Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | spatie |
Maintainer Contact: | freek@spatie.be (Freek Van der Herten) |
Package Create Date: | 2021-01-23 |
Package Last Update: | 2025-01-22 |
Home Page: | https://freek.dev/1886-simplifying-service-providers-in-laravel-packages |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2025-01-24 15:00:53 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 67,384,271 |
Monthly Downloads: | 2,775,303 |
Daily Downloads: | 133,347 |
Total Stars: | 827 |
Total Watchers: | 12 |
Total Forks: | 148 |
Total Open Issues: | 5 |
This package contains a PackageServiceProvider
that you can use in your packages to easily register config files,
migrations, and more.
Here's an example of how it can be used.
use Spatie\LaravelPackageTools\PackageServiceProvider;
use Spatie\LaravelPackageTools\Package;
class YourPackageServiceProvider extends PackageServiceProvider
{
public function configurePackage(Package $package): void
{
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasConfigFile()
->hasViews()
->hasTranslations()
->hasAssets()
->hasRoute('web')
->hasMigration('create_package_tables')
->hasCommand(YourCoolPackageCommand::class);
}
}
Under the hood it will do the necessary work to register the necessary things and make all sorts of files publishable.
We invest a lot of resources into creating best in class open source packages. You can support us by buying one of our paid products.
We highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using. You'll find our address on our contact page. We publish all received postcards on our virtual postcard wall.
This package is opinionated on how you should structure your package. To get started easily, consider using our package-skeleton repo to start your package. The skeleton is structured perfectly to work perfectly with the PackageServiceProvider
in this package.
In your package you should let your service provider extend Spatie\LaravelPackageTools\PackageServiceProvider
.
use Spatie\LaravelPackageTools\PackageServiceProvider;
use Spatie\LaravelPackageTools\Package;
class YourPackageServiceProvider extends PackageServiceProvider
{
public function configurePackage(Package $package) : void
{
$package->name('your-package-name');
}
}
Passing the package name to name
is mandatory.
To register a config file, you should create a php file with your package name in the config
directory of your package. In this example it should be at <package root>/config/your-package-name.php
.
If your package name starts with laravel-
, we expect that your config file does not contain that prefix. So if your package name is laravel-cool-package
, the config file should be named cool-package.php
.
To register that config file, call hasConfigFile()
on $package
in the configurePackage
method.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasConfigFile();
The hasConfigFile
method will also make the config file publishable. Users of your package will be able to publish the config file with this command.
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=your-package-name-config
Any views your package provides, should be placed in the <package root>/resources/views
directory.
You can register these views with the hasViews
command.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasViews();
This will register your views with Laravel.
If you have a view <package root>/resources/views/myView.blade.php
, you can use it like this: view('your-package-name::myView')
. Of course, you can also use subdirectories to organise your views. A view located at <package root>/resources/views/subdirectory/myOtherView.blade.php
can be used with view('your-package-name::subdirectory.myOtherView')
.
Calling hasViews
will also make views publishable. Users of your package will be able to publish the config file with this command:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=your-package-name-views
Any translations your package provides, should be placed in the <package root>/resources/lang/<language-code>
directory.
You can register these translations with the hasTranslations
command.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasTranslations();
This will register the translations with Laravel.
Assuming you save this translation file at <package root>/resources/lang/en/translations.php
...
<?php
return [
'translatable' => 'translation',
];
... your package and users will be able to retrieve the translation with:
trans('your-package-name::translations.translatable'); // returns 'translation'
If your package name starts with laravel-
then you should leave that off in the example above.
Calling hasTranslations
will also make translations publishable. Users of your package will be able to publish the config file with this command:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=your-package-name-translations
Any assets your package provides, should be placed in the <package root>/resources/dist/
directory.
You can make these assets publishable the hasAssets
method.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasAssets();
Users of your package will be able to publish the config file with this command:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=your-package-name-assets
This will copy over the assets to the public/vendor/<your-package-name>
directory in the app where your package is installed in.
The PackageServiceProvider
assumes that any migrations are placed in this directory: <package root>/database/migrations
. Inside that directory you can put any migrations. Make sure they all have a php.stub
extension. Using that extension will make sure that static analysers won't get confused with classes existing in multiple places when your migration gets published.
To register your migration, you should pass its name without the extension to the hasMigration
table.
If your migration file is called create_my_package_tables.php.stub
you can register them like this:
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasMigration('create_my_package_tables');
Should your package contain multiple migration files, you can just call hasMigration
multiple times or use hasMigrations
.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasMigrations(['my_package_tables', 'some_other_migration']);
Calling hasMigration
will also make migrations publishable. Users of your package will be able to publish the config file with this command:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=your-package-name-migrations
Like you might expect, published migration files will be prefixed with the current datetime.
You can register any command you package provides with the hasCommand
function.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasCommand(YourCoolPackageCommand::class);
If your package provides multiple commands, you can either use hasCommand
multiple times, or pass an array to hasCommands
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasCommands([
YourCoolPackageCommand::class,
YourOtherCoolPackageCommand::class,
]);
The PackageServiceProvider
assumes that any route files are placed in this directory: <package root>/routes
. Inside that directory you can put any route files.
To register your route, you should pass its name without the extension to the hasRoute
method.
If your route file is called web.php
you can register them like this:
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasRoute('web');
Should your package contain multiple route files, you can just call hasRoute
multiple times or use hasRoutes
.
$package
->name('your-package-name')
->hasRoutes(['web', 'admin']);
You can put any custom logic your package needs while starting up in one of these methods:
registeringPackage
: will be called at the start of the register
method of PackageServiceProvider
packageRegistered
: will be called at the end of the register
method of PackageServiceProvider
bootingPackage
: will be called at the start of the boot
method of PackageServiceProvider
packageBooted
: will be called at the end of the boot
method of PackageServiceProvider
composer test
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
Please review our security policy on how to report security vulnerabilities.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.