├── html ├── favicon.ico ├── .gitignore ├── robots.txt ├── .htaccess └── index.php ├── bootstrap ├── cache │ └── .gitignore ├── autoload.php └── app.php ├── storage ├── logs │ └── .gitignore ├── app │ ├── public │ │ └── .gitignore │ └── .gitignore ├── framework │ ├── cache │ │ └── .gitignore │ ├── testing │ │ └── .gitignore │ ├── views │ │ └── .gitignore │ ├── sessions │ │ └── .gitignore │ └── .gitignore └── dotenv-editor │ └── .gitignore ├── .gitignore ├── config ├── sms.php ├── view.php ├── services.php ├── broadcasting.php ├── filesystems.php ├── queue.php ├── cache.php ├── auth.php ├── database.php ├── mail.php ├── app.php └── session.php ├── server.php ├── .env.example ├── composer.json ├── artisan └── README.md /html/favicon.ico: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /html/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | assets -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /bootstrap/cache/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /html/robots.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | User-agent: * 2 | Disallow: 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/logs/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/app/public/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/app/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !public/ 3 | !.gitignore 4 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/framework/cache/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/framework/testing/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/framework/views/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/framework/sessions/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | * 2 | !.gitignore 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/dotenv-editor/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | /backups 2 | * 3 | !.gitignore 4 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | vendor 2 | .DS_Store 3 | .idea 4 | Modules/ 5 | composer.lock 6 | .env 7 | !/storage/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /storage/framework/.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | config.php 2 | routes.php 3 | schedule-* 4 | compiled.php 5 | services.json 6 | events.scanned.php 7 | routes.scanned.php 8 | down 9 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/sms.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('SMS_GATEWAY'), 4 | 'smsbin' => [ 5 | 'url' => env('SMSBIN_API_URL'), 6 | 'key' => env('SMSBIN_API_KEY'), 7 | 'senderid' => env('SMSBIN_API_SENDERID'), 8 | 'routeid' => env('SMSBIN_API_ROUTE_ID'), 9 | ], 10 | 11 | 'msg91' => [ 12 | 'url' => env('MSG91_API_URL'), 13 | 'key' => env('MSG91_API_KEY'), 14 | 'senderid' => env('MSG91_API_SENDERID'), 15 | 'routeid' => env('MSG91_API_ROUTE_ID'), 16 | ] 17 | ]; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /bootstrap/autoload.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | 3 | Options -MultiViews 4 | 5 | 6 | RewriteEngine On 7 | 8 | # Redirect Trailing Slashes If Not A Folder... 9 | RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d 10 | RewriteRule ^(.*)/$ /$1 [L,R=301] 11 | 12 | # Handle Front Controller... 13 | RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d 14 | RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f 15 | RewriteRule ^ index.php [L] 16 | 17 | # Handle Authorization Header 18 | RewriteCond %{HTTP:Authorization} . 19 | RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%{HTTP:Authorization}] 20 | 21 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /server.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 8 | */ 9 | 10 | $uri = urldecode( 11 | parse_url($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'], PHP_URL_PATH) 12 | ); 13 | 14 | // This file allows us to emulate Apache's "mod_rewrite" functionality from the 15 | // built-in PHP web server. This provides a convenient way to test a Laravel 16 | // application without having installed a "real" web server software here. 17 | if ($uri !== '/' && file_exists(__DIR__.'/html'.$uri)) { 18 | return false; 19 | } 20 | 21 | require_once __DIR__.'/html/index.php'; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /.env.example: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | APP_NAME="Access Manager" 2 | APP_ENV=local 3 | APP_KEY= 4 | APP_DEBUG=true 5 | APP_LOG_LEVEL=debug 6 | APP_URL=http://localhost 7 | APP_TIMEZONE="UTC" 8 | 9 | DB_CONNECTION=mysql 10 | DB_HOST=127.0.0.1 11 | DB_PORT=3306 12 | DB_DATABASE=acmanager 13 | DB_USERNAME=root 14 | DB_PASSWORD=root 15 | 16 | BROADCAST_DRIVER=log 17 | CACHE_DRIVER=file 18 | SESSION_DRIVER=file 19 | QUEUE_DRIVER=sync 20 | 21 | REDIS_HOST=127.0.0.1 22 | REDIS_PASSWORD=null 23 | REDIS_PORT=6379 24 | 25 | MAIL_DRIVER=smtp 26 | MAIL_HOST=smtp.mailtrap.io 27 | MAIL_PORT=2525 28 | MAIL_USERNAME=null 29 | MAIL_PASSWORD=null 30 | MAIL_ENCRYPTION=null 31 | 32 | PUSHER_APP_ID= 33 | PUSHER_APP_KEY= 34 | PUSHER_APP_SECRET= -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /composer.json: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | { 2 | "name": "access-manager/access-manager", 3 | "description": "The Hotspot Management System", 4 | "keywords": ["access manager","wifi", "hotspot", "mikrotik"], 5 | "license": "MIT", 6 | "type": "project", 7 | "homepage": "http://accessmanager.in", 8 | "require": { 9 | "php": ">=5.6.4", 10 | "access-manager/base": "3.*" 11 | }, 12 | "scripts": { 13 | "post-root-package-install": [ 14 | "@php -r \"file_exists('.env') || copy('.env.example', '.env');\"" 15 | ], 16 | "post-create-project-cmd": [ 17 | "@php artisan key:generate" 18 | ], 19 | "post-autoload-dump": [ 20 | "Illuminate\\Foundation\\ComposerScripts::postAutoloadDump" 21 | ] 22 | }, 23 | "config": { 24 | "sort-packages": true, 25 | "optimize-autoloader": true 26 | }, 27 | "minimum-stability": "dev", 28 | "prefer-stable": true 29 | } 30 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/view.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | [ 17 | resource_path('views'), 18 | ], 19 | 20 | /* 21 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | | Compiled View Path 23 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 24 | | 25 | | This option determines where all the compiled Blade templates will be 26 | | stored for your application. Typically, this is within the storage 27 | | directory. However, as usual, you are free to change this value. 28 | | 29 | */ 30 | 31 | 'compiled' => realpath(storage_path('framework/views')), 32 | 33 | ]; 34 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/services.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | [ 18 | 'domain' => env('MAILGUN_DOMAIN'), 19 | 'secret' => env('MAILGUN_SECRET'), 20 | ], 21 | 22 | 'ses' => [ 23 | 'key' => env('SES_KEY'), 24 | 'secret' => env('SES_SECRET'), 25 | 'region' => 'us-east-1', 26 | ], 27 | 28 | 'sparkpost' => [ 29 | 'secret' => env('SPARKPOST_SECRET'), 30 | ], 31 | 32 | 'stripe' => [ 33 | 'model' => App\User::class, 34 | 'key' => env('STRIPE_KEY'), 35 | 'secret' => env('STRIPE_SECRET'), 36 | ], 37 | 38 | ]; 39 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/broadcasting.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('BROADCAST_DRIVER', 'null'), 19 | 20 | /* 21 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | | Broadcast Connections 23 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 24 | | 25 | | Here you may define all of the broadcast connections that will be used 26 | | to broadcast events to other systems or over websockets. Samples of 27 | | each available type of connection are provided inside this array. 28 | | 29 | */ 30 | 31 | 'connections' => [ 32 | 33 | 'pusher' => [ 34 | 'driver' => 'pusher', 35 | 'key' => env('PUSHER_APP_KEY'), 36 | 'secret' => env('PUSHER_APP_SECRET'), 37 | 'app_id' => env('PUSHER_APP_ID'), 38 | 'options' => [ 39 | // 40 | ], 41 | ], 42 | 43 | 'redis' => [ 44 | 'driver' => 'redis', 45 | 'connection' => 'default', 46 | ], 47 | 48 | 'log' => [ 49 | 'driver' => 'log', 50 | ], 51 | 52 | 'null' => [ 53 | 'driver' => 'null', 54 | ], 55 | 56 | ], 57 | 58 | ]; 59 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /artisan: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/usr/bin/env php 2 | make(Illuminate\Contracts\Console\Kernel::class); 32 | 33 | $status = $kernel->handle( 34 | $input = new Symfony\Component\Console\Input\ArgvInput, 35 | new Symfony\Component\Console\Output\ConsoleOutput 36 | ); 37 | 38 | /* 39 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40 | | Shutdown The Application 41 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 42 | | 43 | | Once Artisan has finished running, we will fire off the shutdown events 44 | | so that any final work may be done by the application before we shut 45 | | down the process. This is the last thing to happen to the request. 46 | | 47 | */ 48 | 49 | $kernel->terminate($input, $status); 50 | 51 | exit($status); 52 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /bootstrap/app.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | singleton( 30 | Illuminate\Contracts\Http\Kernel::class, 31 | \AccessManager\Base\Kernel\Http::class 32 | ); 33 | 34 | $app->singleton( 35 | Illuminate\Contracts\Console\Kernel::class, 36 | \AccessManager\Base\Kernel\Console::class 37 | ); 38 | 39 | $app->singleton( 40 | Illuminate\Contracts\Debug\ExceptionHandler::class, 41 | \AccessManager\Base\Exception\Handler::class 42 | ); 43 | 44 | /* 45 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 46 | | Return The Application 47 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 | | 49 | | This script returns the application instance. The instance is given to 50 | | the calling script so we can separate the building of the instances 51 | | from the actual running of the application and sending responses. 52 | | 53 | */ 54 | 55 | return $app; 56 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /html/index.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 8 | */ 9 | 10 | /* 11 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 | | Register The Auto Loader 13 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 | | 15 | | Composer provides a convenient, automatically generated class loader for 16 | | our application. We just need to utilize it! We'll simply require it 17 | | into the script here so that we don't have to worry about manual 18 | | loading any of our classes later on. It feels great to relax. 19 | | 20 | */ 21 | 22 | require __DIR__.'/../bootstrap/autoload.php'; 23 | 24 | /* 25 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 26 | | Turn On The Lights 27 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 28 | | 29 | | We need to illuminate PHP development, so let us turn on the lights. 30 | | This bootstraps the framework and gets it ready for use, then it 31 | | will load up this application so that we can run it and send 32 | | the responses back to the browser and delight our users. 33 | | 34 | */ 35 | 36 | $app = require_once __DIR__.'/../bootstrap/app.php'; 37 | 38 | /* 39 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40 | | Run The Application 41 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 42 | | 43 | | Once we have the application, we can handle the incoming request 44 | | through the kernel, and send the associated response back to 45 | | the client's browser allowing them to enjoy the creative 46 | | and wonderful application we have prepared for them. 47 | | 48 | */ 49 | 50 | $kernel = $app->make(Illuminate\Contracts\Http\Kernel::class); 51 | 52 | $response = $kernel->handle( 53 | $request = Illuminate\Http\Request::capture() 54 | ); 55 | 56 | $response->send(); 57 | 58 | $kernel->terminate($request, $response); 59 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/filesystems.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('FILESYSTEM_DRIVER', 'local'), 17 | 18 | /* 19 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20 | | Default Cloud Filesystem Disk 21 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | | 23 | | Many applications store files both locally and in the cloud. For this 24 | | reason, you may specify a default "cloud" driver here. This driver 25 | | will be bound as the Cloud disk implementation in the container. 26 | | 27 | */ 28 | 29 | 'cloud' => env('FILESYSTEM_CLOUD', 's3'), 30 | 31 | /* 32 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 33 | | Filesystem Disks 34 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 35 | | 36 | | Here you may configure as many filesystem "disks" as you wish, and you 37 | | may even configure multiple disks of the same driver. Defaults have 38 | | been setup for each driver as an example of the required options. 39 | | 40 | | Supported Drivers: "local", "ftp", "s3", "rackspace" 41 | | 42 | */ 43 | 44 | 'disks' => [ 45 | 46 | 'local' => [ 47 | 'driver' => 'local', 48 | 'root' => storage_path('app'), 49 | ], 50 | 51 | 'public' => [ 52 | 'driver' => 'local', 53 | 'root' => storage_path('app/public'), 54 | 'url' => env('APP_URL').'/storage', 55 | 'visibility' => 'public', 56 | ], 57 | 58 | 's3' => [ 59 | 'driver' => 's3', 60 | 'key' => env('AWS_KEY'), 61 | 'secret' => env('AWS_SECRET'), 62 | 'region' => env('AWS_REGION'), 63 | 'bucket' => env('AWS_BUCKET'), 64 | ], 65 | 66 | ], 67 | 68 | ]; 69 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/queue.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('QUEUE_DRIVER', 'sync'), 19 | 20 | /* 21 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | | Queue Connections 23 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 24 | | 25 | | Here you may configure the connection information for each server that 26 | | is used by your application. A default configuration has been added 27 | | for each back-end shipped with Laravel. You are free to add more. 28 | | 29 | */ 30 | 31 | 'connections' => [ 32 | 33 | 'sync' => [ 34 | 'driver' => 'sync', 35 | ], 36 | 37 | 'database' => [ 38 | 'driver' => 'database', 39 | 'table' => 'jobs', 40 | 'queue' => 'default', 41 | 'retry_after' => 90, 42 | ], 43 | 44 | 'beanstalkd' => [ 45 | 'driver' => 'beanstalkd', 46 | 'host' => 'localhost', 47 | 'queue' => 'default', 48 | 'retry_after' => 90, 49 | ], 50 | 51 | 'sqs' => [ 52 | 'driver' => 'sqs', 53 | 'key' => 'your-public-key', 54 | 'secret' => 'your-secret-key', 55 | 'prefix' => 'https://sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/your-account-id', 56 | 'queue' => 'your-queue-name', 57 | 'region' => 'us-east-1', 58 | ], 59 | 60 | 'redis' => [ 61 | 'driver' => 'redis', 62 | 'connection' => 'default', 63 | 'queue' => 'default', 64 | 'retry_after' => 90, 65 | ], 66 | 67 | ], 68 | 69 | /* 70 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 71 | | Failed Queue Jobs 72 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 73 | | 74 | | These options configure the behavior of failed queue job logging so you 75 | | can control which database and table are used to store the jobs that 76 | | have failed. You may change them to any database / table you wish. 77 | | 78 | */ 79 | 80 | 'failed' => [ 81 | 'database' => env('DB_CONNECTION', 'mysql'), 82 | 'table' => 'failed_jobs', 83 | ], 84 | 85 | ]; 86 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/cache.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('CACHE_DRIVER', 'file'), 19 | 20 | /* 21 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | | Cache Stores 23 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 24 | | 25 | | Here you may define all of the cache "stores" for your application as 26 | | well as their drivers. You may even define multiple stores for the 27 | | same cache driver to group types of items stored in your caches. 28 | | 29 | */ 30 | 31 | 'stores' => [ 32 | 33 | 'apc' => [ 34 | 'driver' => 'apc', 35 | ], 36 | 37 | 'array' => [ 38 | 'driver' => 'array', 39 | ], 40 | 41 | 'database' => [ 42 | 'driver' => 'database', 43 | 'table' => 'cache', 44 | 'connection' => null, 45 | ], 46 | 47 | 'file' => [ 48 | 'driver' => 'file', 49 | 'path' => storage_path('framework/cache/data'), 50 | ], 51 | 52 | 'memcached' => [ 53 | 'driver' => 'memcached', 54 | 'persistent_id' => env('MEMCACHED_PERSISTENT_ID'), 55 | 'sasl' => [ 56 | env('MEMCACHED_USERNAME'), 57 | env('MEMCACHED_PASSWORD'), 58 | ], 59 | 'options' => [ 60 | // Memcached::OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT => 2000, 61 | ], 62 | 'servers' => [ 63 | [ 64 | 'host' => env('MEMCACHED_HOST', '127.0.0.1'), 65 | 'port' => env('MEMCACHED_PORT', 11211), 66 | 'weight' => 100, 67 | ], 68 | ], 69 | ], 70 | 71 | 'redis' => [ 72 | 'driver' => 'redis', 73 | 'connection' => 'default', 74 | ], 75 | 76 | ], 77 | 78 | /* 79 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 | | Cache Key Prefix 81 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 82 | | 83 | | When utilizing a RAM based store such as APC or Memcached, there might 84 | | be other applications utilizing the same cache. So, we'll specify a 85 | | value to get prefixed to all our keys so we can avoid collisions. 86 | | 87 | */ 88 | 89 | 'prefix' => 'laravel', 90 | 91 | ]; 92 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/auth.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | [ 17 | 'guard' => 'web', 18 | 'passwords' => 'users', 19 | ], 20 | 21 | /* 22 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 23 | | Authentication Guards 24 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 | | 26 | | Next, you may define every authentication guard for your application. 27 | | Of course, a great default configuration has been defined for you 28 | | here which uses session storage and the Eloquent user provider. 29 | | 30 | | All authentication drivers have a user provider. This defines how the 31 | | users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage 32 | | mechanisms used by this application to persist your user's data. 33 | | 34 | | Supported: "session", "token" 35 | | 36 | */ 37 | 38 | 'guards' => [ 39 | 'web' => [ 40 | 'driver' => 'session', 41 | 'provider' => 'users', 42 | ], 43 | 44 | 'api' => [ 45 | 'driver' => 'token', 46 | 'provider' => 'users', 47 | ], 48 | ], 49 | 50 | /* 51 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 52 | | User Providers 53 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 54 | | 55 | | All authentication drivers have a user provider. This defines how the 56 | | users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage 57 | | mechanisms used by this application to persist your user's data. 58 | | 59 | | If you have multiple user tables or models you may configure multiple 60 | | sources which represent each model / table. These sources may then 61 | | be assigned to any extra authentication guards you have defined. 62 | | 63 | | Supported: "database", "eloquent" 64 | | 65 | */ 66 | 67 | 'providers' => [ 68 | 'users' => [ 69 | 'driver' => 'eloquent', 70 | 'model' => \AccessManager\Auth\Models\User::class, 71 | ], 72 | 73 | // 'users' => [ 74 | // 'driver' => 'database', 75 | // 'table' => 'users', 76 | // ], 77 | ], 78 | 79 | /* 80 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 81 | | Resetting Passwords 82 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 83 | | 84 | | You may specify multiple password reset configurations if you have more 85 | | than one user table or model in the application and you want to have 86 | | separate password reset settings based on the specific user types. 87 | | 88 | | The expire time is the number of minutes that the reset token should be 89 | | considered valid. This security feature keeps tokens short-lived so 90 | | they have less time to be guessed. You may change this as needed. 91 | | 92 | */ 93 | 94 | 'passwords' => [ 95 | 'users' => [ 96 | 'provider' => 'users', 97 | 'table' => 'password_resets', 98 | 'expire' => 60, 99 | ], 100 | ], 101 | 102 | ]; 103 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/database.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('DB_CONNECTION', 'mysql'), 17 | 18 | /* 19 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 20 | | Database Connections 21 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 | | 23 | | Here are each of the database connections setup for your application. 24 | | Of course, examples of configuring each database platform that is 25 | | supported by Laravel is shown below to make development simple. 26 | | 27 | | 28 | | All database work in Laravel is done through the PHP PDO facilities 29 | | so make sure you have the driver for your particular database of 30 | | choice installed on your machine before you begin development. 31 | | 32 | */ 33 | 34 | 'connections' => [ 35 | 36 | 'sqlite' => [ 37 | 'driver' => 'sqlite', 38 | 'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', database_path('database.sqlite')), 39 | 'prefix' => '', 40 | ], 41 | 42 | 'mysql' => [ 43 | 'driver' => 'mysql', 44 | 'host' => env('DB_HOST', '127.0.0.1'), 45 | 'port' => env('DB_PORT', '3306'), 46 | 'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'forge'), 47 | 'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'forge'), 48 | 'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''), 49 | 'unix_socket' => env('DB_SOCKET', ''), 50 | 'charset' => 'utf8mb4', 51 | 'collation' => 'utf8mb4_unicode_ci', 52 | 'prefix' => '', 53 | 'strict' => true, 54 | 'engine' => null, 55 | ], 56 | 57 | 'pgsql' => [ 58 | 'driver' => 'pgsql', 59 | 'host' => env('DB_HOST', '127.0.0.1'), 60 | 'port' => env('DB_PORT', '5432'), 61 | 'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'forge'), 62 | 'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'forge'), 63 | 'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''), 64 | 'charset' => 'utf8', 65 | 'prefix' => '', 66 | 'schema' => 'public', 67 | 'sslmode' => 'prefer', 68 | ], 69 | 70 | 'sqlsrv' => [ 71 | 'driver' => 'sqlsrv', 72 | 'host' => env('DB_HOST', 'localhost'), 73 | 'port' => env('DB_PORT', '1433'), 74 | 'database' => env('DB_DATABASE', 'forge'), 75 | 'username' => env('DB_USERNAME', 'forge'), 76 | 'password' => env('DB_PASSWORD', ''), 77 | 'charset' => 'utf8', 78 | 'prefix' => '', 79 | ], 80 | 81 | ], 82 | 83 | /* 84 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 85 | | Migration Repository Table 86 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 87 | | 88 | | This table keeps track of all the migrations that have already run for 89 | | your application. Using this information, we can determine which of 90 | | the migrations on disk haven't actually been run in the database. 91 | | 92 | */ 93 | 94 | 'migrations' => 'migrations', 95 | 96 | /* 97 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 98 | | Redis Databases 99 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 100 | | 101 | | Redis is an open source, fast, and advanced key-value store that also 102 | | provides a richer set of commands than a typical key-value systems 103 | | such as APC or Memcached. Laravel makes it easy to dig right in. 104 | | 105 | */ 106 | 107 | 'redis' => [ 108 | 109 | 'client' => 'predis', 110 | 111 | 'default' => [ 112 | 'host' => env('REDIS_HOST', '127.0.0.1'), 113 | 'password' => env('REDIS_PASSWORD', null), 114 | 'port' => env('REDIS_PORT', 6379), 115 | 'database' => 0, 116 | ], 117 | 118 | ], 119 | 120 | ]; 121 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/mail.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('MAIL_DRIVER', 'smtp'), 20 | 21 | /* 22 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 23 | | SMTP Host Address 24 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 | | 26 | | Here you may provide the host address of the SMTP server used by your 27 | | applications. A default option is provided that is compatible with 28 | | the Mailgun mail service which will provide reliable deliveries. 29 | | 30 | */ 31 | 32 | 'host' => env('MAIL_HOST', 'smtp.mailgun.org'), 33 | 34 | /* 35 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 36 | | SMTP Host Port 37 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 38 | | 39 | | This is the SMTP port used by your application to deliver e-mails to 40 | | users of the application. Like the host we have set this value to 41 | | stay compatible with the Mailgun e-mail application by default. 42 | | 43 | */ 44 | 45 | 'port' => env('MAIL_PORT', 587), 46 | 47 | /* 48 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 49 | | Global "From" Address 50 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 51 | | 52 | | You may wish for all e-mails sent by your application to be sent from 53 | | the same address. Here, you may specify a name and address that is 54 | | used globally for all e-mails that are sent by your application. 55 | | 56 | */ 57 | 58 | 'from' => [ 59 | 'address' => env('MAIL_FROM_ADDRESS', 'hello@example.com'), 60 | 'name' => env('MAIL_FROM_NAME', 'Example'), 61 | ], 62 | 63 | /* 64 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 65 | | E-Mail Encryption Protocol 66 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 67 | | 68 | | Here you may specify the encryption protocol that should be used when 69 | | the application send e-mail messages. A sensible default using the 70 | | transport layer security protocol should provide great security. 71 | | 72 | */ 73 | 74 | 'encryption' => env('MAIL_ENCRYPTION', 'tls'), 75 | 76 | /* 77 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 78 | | SMTP Server Username 79 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 | | 81 | | If your SMTP server requires a username for authentication, you should 82 | | set it here. This will get used to authenticate with your server on 83 | | connection. You may also set the "password" value below this one. 84 | | 85 | */ 86 | 87 | 'username' => env('MAIL_USERNAME'), 88 | 89 | 'password' => env('MAIL_PASSWORD'), 90 | 91 | /* 92 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 93 | | Sendmail System Path 94 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 95 | | 96 | | When using the "sendmail" driver to send e-mails, we will need to know 97 | | the path to where Sendmail lives on this server. A default path has 98 | | been provided here, which will work well on most of your systems. 99 | | 100 | */ 101 | 102 | 'sendmail' => '/usr/sbin/sendmail -bs', 103 | 104 | /* 105 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 106 | | Markdown Mail Settings 107 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 108 | | 109 | | If you are using Markdown based email rendering, you may configure your 110 | | theme and component paths here, allowing you to customize the design 111 | | of the emails. Or, you may simply stick with the Laravel defaults! 112 | | 113 | */ 114 | 115 | 'markdown' => [ 116 | 'theme' => 'default', 117 | 118 | 'paths' => [ 119 | resource_path('views/vendor/mail'), 120 | ], 121 | ], 122 | 123 | ]; 124 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/app.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('APP_NAME', 'Access Manager'), 16 | 17 | /* 18 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 | | Application Environment 20 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21 | | 22 | | This value determines the "environment" your application is currently 23 | | running in. This may determine how you prefer to configure various 24 | | services your application utilizes. Set this in your ".env" file. 25 | | 26 | */ 27 | 28 | 'env' => env('APP_ENV', 'production'), 29 | 30 | /* 31 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 32 | | Application Debug Mode 33 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 34 | | 35 | | When your application is in debug mode, detailed error messages with 36 | | stack traces will be shown on every error that occurs within your 37 | | application. If disabled, a simple generic error page is shown. 38 | | 39 | */ 40 | 41 | 'debug' => env('APP_DEBUG', false), 42 | 43 | /* 44 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 45 | | Application URL 46 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 47 | | 48 | | This URL is used by the console to properly generate URLs when using 49 | | the Artisan command line tool. You should set this to the root of 50 | | your application so that it is used when running Artisan tasks. 51 | | 52 | */ 53 | 54 | 'url' => env('APP_URL', 'http://localhost'), 55 | 56 | /* 57 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 58 | | Application Timezone 59 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 60 | | 61 | | Here you may specify the default timezone for your application, which 62 | | will be used by the PHP date and date-time functions. We have gone 63 | | ahead and set this to a sensible default for you out of the box. 64 | | 65 | */ 66 | 67 | 'timezone' => env('APP_TIMEZONE', 'UTC'), 68 | 69 | /* 70 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 71 | | Application Locale Configuration 72 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 73 | | 74 | | The application locale determines the default locale that will be used 75 | | by the translation service provider. You are free to set this value 76 | | to any of the locales which will be supported by the application. 77 | | 78 | */ 79 | 80 | 'locale' => 'en', 81 | 82 | /* 83 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 84 | | Application Fallback Locale 85 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 86 | | 87 | | The fallback locale determines the locale to use when the current one 88 | | is not available. You may change the value to correspond to any of 89 | | the language folders that are provided through your application. 90 | | 91 | */ 92 | 93 | 'fallback_locale' => 'en', 94 | 95 | /* 96 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 97 | | Encryption Key 98 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 99 | | 100 | | This key is used by the Illuminate encrypter service and should be set 101 | | to a random, 32 character string, otherwise these encrypted strings 102 | | will not be safe. Please do this before deploying an application! 103 | | 104 | */ 105 | 106 | 'key' => env('APP_KEY'), 107 | 108 | 'cipher' => 'AES-256-CBC', 109 | 110 | /* 111 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 112 | | Logging Configuration 113 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 114 | | 115 | | Here you may configure the log settings for your application. Out of 116 | | the box, Laravel uses the Monolog PHP logging library. This gives 117 | | you a variety of powerful log handlers / formatters to utilize. 118 | | 119 | | Available Settings: "single", "daily", "syslog", "errorlog" 120 | | 121 | */ 122 | 123 | 'log' => env('APP_LOG', 'single'), 124 | 125 | 'log_level' => env('APP_LOG_LEVEL', 'debug'), 126 | 127 | /* 128 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 129 | | Autoloaded Service Providers 130 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 131 | | 132 | | The service providers listed here will be automatically loaded on the 133 | | request to your application. Feel free to add your own services to 134 | | this array to grant expanded functionality to your applications. 135 | | 136 | */ 137 | 138 | 'providers' => [ 139 | \AccessManager\Base\Providers\BaseServiceProvider::class, 140 | ], 141 | 142 | ]; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Access Manager - Subscriber Manager for ISPs 2 | 3 | 4 | Access Manager is a centralised radius based subscriber management system for 5 | WiFI Hotspot operators and Small/Medium ISPs. It supports Mikrotik as a NAC. It includes most of the features 6 | related to subscriber management. Including subscriber account, free/paid subscriptions, 7 | prepaid voucher generation and limiting subscription services based on 8 | data/time limit among others. 9 | 10 | ### Supported NAC/Router Vendors: 11 | - Mikrotik 12 | 13 | ## Installation 14 | Access Manager is written in PHP (Laravel Framework) and uses MySQL for database storage. Thus requires one time setup 15 | process to be followed. And this is going to be a lengthy one. And with that in mind, lets get started. 16 | 17 | ### Prerequisite 18 | - Basic Knowledge of Linux Operating System 19 | 20 | Though Access Manager can be installed on any linux flavor, 21 | however in this example we'll be using Ubuntu Server 16.04 LTS. And I assume you have configured network interface 22 | with IP address of 192.168.1.10/24. 23 | 24 | This is considered good practice to update your system packages time to time, so run following command to 25 | check & install available updates. 26 | 27 | ``` 28 | $ sudo apt update 29 | $ sudo apt upgrade 30 | ``` 31 | 32 | Next install the required packages: 33 | 34 | ``` 35 | $ sudo apt install apache2 libapache2-mod-php php7.0 php-zip php7.0-mbstring php7.0-bcmath php7.0-mysql mysql-server freeradius freeradius-mysql freeradius-utils 36 | ``` 37 | **NOTE:** 38 | During the installation you'll be asked to set root password for MySQL server, choose a strong password 39 | and make a note of it, you'll need it later. 40 | 41 | Access Manager manages its dependencies & updates using composer. 42 | So, before we can download Access Manager, we need to download composer by 43 | following instructions from official composer website: 44 | https://getcomposer.org/download/ 45 | 46 | After downloading composer you'll end up with `composer.phar` in current directory. 47 | After that, issue following commands: 48 | 49 | ``` 50 | $ chmod +x composer.phar 51 | $ sudo mv composer.phar /usr/bin/composer 52 | ``` 53 | 54 | The above mentioned commands will add executable bit to the composer file and move it to /usr/bin 55 | to make it globally accessible. 56 | 57 | After having composer in place, we're ready to download Access Manager. In this example we'll download the project in 58 | current user's home directory. In case you're already not in the home directory type `cd` to change to home directory 59 | and `pwd` will output the path to current working directory, if you want to verify. 60 | 61 | Now, to download Access Manager project issue following command: 62 | 63 | ``` 64 | $ composer create-project access-manager/access-manager -s beta 65 | ``` 66 | 67 | Above mentioned command will download Access Manager 3.0-BETA & its dependencies. We'll also need to create a database 68 | we want to use for Access Manager. Use following commands to create a new databased called `acmanager`, 69 | you can choose whatever you want to name it: 70 | 71 | when prompted enter the password for MySQL root user, you set during MySQL installation. 72 | 73 | ``` 74 | $ mysql -u root -p 75 | mysql> create database acmanager; 76 | ``` 77 | 78 | Press `ctrl+d` to get out of MySQL prompt. 79 | 80 | Still being in the home directory issue following commands to get into project directory 81 | & make the storage directory writeable: 82 | 83 | ``` 84 | $ cd access-manager 85 | $ chmod 777 -R storage 86 | ``` 87 | 88 | Since this is a fresh install, run following command for configuration setup. 89 | 90 | _This command will ask for a few inputs including MySQL username/password. For testing you can provide 91 | root username & password, but **it is strongly recommended to create a new user with less privileges for 92 | production server.**_ 93 | 94 | ``` 95 | $ php artisan setup:fresh 96 | ``` 97 | 98 | Access Manager setup is complete but we need to configure apache web server to serve our project. If you want to host 99 | other projects/websites on this server multiple virtual servers can be created. But for this example I'll 100 | edit the default virtual server. Use following command to open virtualserver config file using vim text editor: 101 | 102 | ``` 103 | $ sudo vim /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/000-default.conf 104 | ``` 105 | 106 | In this file we need to make two modifications: 107 | 1. change document root to `/home/{Your_User_Name}/access-manager/html` 108 | 2. add following code block somewhere within .... block. 109 | ``` 110 | 111 | Options Indexes FollowSymLinks 112 | AllowOverride all 113 | Require all granted 114 | 115 | ``` 116 | 117 | Next step is to enable rewrite mode for apache. 118 | 119 | ``` 120 | $ sudo a2enmod rewrite 121 | ``` 122 | 123 | Now, for the changes to take effect, restart apache server with following command: 124 | 125 | ``` 126 | $ sudo service apache2 restart 127 | ``` 128 | 129 | At this point, you should be able to access the project by pointing your browser to IP address of the server, which 130 | in this case is 192.168.1.10. Login using admin credentials & create new accouts, subscriptions, routers and all other 131 | features of Access Manager. But one more thing left to be configured is freeradius. Installing & configuring Freeradius 132 | is same as earlier versions of Access Manager ie. 2.*. 133 | 134 | **MIND YOUR CREDENTIALS WHEN FOLLOWING OLDER EXAMPLES** 135 | 136 | To install & configure Freeradius server, refer to: 137 | http://accessmanager.in/userguide/install_and_configure_freeradius . 138 | 139 | 140 | And to integrate Access Manager & Freeradius to complete the setup, follow: 141 | 142 | http://accessmanager.in/userguide/integrate_access_manager_with_freeradius 143 | 144 | **Use following code for exec modules:** 145 | 146 | ``` 147 | exec am-authorize { 148 | input_pairs = request 149 | shell_escape = yes 150 | wait = yes 151 | output_pairs = reply 152 | program = "/usr/bin/php /home/am/access-manager/artisan am:authorize %u" 153 | } 154 | 155 | exec am-accounting { 156 | input_pairs = request 157 | shell_escape = yes 158 | wait = yes 159 | output = none 160 | program = "/usr/bin/php /home/am/access-manager/artisan am:account %Z" 161 | } 162 | ``` 163 | 164 | 165 | **Hope you enjoy the project. :\)** -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /config/session.php: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | env('SESSION_DRIVER', 'file'), 20 | 21 | /* 22 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 23 | | Session Lifetime 24 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 | | 26 | | Here you may specify the number of minutes that you wish the session 27 | | to be allowed to remain idle before it expires. If you want them 28 | | to immediately expire on the browser closing, set that option. 29 | | 30 | */ 31 | 32 | 'lifetime' => 120, 33 | 34 | 'expire_on_close' => false, 35 | 36 | /* 37 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 38 | | Session Encryption 39 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40 | | 41 | | This option allows you to easily specify that all of your session data 42 | | should be encrypted before it is stored. All encryption will be run 43 | | automatically by Laravel and you can use the Session like normal. 44 | | 45 | */ 46 | 47 | 'encrypt' => false, 48 | 49 | /* 50 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 51 | | Session File Location 52 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 53 | | 54 | | When using the native session driver, we need a location where session 55 | | files may be stored. A default has been set for you but a different 56 | | location may be specified. This is only needed for file sessions. 57 | | 58 | */ 59 | 60 | 'files' => storage_path('framework/sessions'), 61 | 62 | /* 63 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 64 | | Session Database Connection 65 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 66 | | 67 | | When using the "database" or "redis" session drivers, you may specify a 68 | | connection that should be used to manage these sessions. This should 69 | | correspond to a connection in your database configuration options. 70 | | 71 | */ 72 | 73 | 'connection' => null, 74 | 75 | /* 76 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 77 | | Session Database Table 78 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 79 | | 80 | | When using the "database" session driver, you may specify the table we 81 | | should use to manage the sessions. Of course, a sensible default is 82 | | provided for you; however, you are free to change this as needed. 83 | | 84 | */ 85 | 86 | 'table' => 'sessions', 87 | 88 | /* 89 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 90 | | Session Cache Store 91 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 92 | | 93 | | When using the "apc" or "memcached" session drivers, you may specify a 94 | | cache store that should be used for these sessions. This value must 95 | | correspond with one of the application's configured cache stores. 96 | | 97 | */ 98 | 99 | 'store' => null, 100 | 101 | /* 102 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 103 | | Session Sweeping Lottery 104 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 105 | | 106 | | Some session drivers must manually sweep their storage location to get 107 | | rid of old sessions from storage. Here are the chances that it will 108 | | happen on a given request. By default, the odds are 2 out of 100. 109 | | 110 | */ 111 | 112 | 'lottery' => [2, 100], 113 | 114 | /* 115 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 116 | | Session Cookie Name 117 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 118 | | 119 | | Here you may change the name of the cookie used to identify a session 120 | | instance by ID. The name specified here will get used every time a 121 | | new session cookie is created by the framework for every driver. 122 | | 123 | */ 124 | 125 | 'cookie' => 'laravel_session', 126 | 127 | /* 128 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 129 | | Session Cookie Path 130 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 131 | | 132 | | The session cookie path determines the path for which the cookie will 133 | | be regarded as available. Typically, this will be the root path of 134 | | your application but you are free to change this when necessary. 135 | | 136 | */ 137 | 138 | 'path' => '/', 139 | 140 | /* 141 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 142 | | Session Cookie Domain 143 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 144 | | 145 | | Here you may change the domain of the cookie used to identify a session 146 | | in your application. This will determine which domains the cookie is 147 | | available to in your application. A sensible default has been set. 148 | | 149 | */ 150 | 151 | 'domain' => env('SESSION_DOMAIN', null), 152 | 153 | /* 154 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 155 | | HTTPS Only Cookies 156 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 157 | | 158 | | By setting this option to true, session cookies will only be sent back 159 | | to the server if the browser has a HTTPS connection. This will keep 160 | | the cookie from being sent to you if it can not be done securely. 161 | | 162 | */ 163 | 164 | 'secure' => env('SESSION_SECURE_COOKIE', false), 165 | 166 | /* 167 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 168 | | HTTP Access Only 169 | |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 170 | | 171 | | Setting this value to true will prevent JavaScript from accessing the 172 | | value of the cookie and the cookie will only be accessible through 173 | | the HTTP protocol. You are free to modify this option if needed. 174 | | 175 | */ 176 | 177 | 'http_only' => true, 178 | 179 | ]; 180 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------