Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | mvanduijker |
Maintainer Contact: | mark@duyker.nl (Mark van Duijker) |
Package Create Date: | 2019-02-13 |
Package Last Update: | 2024-03-13 |
Home Page: | |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-22 15:01:05 |
Package Statistics | |
---|---|
Total Downloads: | 108,032 |
Monthly Downloads: | 2,887 |
Daily Downloads: | 163 |
Total Stars: | 70 |
Total Watchers: | 4 |
Total Forks: | 8 |
Total Open Issues: | 0 |
Add transactional events to your eloquent models. Will automatically detect changes in your models within a transaction and will fire events on commit or rollback. Should mimic the same functionality as transactional callbacks in Ruby on Rails.
You want to use this if you want to listen on events fired by models within a transaction and you want to be sure the transaction has completed successfully (or is rolled back).
You can install the package via composer:
composer require mvanduijker/laravel-transactional-model-events
Just add the trait TransactionalAwareEvents to your model or base model.
<?php
class MyModel extends Model
{
use TransactionalAwareEvents;
}
The following events will become available:
afterCommit.created
afterCommit.saved
afterCommit.updated
afterCommit.deleted
afterCommit.restored
afterCommit.forceDeleted
afterRollback.created
afterRollback.saved
afterRollback.updated
afterRollback.deleted
afterRollback.restored
afterRollback.forceDeleted
You can add listeners in you EventServiceProvider the same way as normal events
<?php
/**
* The event listener mappings for the application.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $listen = [
'eloquent.afterCommit.created: App\Models\Shipment' => [
'App\Listeners\SendShipmentNotification',
],
];
Or you can put them in your model boot method:
<?php
class PictureFile extends Model
{
use TransactionalAwareEvents;
public static function boot()
{
parent::boot();
static::registerModelEvent('afterCommit.deleted', function ($model) {
if (Storage::exists($model->file)) {
Storage::delete($model->file);
}
});
}
}
You should also be able to map them to event classes
<?php
class PictureFile extends Model
{
use TransactionalAwareEvents;
protected $dispatchesEvents = [
'afterCommit.created' => PictureFileCreated::class,
'afterCommit.deleted' => PictureFileDeleted::class,
];
}
And as icing on the cake, you can observe them with the following methods:
afterCommitCreated
afterCommitSaved
afterCommitUpdated
afterCommitDeleted
afterCommitRestored
afterCommitForceDeleted
afterRollbackCreated
afterRollbackSaved
afterRollbackUpdated
afterRollbackDeleted
afterRollbackRestored
afterRollbackForceDeleted
For example:
<?php
class PictureFileObserver
{
public function afterCommitDeleted(PictureFile $model)
{
if (Storage::exists($model->file)) {
Storage::delete($model->file);
}
}
}
And register the observer in you ServiceProvider:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Register any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function register()
{
//
}
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
PictureFile::observe(PictureFileObserver::class);
}
}
Multiple database connections are supported, events are triggered when the transaction is committed on the configured connection of the model.
composer test
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.