security: # https://symfony.com/doc/current/security.html#registering-the-user-hashing-passwords password_hashers: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\PasswordAuthenticatedUserInterface: 'auto' # https://symfony.com/doc/current/security.html#loading-the-user-the-user-provider providers: users_in_memory: { memory: { users: [ { identifier: "ahch0joh9ahthoh6xiew9Eer5aevieR1", roles: ["ROLE_USER"] } ] } } firewalls: dev: pattern: ^/(_(profiler|wdt)|css|images|js)/ security: false main: #lazy: true provider: users_in_memory custom_authenticators: - App\Security\ApiKeyAuthenticator # activate different ways to authenticate # https://symfony.com/doc/current/security.html#the-firewall # https://symfony.com/doc/current/security/impersonating_user.html # switch_user: true # Easy way to control access for large sections of your site # Note: Only the *first* access control that matches will be used access_control: # - { path: ^/admin, roles: ROLE_ADMIN } # - { path: ^/profile, roles: ROLE_USER } when@test: security: password_hashers: # By default, password hashers are resource intensive and take time. This is # important to generate secure password hashes. In tests however, secure hashes # are not important, waste resources and increase test times. The following # reduces the work factor to the lowest possible values. Symfony\Component\Security\Core\User\PasswordAuthenticatedUserInterface: algorithm: auto cost: 4 # Lowest possible value for bcrypt time_cost: 3 # Lowest possible value for argon memory_cost: 10 # Lowest possible value for argon