so:

<?php namespace App\Mail; use Illuminate\Bus\Queueable; use Illuminate\Mail\Mailable; use Illuminate\Queue\SerializesModels; use Illuminate\Contracts\Queue\ShouldQueue; class EmailVerification extends Mailable { use Queueable, SerializesModels; protected $user; /** * Create a new message instance. * * @return void */ public function __construct($user) { $this->user = $user; } /** * Build the message. * * @return $this */ public function build() { return $this->view('email.verify_account')->with([ 'email_token' => $this->user->email_token ]); } }

Step 6

Create the email view within resources/views/email/verify_account.blade.php:

<h3>Click the Link To Verify Your Email</h3> Click the following link to verify your email {{ url('/verifyemail/' . $email_token) }}

Step 7

Now we need to make a new job that will fire off the email:

$ php artisan make:job SendVerificationEmail

That job will live in app/Jobs. We pass in the user and send a verification email within this job. In order to have your queue active and listening for jobs you need a separate tab from your php artisan serve running php artisan queue:work . If you are making frontend changes you're going to want to have npm run watch running in a third tab, but frontend Javascript is out of the scope of this tutorial.

<?php namespace App\Jobs; use Illuminate\Bus\Queueable; use Illuminate\Queue\SerializesModels; use Illuminate\Queue\InteractsWithQueue; use Illuminate\Contracts\Queue\ShouldQueue; use Illuminate\Foundation\Bus\Dispatchable; use Mail; use App\Mail\EmailVerification; class SendVerificationEmail implements ShouldQueue { use Dispatchable, InteractsWithQueue, Queueable, SerializesModels; protected $user; /** * Create a new job instance. * * @return void */ public function __construct($user) { $this->user = $user; } /** * Execute the job. * * @return void */ public function handle() { $email = new EmailVerification($this->user); Mail::to($this->user->email)->send($email); } }

Step 8

Update the RegisterController.php:

<?php namespace App\Http\Controllers\Auth; use App\User; use App\Http\Controllers\Controller; use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Hash; use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator; use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\RegistersUsers; use Illuminate\Auth\Events\Registered; use Illuminate\Http\Request; use App\Jobs\SendVerificationEmail; class RegisterController extends Controller { /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Register Controller |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | This controller handles the registration of new users as well as their | validation and creation. By default this controller uses a trait to | provide this functionality without requiring any additional code. | */ use RegistersUsers; /** * Where to redirect users after registration. * * @var string */ protected $redirectTo = '/home'; /** * Create a new controller instance. * * @return void */ public function __construct() { $this->middleware('guest'); } /** * Get a validator for an incoming registration request. * * @param array $data * @return \Illuminate\Contracts\Validation\Validator */ protected function validator(array $data) { return Validator::make($data, [ 'name' => 'required|string|max:255', 'email' => 'required|string|email|max:255|unique:users', 'password' => 'required|string|min:6|confirmed', ]); } /** * Create a new user instance after a valid registration. * * @param array $data * @return \App\User */ protected function create(array $data) { return User::create([ 'name' => $data['name'], 'email' => $data['email'], 'password' => Hash::make($data['password']), 'email_token' => base64_encode($data['email']), ]); } /** * Handle a registration request for the application. * * @param \Illuminate\Http\Request $request * @return \Illuminate\Http\Response */ public function register(Request $request) { $this->validator($request->all())->validate(); event(new Registered($user = $this->create($request->all()))); dispatch(new SendVerificationEmail($user)); return view('verification'); } /** * Handle a registration request for the application. * * @param $token * @return \Illuminate\Http\Response */ public function verify($token) { $user = User::where('email_token', $token)->first(); $user->verified = 1; if($user->save()){ return view('emailconfirm', ['user' => $user]); } } }

Step 9

and add the views…

resources/views/email/verify_account.blade.php

<h1>Click the Link To Verify Your Email</h1> Click the following link to verify your email {{ url('/verifyemail/' . $email_token) }}

resources/views/verification.blade.php

@extends('layouts.app') @section('content') <div class="container"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-8 col-md-offset-2"> <div class="panel panel-default"> <div class="panel-heading">Registration</div> <div class="panel-body"> You have successfully registered. An email is sent to you for verification. </div> </div> </div> </div> @endsection

resources/views/emailconfirm.blade.php

@extends('layouts.app') @section('content') <div class="container"> <div class="row"> <div class="col-md-8 col-md-offset-2"> <div class="panel panel-default"> <div class="panel-heading">Registration Confirmed</div> <div class="panel-body"> Your Email is successfully verified. Click here to <a href="{{ url('/login') }}">login</a> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> @endsection

Fin!

That's it! Register for your application locally and you'll be redirected to the “we sent you an email screen”. Check your email, click the link and your account will be verified. From there you'll be able to login successfully. All of our testing here is done locally. To get your application live to the internet you could deploy to heroku. As an exercise for the reader you could switch your queue driver to Redis with Laravel Horizon, or leave it as is and start building the rest of your app.

If you have any questions shoot me an email (above) or hit me up on twitter.