Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | laracasts |
Maintainer Contact: | jeffrey@laracasts.com (Jeffrey Way) |
Package Create Date: | 2014-06-28 |
Package Last Update: | 2015-01-03 |
Home Page: | https://laracasts.com/series/commands-and-domain-events |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-10 15:05:16 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 311,088 |
Monthly Downloads: | 540 |
Daily Downloads: | 0 |
Total Stars: | 279 |
Total Watchers: | 23 |
Total Forks: | 65 |
Total Open Issues: | 22 |
This package gives you an easy way to leverage commands and domain events in your Laravel projects.
Laravel 5 users: this package is no longer required, as the framework includes its own flexible command bus out of the box.
Per usual, install Commander through Composer.
"require": {
"laracasts/commander": "~1.0"
}
Next, update app/config/app.php
to include a reference to this package's service provider in the providers array.
'providers' => [
'Laracasts\Commander\CommanderServiceProvider'
]
Easily, the most important piece of advice I can offer is to keep in mind that this approach isn't for everything. If you're building a simple CRUD app that does not have much business logic, then you likely don't need this. Still want to move ahead? Okay - onward!
Imagine that you're building an app for advertising job listings. Now, when an employer posts a new job listing, a number of things need to happen, right? Well, don't put all that stuff into your controller! Instead, let's leverage commands, handlers, and domain events to clean up our code.
To begin, we can inject this package's CommanderTrait
into your controller (or a BaseController, if you wish). This will give you a couple helper methods to manage the process of passing commands to the command bus.
<?php
use Laracasts\Commander\CommanderTrait;
class JobsController extends \BaseController {
use CommanderTrait;
/**
* Publish the new job listing.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function store()
{
}
}
Good? Next, we'll represent this "instruction" (to post a job listing) as a command. This will be nothing more than a simple DTO.
<?php
use Laracasts\Commander\CommanderTrait;
use Acme\Jobs\PostJobListingCommand;
class JobsController extends \BaseController {
use CommanderTrait;
/**
* Post the new job listing.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function store()
{
$this->execute(PostJobListingCommand::class);
return Redirect::home();
}
Notice how we are representing the user's instruction (or command) as a readable class: PostJobListingCommand
. The execute
method will expect the command's class path, as a string. Above, we're using the helpful PostJobListingCommand::class
to fetch this. Alternatively, you could manually write out the path as a string.
Pretty simply, huh? We make a command to represent the instruction, and then we throw that command into a command bus. Here's what that command might look like:
<?php namespace Acme\Jobs;
class PostJobListingCommand {
public $title;
public $description;
public function __construct($title, $description)
{
$this->title = $title;
$this->description = $description;
}
}
When you call the
execute
method on theCommanderTrait
, it will automatically map the data fromInput::all()
to your command. You won't need to worry about doing that manually.
So what exactly does the command bus do? Think of it as a simple utility that will translate this command into an associated handler class that will, well, handle the command! In this case, that means delegating as needed to post the new job listing.
By default, the command bus will do a quick search and replace on the name of the command class to figure out which handler class to resolve out of the IoC container. As such:
Make sense? Good. Keep in mind, though, that if you prefer a different naming convention, you can override the defaults. See below.
There may be times when you want to decorate the command bus to first perform some kind of action...maybe you need to first sanitize some data. Well, that's easy. First, create a class that implements the Laracasts\Commander\CommandBus
contract...
<?php namespace Acme\Jobs;
use Laracasts\Commander\CommandBus;
class JobSanitizer implements CommandBus {
public function execute($command)
{
// sanitize the job data
}
}
...and now reference this class, when you execute the command in your controller.
$this->execute(PostJobListingCommand::class, null, [
'JobSanitizer'
]);
And that's it! Now, you have a hook to sanitize the command/data before it's passed on to the handler class. On that note...
Let's create our first handler class now:
<?php namespace Acme\Jobs;
use Laracasts\Commander\CommandHandler;
use Laracasts\Commander\Events\DispatchableTrait;
class PostJobListingCommandHandler implements CommandHandler {
use DispatchableTrait;
public function handle($command)
{
$job = Job::post($command->title, $command->description);
$this->dispatchEventsFor($job);
return $job;
}
}
For this demo, our handler is fairly simple. In real-life, more would be going on here. Notice that dispatchEventsFor
method? This will handle the process of firing all queued events for your entity. This way, other parts of your app may listen
for when a job has been published, and respond accordingly.
Here's a quick and dirty example of what that Job
model might look like:
<?php namespace Acme\Jobs;
use Laracasts\Commander\Events\EventGenerator;
use Acme\Jobs\Events\JobWasPublished;
class Job extends \Eloquent {
use EventGenerator;
protected $fillable = ['title', 'description'];
public static function post($title, $description)
{
// We're ignoring persistence for this demo
$job = new static(compact('title', 'description'));
$job->raise(new JobWasPublished($job));
return $job;
}
}
Pay close to attention to where we raise that event.
$job->raise(new JobWasPublished($job));
Once again, this JobWasPublished
object is nothing more than a simple transport object.
<?php namespace Acme\Jobs\Events;
use Acme\Jobs\Job;
class JobWasPublished {
public $job;
public function __construct(Job $job) /* or pass in just the relevant fields */
{
$this->job = $job;
}
}
Also, the raise
method is available through that EventGenerator
trait. It simply stores the event in an array.
Now, because the handler class dispatched all events, that means you can register any number of listeners. The event name to listen for follows, once again, a simple convention:
So, essentially, we replace slashes with periods to make it appear just a bit more object-oriented. So, if we raise:
Then, the event to listen for will be:
Let's register a basic event listener to fire off an email.
Event::listen('Acme.Jobs.Events.JobWasPublished', function($event)
{
var_dump('Send a notification email to the job creator.');
});
Remember: you can register multiple listeners for the same event. Maybe you also need to do something related to reporting when a job is published. Well, add a new event listener!
Now, this example above uses a simple closure. If you want, you could take a more "catch-all" approach, which this package can help with.
First, let's setup an EmailNotifier
class that will be given a chance to handle all fired events for our app.
Event::listen('Acme.*', 'Acme\Listeners\EmailNotifier');
So, now, any time that you raise an event in the Acme
namespace, once dispached, the EmailNotifier
class' handle method will fire. Naturally, though,
we don't need to respond to every event! Just a few. Well, once again, we can follow a simple method naming convention to respond to only the events that we are interested in.
The JobWasPublished
event class will look for a whenJobWasPublished
method on your event listener. If it exists, it will call it. Otherwise, it'll simply continue on. That means our EmailNotifier
class might look like so:
<?php namespace Acme\Listeners;
use Laracasts\Commander\Events\EventListener;
use Acme\Jobs\Events\JobWasPublished;
class EmailNotifier extends EventListener {
public function whenJobWasPublished(JobWasPublished $event)
{
var_dump('send an email');
}
}
Because this class extends EventListener
, that parent class will manage all the details of determining if whenJobWasPublished
should be called.
You'll likely find yourself manually creating lots and lots of commands and handler classes. Instead, use the Artisan command that is included with this package! Simply run:
php artisan commander:generate Acme/Bar/SubscribeUserCommand
This will generate both SubscribeUserCommand
and a SubscribeUserCommandHandler
classes. By default, it will look for that "Acme" directory within "app/". If your base domain directory is somewhere else, pass the --base="src"
.
<?php namespace Acme\Bar;
class SubscribeUserCommand {
/**
* Constructor
*/
public function __construct()
{
}
}
<?php namespace Acme\Bar;
use Laracasts\Commander\CommandHandler;
class SubscribeUserCommandHandler implements CommandHandler {
/**
* Handle the command.
*
* @param object $command
* @return void
*/
public function handle($command)
{
}
}
Or, if you also want boilerplate for the properties, you can do that as well.
php artisan commander:generate Acme/Bar/SubscribeUserCommand --properties="first, last"
When you add the --properties
flag, the handle class will remain the same, however, the command, itself, will be scaffolded, like so:
<?php namespace Acme\Bar;
class SubscribeUserCommand {
/**
* @var string
*/
public $first;
/**
* @var string
*/
public $last;
/**
* Constructor
*
* @param string first
* @param string last
*/
public function __construct($first, $last)
{
$this->first = $first;
$this->last = $last;
}
}
Nifty, ay? That'll save you a lot of time, so remember to use it.
When calling this command, use forward slashes for your class path:
Acme/Bar/MyCommand
. If you'd rather use backslashes, you'll need to wrap it in quotes.
This can be complicated stuff to read. Be sure to check out the Commands and Domain Events series on Laracasts to learn more about this stuff.