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Commit 981b4e6

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‎security.rst‎

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@@ -575,8 +575,7 @@ Only one firewall is active on each request: Symfony uses the ``pattern`` key
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to find the first match (you can also
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:doc:`match by host or other things </security/firewall_restriction>`).
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Here, all real URLs are handled by the ``main`` firewall (no ``pattern`` key means
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it matches *all* URLs). A firewall can have many modes of authentication,
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in other words, it enables many ways to ask the question "Who are you?".
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it matches *all* URLs).
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The ``dev`` firewall is really a fake firewall: it makes sure that you
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don't accidentally block Symfony's dev tools - which live under URLs like
@@ -631,9 +630,10 @@ don't accidentally block Symfony's dev tools - which live under URLs like
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The feature to use an array of regex was introduced in Symfony 6.4.
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Often, the user is unknown (i.e. not logged in) when they first visit your
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website. If you visit your homepage right now, you *will* have access and
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you'll see that you're visiting a page behind the firewall in the toolbar:
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A firewall can have many modes of authentication, in other words, it enables many
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ways to ask the question "Who are you?". Often, the user is unknown (i.e. not logged in)
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when they first visit your website. If you visit your homepage right now, you *will*
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have access and you'll see that you're visiting a page behind the firewall in the toolbar:
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.. image:: /_images/security/anonymous_wdt.png
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:alt: The Symfony profiler toolbar where the Security information shows "Authenticated: no" and "Firewall name: main"

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