This Laravel package provides a variety of generators to speed up your development process. These generators include:
generate:model
generate:view
generate:controller
generate:seed
generate:migration
generate:pivot
generate:resource
generate:scaffold
Begin by installing this package through Composer. Edit your project's composer.json
file to require way/generators
.
"require-dev": {
"way/generators": "~2.0"
}
There is no support for Laravel 5, as the framework now includes a number of generators out of the box.
Next, update Composer from the Terminal:
composer update --dev
Once this operation completes, the final step is to add the service provider. Open app/config/app.php
, and add a new item to the providers array.
'Way\Generators\GeneratorsServiceProvider'
That's it! You're all set to go. Run the artisan
command from the Terminal to see the new generate
commands.
php artisan
Next, update Composer from the Terminal:
composer update --dev
Once this operation completes, the final step is to add the service provider. Open config/app.php
, and add a new item to the providers array.
'Way\Generators\GeneratorsServiceProvider'
That's it! You're all set to go. Run the artisan
command from the Terminal to see the new generate
commands.
php artisan
Think of generators as an easy way to speed up your workflow. Rather than opening the models directory, creating a new file, saving it, and adding the class, you can simply run a single generate command.
Laravel offers a migration generator, but it stops just short of creating the schema (or the fields for the table). Let's review a couple examples, using generate:migration
.
php artisan generate:migration create_posts_table
If we don't specify the fields
option, the following file will be created within app/database/migrations
.
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
class CreatePostsTable extends Migration {
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::create('posts', function(Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::drop('posts');
}
}
Notice that the generator is smart enough to detect that you're trying to create a table. When naming your migrations, make them as descriptive as possible. The migration generator will detect the first word in your migration name and do its best to determine how to proceed. As such, for create_posts_table
, the keyword is "create," which means that we should prepare the necessary schema to create a table.
If you instead use a migration name along the lines of add_user_id_to_posts_table
, in that case, the keyword is "add," signaling that we intend to add rows to an existing table. Let's see what that generates.
php artisan generate:migration add_user_id_to_posts_table
This will prepare the following boilerplate:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
class AddUserIdToPostsTable extends Migration {
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::table('posts', function(Blueprint $table) {
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::table('posts', function(Blueprint $table) {
});
}
}
Notice how, this time, we're not doing Schema::create
.
When writing migration names, use the following keywords to provide hints for the generator.
create
ormake
(create_users_table
)add
orinsert
(add_user_id_to_posts_table
)remove
(remove_user_id_from_posts_table
)delete
ordrop
(delete_users_table
)
This is pretty nice, but let's take things a step further and also generate the schema, using the fields
option.
php artisan generate:migration create_posts_table --fields="title:string, body:text"
Before we decipher this new option, let's see the output:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
class CreatePostsTable extends Migration {
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::create('posts', function(Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->string('title');
$table->text('body');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::drop('posts');
}
}
Nice! A few things to notice here:
- The generator will automatically set the
id
as the primary key. - It parsed the
fields
options, and added those fields. - The drop method is smart enough to realize that, in reverse, the table should be dropped entirely.
To declare fields, use a comma+space-separated list of key:value:option sets, where key
is the name of the field, value
is the column type, and option
is a way to specify indexes and such, like unique
or nullable
. Here are some examples:
--fields="first:string, last:string"
--fields="age:integer, yob:date"
--fields="username:string:unique, age:integer:nullable"
--fields="name:string:default('John Doe'), bio:text:nullable"
--fields="username:string(30):unique, age:integer:nullable:default(18)"
Please make note of the last example, where we specify a character limit: string(30)
. This will produce $table->string('username', 30)->unique();
It is possible to destroy the table by issuing:
php artisan generate:migration delete_posts_table
As a final demonstration, let's run a migration to remove the completed
field from a tasks
table.
php artisan generate:migration remove_completed_from_tasks_table --fields="completed:boolean"
This time, as we're using the "remove" keyword, the generator understands that it should drop a column, and add it back in the down()
method.
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
class RemoveCompletedFromTasksTable extends Migration {
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::table('tasks', function(Blueprint $table) {
$table->dropColumn('completed');
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::table('tasks', function(Blueprint $table) {
$table->boolean('completed');
});
}
}
php artisan generate:model Post
This will create the file, app/models/Post.php
and insert the following boilerplate:
<?php
class Post extends \Eloquent {
}
The view generator is fairly simple.
php artisan generate:view admin.reports.index
This command will create an empty view, /app/views/admin/reports/index.blade.php
. If the provided directory tree does not exist, it will be created for you.
Laravel provides us with a flexible way to seed new tables.
php artisan generate:seed users
Set the argument to the name of the table that you'd like a seed file for. This will generate app/database/seeds/UsersTableSeeder.php
and populate it with:
<?php
// Composer: "fzaninotto/faker": "v1.3.0"
use Faker\Factory as Faker;
class UsersTableSeeder extends Seeder {
public function run()
{
$faker = Faker::create();
foreach(range(1, 10) as $index)
{
User::create([
]);
}
}
}
This will give you a basic bit of boilerplate, using the popular Faker library. This is a nice way to seed your DB tables. Don't forget to pull in Faker through Composer!
When you require a new pivot table, the generate:pivot
table expedites the process of creating the appropriate migration.
Simply pass the name of the two tables that require a joining pivot table. For orders
and users
, you might do:
php artisan generate:pivot orders users
This will create the following migration:
<?php
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
class CreateOrderUserTable extends Migration {
/**
* Run the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function up()
{
Schema::create('order_user', function(Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->integer('order_id')->unsigned()->index();
$table->foreign('order_id')->references('id')->on('orders')->onDelete('cascade');
$table->integer('user_id')->unsigned()->index();
$table->foreign('user_id')->references('id')->on('users')->onDelete('cascade');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
/**
* Reverse the migrations.
*
* @return void
*/
public function down()
{
Schema::drop('order_user');
}
}
Notice that it correctly sets the table name according to your two provided tables, in alphabetical order. Now, run php artisan migrate
to create your pivot table!
The generate:resource
command will do a number of things for you:
- Generate a model
- Generate index, show, create, and edit views
- Generate a controller
- Generate a migration with schema
- Generate a table seeder
- Migrate the database
When triggering this command, you'll be asked to confirm each of these actions. That way, you can tailor the generation to what you specifically require.
Imagine that you need to build a way to display posts. While you could manually create a controller, create a model, create a migration and populate it with the schema, and then create a table seeder...why not let the generator do that?
php artisan generate:resource post --fields="title:string, body:text"
If you say yes to each confirmation, this single command will give you boilerplate for:
- app/models/Post.php
- app/controllers/PostsController.php
- app/database/migrations/timestamp-create_posts_table.php (including the schema)
- app/database/seeds/PostsTableSeeder.php
The scaffolding generator is similar to generate:resource
, except it will add some beginning boilerplate to these files, as a convenience.
For instance, when running generate:scaffold post
, your controller boilerplate will be:
<?php
class PostsController extends \BaseController {
/**
* Display a listing of posts
*
* @return Response
*/
public function index()
{
$posts = Post::all();
return View::make('posts.index', compact('posts'));
}
/**
* Show the form for creating a new post
*
* @return Response
*/
public function create()
{
return View::make('posts.create');
}
/**
* Store a newly created post in storage.
*
* @return Response
*/
public function store()
{
$validator = Validator::make($data = Input::all(), Post::$rules);
if ($validator->fails())
{
return Redirect::back()->withErrors($validator)->withInput();
}
Post::create($data);
return Redirect::route('posts.index');
}
/**
* Display the specified post.
*
* @param int $id
* @return Response
*/
public function show($id)
{
$post = Post::findOrFail($id);
return View::make('posts.show', compact('post'));
}
/**
* Show the form for editing the specified post.
*
* @param int $id
* @return Response
*/
public function edit($id)
{
$post = Post::find($id);
return View::make('posts.edit', compact('post'));
}
/**
* Update the specified resource in storage.
*
* @param int $id
* @return Response
*/
public function update($id)
{
$post = Post::findOrFail($id);
$validator = Validator::make($data = Input::all(), Post::$rules);
if ($validator->fails())
{
return Redirect::back()->withErrors($validator)->withInput();
}
$post->update($data);
return Redirect::route('posts.index');
}
/**
* Remove the specified resource from storage.
*
* @param int $id
* @return Response
*/
public function destroy($id)
{
Post::destroy($id);
return Redirect::route('posts.index');
}
}
Please note that you're encouraged to modify this generated controller. It simply provides a starting point.
You may want to modify your templates - how the generated files are formatted. To allow for this, you need to publish the templates that, behind the scenes, the generators will reference.
php artisan generate:publish-templates
This will copy all templates to your app/templates
directory. You can modify these however you wish to fit your desired formatting. If you'd prefer a different directory:
php artisan generate:publish-templates --path=app/foo/bar/templates
When you run the generate:publish-templates
command, it will also publish
the configuration to app/config/packages/way/generators/config/config.php
. This file will look somewhat like:
<?php
return [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Where the templates for the generators are stored...
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'model_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/model.txt',
'scaffold_model_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/scaffolding/model.txt',
'controller_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/controller.txt',
'scaffold_controller_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/scaffolding/controller.txt',
'migration_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/migration.txt',
'seed_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/seed.txt',
'view_template_path' => '/Users/jeffreyway/Desktop/generators-testing/app/templates/view.txt',
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Where the generated files will be saved...
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'model_target_path' => app_path('models'),
'controller_target_path' => app_path('controllers'),
'migration_target_path' => app_path('database/migrations'),
'seed_target_path' => app_path('database/seeds'),
'view_target_path' => app_path('views')
];
Also, while you're in this file, note that you can also update the default target directory for each generator.
Because you'll likely type these commands over and over, it makes sense to create aliases.
# Generator Stuff
alias g:m="php artisan generate:model"
alias g:c="php artisan generate:controller"
alias g:v="php artisan generate:view"
alias g:s="php artisan generate:seed"
alias g:mig="php artisan generate:migration"
alias g:r="php artisan generate:resource"
These can be stored in, for example, your ~/.bash_profile
or ~/.bashrc
files.