/laravel-core

A feature rich Laravel package which provides fast & flexible way to quickly build powerful RESTful APIs. Various other features like queries & filters over nested complex relationships between models can be done on the go using this package. Read the docs for more info.

Primary LanguagePHPMIT LicenseMIT

Laravel Core Package

Luezoid came up with a compact way to help one creating the APIs very fast & without much hassle. Using this package, one case easily create simple CRUD operations in Laravel framework in couple of minutes with just creating a few files & configuring the components. With a lot of efforts and deep analysis of day-to-day problems (we) developers faced in the past, we came up with a sub-framework of it's own kind to simplify & fasten up the REST APIs building process.

A few cool features of this package are:

  1. Simplest & fastest way to create CRUDs.
  2. Pre-built support to define table columns which are to be specifically excluded before creating/updating a record(in default CRUD).
  3. Pre-built Search & Filters ready to use with just configuring components.
  4. Pre-built Pagination & Ordering of records ready in a Standard communication format.
  5. Relationship's data in the APIs(GET) is just a config thing.
  6. Better way to correctly fire an event upon successful completion of an action.
  7. File uploads has never been so easy before. Upload to local filesystem or AWS S3 bucket on the go.
  8. Pre-built feature rich Service classes eg. EnvironmentService, RequestService, UtilityService, etc.
  9. Nested Related models can be queried with simple config based approach from the code components.
  10. On the go SELECT & Relation filters can be passed with JSON & object operator(->) in query params to select particular columns from a table(and related objects defined in models) making the API's response with less garbage data instead of writing custom query every time a new endpoint is created.
  11. Generic/Open Search over a set of related objects(tables) with simple Array based config.

Note: For a complete working example of all these feature with core package pre-configured is available on this repository luezoidtechnologies/laravel-core-base-repo-example.

Installation

We recommend using Composer to install this package. This package supports Laravel versions >= 5.x.

composer require "luezoid/laravel-core"		# For latest version of Laravel (>=7.x)
composer require "luezoid/laravel-core:^6.0"	# For Laravel version 6.x
composer require "luezoid/laravel-core:^5.0"	# For Laravel version 5.x

Next, configure your app/Exceptions/Handler.php and extend it with Luezoid\Laravelcore\Exceptions\Handler. Sample file can be seen here.

1. Creating CRUD

Using this packages adds an extra entity between the Controller & Model paradigm in a normal MVC architecture. This extra entity we are referring here is called Repository. A Repository is a complete class where your whole business logic resides from getting the processed data from a Controller and saving it into database using Model(s). By using Repository as an intermediate between Controller & Model, we aim at maintaing clean code at Controller's end and making it a mediator which only receives data(from View, typically a REST route), validate it against the defined validation rules(if any, we uses Request class to define such rules), pre-process it(for eg. transform camelCased data from front-end into snake_case) & sending business cooked data back the View.

Let's start with creating a simple Minions CRUD.

We have sample migration for table minions, model Minion, controller MinionController and repository MinionRepository. Add these files into your application & adjust the namespaces accordingly. Then create a Route resource as below in routes/api.php and we are all ready:

Route::resource('minions', 'MinionController', ['parameters' => ['minions' => 'id']]);

Assuming your local server is running on port: 7872, try hitting REST endpoints as below:

  1. POST /minions

     curl -X POST \
      http://localhost:7872/api/minions \
      -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
      -d '{
    	"name": "Stuart",
    	"totalEyes": 2,
    	"favouriteSound": "Grrrrrrrrrrr",
    	"hasHairs": true
    }'
    
  2. PUT /minions/1

    curl -X PUT \
      http://localhost:7872/api/minions/1 \
      -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
      -d '{
    	"name": "Stuart - The Pfff",
    	"totalEyes": 2,
    	"favouriteSound": "Grrrrrrrrrrr Pffffff",
    	"hasHairs": false
    }'
    
  3. DELETE /minions/1

    curl -X DELETE \
      http://localhost:7872/api/minions/1 \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    
  4. GET /minions

    curl -X GET \
      http://localhost:7872/api/minions \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    
  5. GET /minions/2

    curl -X GET \
      http://localhost:7872/api/minions/2 \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    

2. Exclude columns for default POST & PUT request(s)

Refer the Minon model. We have the below public properties which can be used to define an array containing list of the columns to be specifically excluded for default POST & PUT requests of CRUD:

// To exclude the key(s) if present in request body for default POST CRUD routes eg. POST /minions
public $createExcept = [
	'id'
];

// To exclude the key(s) if present in request body for default PUT CRUD routes eg. PUT /minions/1
public $updateExcept = [
	'total_eyes',
	'has_hairs'
];

The major advantage for using such config in the model in the first place is: to provide a clean & elegant way & to simply reduce the coding efforts to be done just before saving the whole data into table. Typical examples could be:

  1. You don't want to save a column value say is_email_verified if an attacker sends it the request body of POST /users; just add it into $createExcept. You need not to exclude this specifically in the codes/or request rules.
  2. You don't want to update a column say username if an attacker sends it the request body of PUT /users/{id}; just add it into $updateExcept. You need not to exclude this specifically in the codes/or request rules.

3. Searching & Filters

You can simply search over the list of available column(s) in the table for all GET requests. Let's begin with examples:

  • General Searching

    By default all the available columns in the tables are ready to be queried over GET request just by passing the key(s)-value(s) pair(s) in the query params. But to specifically mention it in the Model itsef, just define a public property $searchable which is an array containing the columns allowed to be searched. Let's say you want to search for all minions whose favourite sound is Pchhhh.

      curl -X GET \
        'http://localhost:7872/api/minions?favouriteSound=Pchhhh' \
        -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    

    Response should contain all minions having Pchhhh string available in the column favourite_sound in the table minions.

    Searching is using LIKE operator as '%-SEARCH-STRING%'.

  • General Filtering

    Similar to searching, you need to define public property $filterable which is again an array containing the columns allowed to be filtered.

      public $filterable = [
          'id',
          'total_eyes',
          'has_hairs'
      ];
    

    Exact match will performed against these columns if present in the query params.

    Example: To find all the minions having totalEyes equal to 1:

      curl -X GET \
        'http://localhost:7872/api/minions?totalEyes=1' \
        -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    

    Filtering is using = operator as 'total_eyes'=1.

  • Date Filters

    Add the column which you want to be used for date filtering into $filterable property in the model class. Once done, you can now simply pass the query params from (AND/OR) to with the date(or datetime) values in standard MySQL format(Y-m-d H:i:s). Example: We want to search for all the minions which are created after 2020-04-25 09:25:20:

      curl -X GET \
        'http://localhost:7872/api/minions?createdAt=2020-04-25%20%2009:25:20' \
        -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    

    You can also pass the column name in the query params over which you want the date search to be applied for. Just pass the key dateFilterColumn with the column name you want to use date search on (but note that the $filterable property must have this column specified in order to make things work).

Notes:

  1. You may specify multiple key-value pairs in the query params & all the conditions will be queried with AND operators.
  2. Pass all the variables in camelCasing & all will be transferred into snake_casing internally. You may configure this transformation turning off by overriding properties $isCamelToSnake & $isSnakeToCamel and setting them to false in ApiCotroller.

4. Pagination & Ordering

Did you notice the response of GET endpoint we just created above? Let's take a look in brief. Refer the response of GET /minions API.

{
  "message": null,
  "data": {
    "items": [
      {},
      {},
      ...
    ],
    "page": 1,      // tells us about the current page
    "total": 6,     // tells us the total results available (matching all the query params for searching/filtering applied)
    "pages": 1,     // total pages in which the whole result set is distributed
    "perpage": 15   // total results per page
  },
  "type": null
}

Pretty self explanatory, eh?

You can pass query param perpage=5 (to limit the per page size). Similarly, the page=2 will grab the results of page 2.

For ordering the result set by a particular column, just send query param key orderby with the name of column & a separate key order with value ASC for ascending (or) DESC for sorting in descending order. By default, results are sorted in descending order.

Paginating & Ordering the results has never been so easy before :)

Note: Any GET(index) route retrieving results from a Repository (eg.MinionRepository) extending \Luezoid\Laravelcore\Repositories\EloquentBaseRepository::getAll() is all ready with such pagination & ordering. Make sure to use this pre-built feature & save time for manually implementing these features for every endpoint & grab a pint of beer to chill.

5. Relationship's data

Let's assume each Minion leads a mission operated by Gru i.e. there is one-to-one relationship exists between Minion & Missions. See the missions table migrations(1,2) and Model Mission. To retrieve the leading mission by each Minion in GET requests(index & show), just add the relationship name in the MinionController properties as follows:

  • GET /minions

    protected $indexWith = [
        'leading_mission'	// name of the hasOne() relationship defined in the Minion model
    ];
    
  • GET /minions/2

    protected $showWith = [
        'leading_mission'	// name of the hasOne() relationship defined in the Minion model
    ];
    

That's it. Just a config thingy & you can see in the response each Minion object contains another object leadingMission which is an instance of Mission model lead by respective Minion.

Note: For nested relationships, you can define them appending dot(.) operator eg. employee.designations.

6. Attach Event on an action success

Let's arrange an Event to get triggered to bring a Minion to Gru's lab whenever a new Mission is created leading by the Minion. Create a POST route in routes/api.php:

Route::post('missions', 'MissionController@createMission')->name('missions.store');

We need to have MissionController, MissionRepository, MissionCreateRequest and MissionCreateJob ready for this route to work. Also we need to have an Event say BringMinionToLabEvent ready to be triggered & the same to be configured into job MissionCreateJob under property public $event = BringMinionToLabEvent::class; Now try hitting the route POST /missions as follows:

curl -X POST \
  http://localhost:7872/api/missions \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
  -d '{
	"name": "Steal the Moon! Part - 4",
	"description": "The first moon landing happened in 1969. Felonius Gru watched this historic moment with his mother and was inspired by the landing to go to outer space just like his idol Neil Armstrong.",
	"minionId": 2
}'

You should be able to see a log entry under file storage/logs/laravel.log which is the action we had set in the event BringMinionToLabEvent.

7. File Upload

With this package, file upload is just a config thing away. Publish the file.php configuration file to the config directory with below command:

php artisan vendor:publish --tag=luezoid-file-config

Configure the new type representing a specific module eg. MINION_PROFILE_PICTURE as per your requirement, define the validation(if any), valid_file_types allowed, local_path(for local filesystem), etc. A sample type named EXAMPLE is added by default for reference. Next, add the below code in AppServiceProvide:

$this->app->bind(\Luezoid\Laravelcore\Contracts\IFile::class, function ($app) {
    if (config('file.is_local')) {
        return $app->make(\Luezoid\Laravelcore\Files\Services\LocalFileUploadService::class);
    }
    return $app->make(\Luezoid\Laravelcore\Files\Services\SaveFileToS3Service::class);
});

Next, create a route as below:

Route::post('files', '\Luezoid\Laravelcore\Http\Controllers\FileController@store')->name('files.store');

Now, you are all set to upload files.

curl -X POST \
  http://localhost:7872/api/files \
  -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
  -H 'content-type: multipart/form-data; boundary=----WebKitFormBoundary7MA4YWxkTrZu0gW' \
  -F type=EXAMPLE \
  -F file=@/home/choxx/Desktop/a61113f5afc5ad52eb59f98ce293c266.jpg

The response body will have an id, url, and a few other fields representing the storage location & other details for the uploaded file. See sample here. This id field you could use to store in your table as foreign key column & make hasOne() relation with the records & use them as per need.

Moreover, in the config itself you could configure if local filesystem has to be used for uploads or on the go AWS S3 bucket. For using S3 bucket, you need to configure AWS credentials in .env file:

AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=
AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=

Isn't is awesome? :)

10. Select & Relation Filters - SELECT & WHERE query over table columns (& nested relations)

This is one of the coolest feature of this package. Tired off writing query to shorten up the result set & applying filters over nested relation data? Apply such filters with simplicity with just sending simple query params. Let's see how:

  • Select Filters:

    In the query params, a key-value pair can be passed with which you could simply restrict the number of columns to be present in the response for a particular model object & it's related model entities. The key to be sent is selectFilters & the value has to be minified JSON as explained below:

    k is keys, r is relation, cOnly is flag to set if only count is needed or the whole relational data. cOnly flag can be used in r relations nestedly.

    {
      "cOnly": false,
      "k": ["id", "name", "favouriteSound"],
      "r": {
        "missions": {
          "k": ["name", "description"]
        }
      }
    }
    

    So, with the above JSON, a GET request like:

    curl -X GET \
      'http://localhost:7872/api/minions?selectFilters={%22cOnly%22:false,%22k%22:[%22id%22,%22name%22,%22favouriteSound%22],%22r%22:{%22missions%22:{%22k%22:[%22name%22,%22description%22]}}}' \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    

    would return only the columns id, name & favourite_sound of table minions and columns name & description of table missions in the response. Rest redundant columns which are not needed are eleminated from the response causing substantial reduction in the size of overall response & speeding up the response time of APIs.

    Note: both the columns the 'local key' & the 'foreign key' must be present in the main & the related relation(s). This whole config can go as deeper as needed in the same way as the first relation goes.

  • Relation Filters:

    Let's assume we want to find all the minions whose Leading Mission name is "Steal the Moon!". Using Eloquent queries we can retrieve such results as:

    $query = Minion::whereHas('missions', function ($q) {
        $q->where('name', 'Steal the Moon!');
    });
    

    Seems easy right? But wait, for this to be dynamic, you need to customarily pass the query param holding this missions.name column & manage yourself by writing custom logic to make such filtering work. But by using this package, you can simply do it with just sending the query params as we have seen in Searching & Filters. You just need to send the query params as relation-name->column-name={string-to-be-filtered}. See the below example:

    curl -X GET \
      'http://localhost:7872/api/minions?missions-%3Ename=Steal%20the%20Moon%21' \
      -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
    

    Notice that we have passed query param missions-%3Ename=Steal%20the%20Moon%21 & hence reducing our effort of writing the above custom logic altogether.

    So, do we deserve a star rating? :)

    Note: These Select & Relation filters can be combined together to reduce the response size as well as the size of bacck-end code. Make use of these two features combinely & make wonderful applications.

11. Generic/Open Search

Need to send key searchKey via query params along with value.
In repo, define config along with models & column names to be searched on.
Usage:

$searchConfig = [  
    'abc' => [  
        'model' => Abc::class,  
        'keys' => ['name', 'field']  
    ],  
    'groups' => [
        'model' => ProductGroup::class,  
        'keys' => ['name', 'code', 'hsn_code']  
   ]
];  
return $this->search($searchConfig, $params);

License

Laravel-core is released under the MIT License. See the bundled LICENSE for details.