/usr/share/php/Symfony/Component/Security/Core/User/UserInterface.php is in php-symfony-security 2.7.10-0ubuntu2.
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/*
* This file is part of the Symfony package.
*
* (c) Fabien Potencier <fabien@symfony.com>
*
* For the full copyright and license information, please view the LICENSE
* file that was distributed with this source code.
*/
namespace Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User;
use Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Role\Role;
/**
* Represents the interface that all user classes must implement.
*
* This interface is useful because the authentication layer can deal with
* the object through its lifecycle, using the object to get the encoded
* password (for checking against a submitted password), assigning roles
* and so on.
*
* Regardless of how your user are loaded or where they come from (a database,
* configuration, web service, etc), you will have a class that implements
* this interface. Objects that implement this interface are created and
* loaded by different objects that implement UserProviderInterface
*
* @see UserProviderInterface
* @see AdvancedUserInterface
*
* @author Fabien Potencier <fabien@symfony.com>
*/
interface UserInterface
{
/**
* Returns the roles granted to the user.
*
* <code>
* public function getRoles()
* {
* return array('ROLE_USER');
* }
* </code>
*
* Alternatively, the roles might be stored on a ``roles`` property,
* and populated in any number of different ways when the user object
* is created.
*
* @return (Role|string)[] The user roles
*/
public function getRoles();
/**
* Returns the password used to authenticate the user.
*
* This should be the encoded password. On authentication, a plain-text
* password will be salted, encoded, and then compared to this value.
*
* @return string The password
*/
public function getPassword();
/**
* Returns the salt that was originally used to encode the password.
*
* This can return null if the password was not encoded using a salt.
*
* @return string|null The salt
*/
public function getSalt();
/**
* Returns the username used to authenticate the user.
*
* @return string The username
*/
public function getUsername();
/**
* Removes sensitive data from the user.
*
* This is important if, at any given point, sensitive information like
* the plain-text password is stored on this object.
*/
public function eraseCredentials();
}
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