Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | timacdonald |
Maintainer Contact: | hello@timacdonald.me (Tim MacDonald) |
Package Create Date: | 2020-04-11 |
Package Last Update: | 2024-06-26 |
Home Page: | https://timacdonald.me/rethinking-laravels-middleware-argument-api/ |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-12-17 03:09:43 |
Package Statistics | |
---|---|
Total Downloads: | 172,385 |
Monthly Downloads: | 7,208 |
Daily Downloads: | 280 |
Total Stars: | 224 |
Total Watchers: | 5 |
Total Forks: | 10 |
Total Open Issues: | 0 |
A trait for Laravel middleware that allows you to pass arguments in a more PHP'ish way, including as a key => value pair for named parameters, and as a list for variadic parameters. Improves static analysis / IDE support, allows you to specify arguments by referencing the parameter name, enables skipping optional parameters (which fallback to their default value), and adds some validation so you don't forget any required parameters by accident.
Read more about the why in my blog post Rethinking Laravel's middleware argument API
You can install using composer from Packagist.
$ composer require timacdonald/has-parameters
To get started with an example, I'm going to use a stripped back version of Laravel's ThrottleRequests
. First up, add the HasParameters
trait to your middleware.
<?php
class ThrottleRequests
{
use HasParameters;
public function handle($request, Closure $next, $maxAttempts = 60, $decayMinutes = 1, $prefix = '')
{
//
}
}
You can now pass arguments to this middleware using the static with()
method, using the parameter name as the key.
<?php
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
ThrottleRequests::with([
'maxAttempts' => 120,
]),
]);
You'll notice at first this is a little more verbose, but I think you'll enjoy the complete feature set after reading these docs and taking it for a spin.
The static with()
method allows you to easily see which values represent what when declaring your middleware, instead of just declaring a comma seperate list of values.
The order of the keys does not matter. The trait will pair up the keys to the parameter names in the handle()
method.
<?php
// before...
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
'throttle:10,1' // what does 10 or 1 stand for here?
]);
// after...
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
ThrottleRequests::with([
'decayMinutes' => 1,
'maxAttempts' => 10,
]),
]);
If any parameters in the handle
method have a default value, you do not need to pass them through - unless you are changing their value. As an example, if you'd like to only specify a prefix for the ThrottleRequests
middleware, but keep the $decayMinutes
and $maxAttempts
as their default values, you can do the following...
<?php
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
ThrottleRequests::with([
'prefix' => 'admins',
]),
]);
As we saw previously in the handle method, the default values of $decayMinutes
is 1
and $maxAttempts
is 60
. The middleware will receive those values for those parameters, but will now receive "admins"
for the $prefix
.
When your middleware ends in a variadic paramater, you can pass an array of values for the variadic parameter key. Take a look at the following handle()
method.
<?php
public function handle(Request $request, Closure $next, string $ability, string ...$models)
Here is how we can pass a list of values to the variadic $models
parameter...
<?php
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
Authorize::with([
'ability' => PostVideoPolicy::UPDATE,
'models' => [Post::class, Video::class],
]),
]);
Some middleware will have different behaviour based on the type of values passed through to a specific parameter. As an example, Laravel's ThrottleRequests
middleware allows you to pass the name of a rate limiter to the $maxAttempts
parameter, instead of a numeric value, in order to utilise that named limiter on the endpoint.
<?php
// a named rate limiter...
RateLimiter::for('api', function (Request $request) {
return Limit::perMinute(60)->by(optional($request->user())->id ?: $request->ip());
});
// using the rate limiter WITHOUT an alias...
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
ThrottleRequests::with([
'maxAttempts' => 'api',
]),
]);
In this kind of scenario, it is nice to be able to alias the $maxAttempts
parameter name to something more readable.
<?php
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
ThrottleRequests::with([
'limiter' => 'api',
]),
]);
To achieve this, you can setup a parameter alias map in your middleware...
<?php
class ThrottleRequests
{
use HasParameters;
public function handle($request, Closure $next, $maxAttempts = 60, $decayMinutes = 1, $prefix = '')
{
//
}
protected static function parameterAliasMap(): array
{
return [
'limiter' => 'maxAttempts',
// 'alias' => 'parameter',
];
}
}
These validations occur whenever the routes file is loaded or compiled, not just when you hit a route that contains the declaration.
Ensures that you do not declare any keys that do not exist as parameter variables in the handle()
method. This helps make sure you don't mis-type a parameter name.
Ensures all required parameters (those without default values) have been provided.
The static in()
method very much reflects and works the same as the existing concatination API. It accepts a list of values, i.e. a non-associative array. You should use this method if your handle()
method is a single variadic parameter, i.e. expecting a single list of values, as shown in the following middleware handle method...
.
<?php
public function handle(Request $request, Closure $next, string ...$states)
{
//
}
You can pass through a list of "states" to the middleware like so...
<?php
Route::stuff()
->middleware([
EnsurePostState::in([PostState::DRAFT, PostState::UNDER_REVIEW]),
]);
Just like the with()
method, the in()
method will validate that you have passed enough values through to cover all the required parameters. Because variadic parameters do not require any values to be passed through, you only really rub up against this when you should probably be using the with()
method.
You should keep in mind that everything will still be cast to a string. Although you are passing in, for example, integers, the middleware itself will always receive a string. This is how Laravel works under-the-hood to implement route caching.
One thing to note is the false
is actually cast to the string "0"
to keep some consistency with casting true
to a string, which results in the string "1"
.
Although this package requires "PHP": "^7.1"
, in order to install and develop locally, you should be running a recent version of PHP to ensure compatibility with the development tools.
And a special (vegi) thanks to Caneco for the logo ✨
You are free to use this package, but I ask that you reach out to someone (not me) who has previously, or is currently, maintaining or contributing to an open source library you are using in your project and thank them for their work. Consider your entire tech stack: packages, frameworks, languages, databases, operating systems, frontend, backend, etc.