/laravel-debugbar

Laravel 4 Debugbar (Integrates PHP Debug Bar)

Primary LanguagePHPMIT LicenseMIT

Laravel 4 Debugbar

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This is a package to integrate PHP Debug Bar with Laravel. It includes a ServiceProvider to register the debugbar and attach it to the output. You can publish assets and configure it through Laravel. It bootstraps some Collectors to work with Laravel and implements a couple custom DataCollectors, specific for Laravel. It is configured to display Redirects and (jQuery) Ajax Requests. (Shown in a dropdown) Read the documentation for more configuration options.

Screenshot

Note: Use the DebugBar only in development. It can slow the application down (because it has to gather data). So when experiencing slowness, try disabling some of the collectors.

This package includes some custom collectors:

  • QueryCollector: Show all queries, including binding + timing
  • RouteCollector: Show information about the current Route.
  • ViewCollector: Show the currently loaded views. (Optionally: display the shared data)
  • EventsCollector: Show all events
  • LaravelCollector: Show the Laravel version and Environment. (disabled by default)
  • SymfonyRequestCollector: replaces the RequestCollector with more information about the request/response
  • LogsCollector: Show the latest log entries from the storage logs. (disabled by default)
  • FilesCollector: Show the files that are included/required by PHP. (disabled by default)
  • ConfigCollector: Display the values from the config files. (disabled by default)

Bootstraps the following collectors for Laravel:

  • LogCollector: Show all Log messages
  • SwiftMailCollector and SwiftLogCollector for Mail

And the default collectors:

  • PhpInfoCollector
  • MessagesCollector
  • TimeDataCollector (With Booting and Application timing)
  • MemoryCollector
  • ExceptionsCollector

It also provides a Facade interface for easy logging Messages, Exceptions and Time

Installation

Require this package with composer:

composer require barryvdh/laravel-debugbar

After updating composer, add the ServiceProvider to the providers array in app/config/app.php

'Barryvdh\Debugbar\ServiceProvider',

If you want to use the facade to log messages, add this to your facades in app.php:

'Debugbar' => 'Barryvdh\Debugbar\Facade',

You need to publish the assets from this package. Since 1.7, you don't need to publish the assets anymore.

The profiler is enabled by default, if you have app.debug=true. You can override that in the config files. You can also set in your config if you want to include/exclude the vendor files also (FontAwesome, Highlight.js and jQuery). If you already use them in your site, set it to false. You can also only display the js of css vendors, by setting it to 'js' or 'css'. (Highlight.js requires both css + js, so set to true for syntax highlighting)

php artisan config:publish barryvdh/laravel-debugbar

You can also disable/enable the loggers you want. You can also use the IoC container to add extra loggers. ($app['debugbar']->addCollector(new MyDataCollector))

You can now add messages using the Facade (when added), using the PSR-3 levels (debug, info, notice, warning, error, critical, alert, emergency):

Debugbar::info($object);
Debugbar::error("Error!");
Debugbar::warning('Watch out..');
Debugbar::addMessage('Another message', 'mylabel');

And start/stop timing:

Debugbar::startMeasure('render','Time for rendering');
Debugbar::stopMeasure('render');
Debugbar::addMeasure('now', LARAVEL_START, microtime(true));
Debugbar::measure('My long operation', function() {
    //Do something..
});

Or log exceptions:

try {
    throw new Exception('foobar');
} catch (Exception $e) {
    Debugbar::addException($e);
}

There are also helper functions available for the most common calls:

// All arguments will be dumped as a debug message
debug($var1, $someString, $intValue, $object);

start_measure('render','Time for rendering');
stop_measure('render');
add_measure('now', LARAVEL_START, microtime(true));
measure('My long operation', function() {
    //Do something..
});

If you want you can add your own DataCollectors, through the Container or the Facade:

Debugbar::addCollector(new DebugBar\DataCollector\MessagesCollector('my_messages'));
//Or via the App container:
$debugbar = App::make('debugbar');
$debugbar->addCollector(new DebugBar\DataCollector\MessagesCollector('my_messages'));

By default, the Debugbar is injected just before </body>. If you want to inject the Debugbar yourself, set the config option 'inject' to false and use the renderer yourself and follow http://phpdebugbar.com/docs/rendering.html

$renderer = Debugbar::getJavascriptRenderer();

Note: Not using the auto-inject, will disable the Request information, because that is added After the response. You can add the default_request datacollector in the config as alternative.

Enabling/Disabling on run time

You can enable or disable the debugbar during run time.

\Debugbar::enable();
\Debugbar::disable();

NB. Once enabled, the collectors are added (and could produce extra overhead), so if you want to use the debugbar in production, disable in the config and only enable when needed.

Twig Integration

Laravel Debugbar comes with two Twig Extensions. These are tested with rcrowe/TwigBridge 0.6.x

Add the following extensions to your TwigBridge config/extensions.php (or register the extensions manually)

'Barryvdh\Debugbar\Twig\Extension\Debug',
'Barryvdh\Debugbar\Twig\Extension\Stopwatch',

The Debug extension will replace the dump function to output variables to the Messages, instead of showing it directly in the template. It dumps the arguments, or when empty; all context variables.

{{ dump() }}
{{ dump(user, categories) }}

The Stopwatch extension adds a stopwatch tag similar to the one in Symfony/Silex Twigbridge.

{% stopwatch "foo" %}
    ... some things that gets timed
{% endstopwatch %}