- Introduction
- Package Discovery
- Service Providers
- Resources
- Commands
- Public Assets
- Publishing File Groups
Packages are the primary way of adding functionality to Laravel. Packages might be anything from a great way to work with dates like Carbon or a package that allows you to associate files with Eloquent models like Spatie's Laravel Media Library.
There are different types of packages. Some packages are stand-alone, meaning they work with any PHP framework. Carbon and PHPUnit are examples of stand-alone packages. Any of these packages may be used with Laravel by requiring them in your composer.json
file.
On the other hand, other packages are specifically intended for use with Laravel. These packages may have routes, controllers, views, and configuration specifically intended to enhance a Laravel application. This guide primarily covers the development of those packages that are Laravel specific.
When writing a Laravel application, it generally does not matter if you use contracts or facades since both provide essentially equal levels of testability. However, when writing packages, your package will not typically have access to all of Laravel's testing helpers. If you would like to be able to write your package tests as if the package were installed inside a typical Laravel application, you may use the Orchestral Testbench package.
In a Laravel application's config/app.php
configuration file, the providers
option defines a list of service providers that should be loaded by Laravel. When someone installs your package, you will typically want your service provider to be included in this list. Instead of requiring users to manually add your service provider to the list, you may define the provider in the extra
section of your package's composer.json
file. In addition to service providers, you may also list any facades you would like to be registered:
"extra": {
"laravel": {
"providers": [
"Barryvdh\\Debugbar\\ServiceProvider"
],
"aliases": {
"Debugbar": "Barryvdh\\Debugbar\\Facade"
}
}
},
Once your package has been configured for discovery, Laravel will automatically register its service providers and facades when it is installed, creating a convenient installation experience for your package's users.
If you are the consumer of a package and would like to disable package discovery for a package, you may list the package name in the extra
section of your application's composer.json
file:
"extra": {
"laravel": {
"dont-discover": [
"barryvdh/laravel-debugbar"
]
}
},
You may disable package discovery for all packages using the *
character inside of your application's dont-discover
directive:
"extra": {
"laravel": {
"dont-discover": [
"*"
]
}
},
Service providers are the connection point between your package and Laravel. A service provider is responsible for binding things into Laravel's service container and informing Laravel where to load package resources such as views, configuration, and localization files.
A service provider extends the Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider
class and contains two methods: register
and boot
. The base ServiceProvider
class is located in the illuminate/support
Composer package, which you should add to your own package's dependencies. To learn more about the structure and purpose of service providers, check out their documentation.
Typically, you will need to publish your package's configuration file to the application's config
directory. This will allow users of your package to easily override your default configuration options. To allow your configuration files to be published, call the publishes
method from the boot
method of your service provider:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->publishes([
__DIR__.'/../config/courier.php' => config_path('courier.php'),
]);
}
Now, when users of your package execute Laravel's vendor:publish
command, your file will be copied to the specified publish location. Once your configuration has been published, its values may be accessed like any other configuration file:
$value = config('courier.option');
Warning
You should not define closures in your configuration files. They can not be serialized correctly when users execute theconfig:cache
Artisan command.
You may also merge your own package configuration file with the application's published copy. This will allow your users to define only the options they actually want to override in the published copy of the configuration file. To merge the configuration file values, use the mergeConfigFrom
method within your service provider's register
method.
The mergeConfigFrom
method accepts the path to your package's configuration file as its first argument and the name of the application's copy of the configuration file as its second argument:
/**
* Register any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function register()
{
$this->mergeConfigFrom(
__DIR__.'/../config/courier.php', 'courier'
);
}
Warning
This method only merges the first level of the configuration array. If your users partially define a multi-dimensional configuration array, the missing options will not be merged.
If your package contains routes, you may load them using the loadRoutesFrom
method. This method will automatically determine if the application's routes are cached and will not load your routes file if the routes have already been cached:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->loadRoutesFrom(__DIR__.'/../routes/web.php');
}
If your package contains database migrations, you may use the loadMigrationsFrom
method to inform Laravel how to load them. The loadMigrationsFrom
method accepts the path to your package's migrations as its only argument:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->loadMigrationsFrom(__DIR__.'/../database/migrations');
}
Once your package's migrations have been registered, they will automatically be run when the php artisan migrate
command is executed. You do not need to export them to the application's database/migrations
directory.
If your package contains translation files, you may use the loadTranslationsFrom
method to inform Laravel how to load them. For example, if your package is named courier
, you should add the following to your service provider's boot
method:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->loadTranslationsFrom(__DIR__.'/../lang', 'courier');
}
Package translations are referenced using the package::file.line
syntax convention. So, you may load the courier
package's welcome
line from the messages
file like so:
echo trans('courier::messages.welcome');
If you would like to publish your package's translations to the application's lang/vendor
directory, you may use the service provider's publishes
method. The publishes
method accepts an array of package paths and their desired publish locations. For example, to publish the translation files for the courier
package, you may do the following:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->loadTranslationsFrom(__DIR__.'/../lang', 'courier');
$this->publishes([
__DIR__.'/../lang' => $this->app->langPath('vendor/courier'),
]);
}
Now, when users of your package execute Laravel's vendor:publish
Artisan command, your package's translations will be published to the specified publish location.
To register your package's views with Laravel, you need to tell Laravel where the views are located. You may do this using the service provider's loadViewsFrom
method. The loadViewsFrom
method accepts two arguments: the path to your view templates and your package's name. For example, if your package's name is courier
, you would add the following to your service provider's boot
method:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->loadViewsFrom(__DIR__.'/../resources/views', 'courier');
}
Package views are referenced using the package::view
syntax convention. So, once your view path is registered in a service provider, you may load the dashboard
view from the courier
package like so:
Route::get('/dashboard', function () {
return view('courier::dashboard');
});
When you use the loadViewsFrom
method, Laravel actually registers two locations for your views: the application's resources/views/vendor
directory and the directory you specify. So, using the courier
package as an example, Laravel will first check if a custom version of the view has been placed in the resources/views/vendor/courier
directory by the developer. Then, if the view has not been customized, Laravel will search the package view directory you specified in your call to loadViewsFrom
. This makes it easy for package users to customize / override your package's views.
If you would like to make your views available for publishing to the application's resources/views/vendor
directory, you may use the service provider's publishes
method. The publishes
method accepts an array of package view paths and their desired publish locations:
/**
* Bootstrap the package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->loadViewsFrom(__DIR__.'/../resources/views', 'courier');
$this->publishes([
__DIR__.'/../resources/views' => resource_path('views/vendor/courier'),
]);
}
Now, when users of your package execute Laravel's vendor:publish
Artisan command, your package's views will be copied to the specified publish location.
If you are building a package that utilizes Blade components or placing components in non-conventional directories, you will need to manually register your component class and its HTML tag alias so that Laravel knows where to find the component. You should typically register your components in the boot
method of your package's service provider:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
use VendorPackage\View\Components\AlertComponent;
/**
* Bootstrap your package's services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::component('package-alert', AlertComponent::class);
}
Once your component has been registered, it may be rendered using its tag alias:
<x-package-alert/>
Alternatively, you may use the componentNamespace
method to autoload component classes by convention. For example, a Nightshade
package might have Calendar
and ColorPicker
components that reside within the Nightshade\Views\Components
namespace:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Blade;
/**
* Bootstrap your package's services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Blade::componentNamespace('Nightshade\\Views\\Components', 'nightshade');
}
This will allow the usage of package components by their vendor namespace using the package-name::
syntax:
<x-nightshade::calendar />
<x-nightshade::color-picker />
Blade will automatically detect the class that's linked to this component by pascal-casing the component name. Subdirectories are also supported using "dot" notation.
If your package contains anonymous components, they must be placed within a components
directory of your package's "views" directory (as specified by the loadViewsFrom
method). Then, you may render them by prefixing the component name with the package's view namespace:
<x-courier::alert />
Laravel's built-in about
Artisan command provides a synopsis of the application's environment and configuration. Packages may push additional information to this command's output via the AboutCommand
class. Typically, this information may be added from your package service provider's boot
method:
use Illuminate\Foundation\Console\AboutCommand;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
AboutCommand::add('My Package', fn () => ['Version' => '1.0.0']);
}
To register your package's Artisan commands with Laravel, you may use the commands
method. This method expects an array of command class names. Once the commands have been registered, you may execute them using the Artisan CLI:
use Courier\Console\Commands\InstallCommand;
use Courier\Console\Commands\NetworkCommand;
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
if ($this->app->runningInConsole()) {
$this->commands([
InstallCommand::class,
NetworkCommand::class,
]);
}
}
Your package may have assets such as JavaScript, CSS, and images. To publish these assets to the application's public
directory, use the service provider's publishes
method. In this example, we will also add a public
asset group tag, which may be used to easily publish groups of related assets:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->publishes([
__DIR__.'/../public' => public_path('vendor/courier'),
], 'public');
}
Now, when your package's users execute the vendor:publish
command, your assets will be copied to the specified publish location. Since users will typically need to overwrite the assets every time the package is updated, you may use the --force
flag:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=public --force
You may want to publish groups of package assets and resources separately. For instance, you might want to allow your users to publish your package's configuration files without being forced to publish your package's assets. You may do this by "tagging" them when calling the publishes
method from a package's service provider. For example, let's use tags to define two publish groups for the courier
package (courier-config
and courier-migrations
) in the boot
method of the package's service provider:
/**
* Bootstrap any package services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
$this->publishes([
__DIR__.'/../config/package.php' => config_path('package.php')
], 'courier-config');
$this->publishes([
__DIR__.'/../database/migrations/' => database_path('migrations')
], 'courier-migrations');
}
Now your users may publish these groups separately by referencing their tag when executing the vendor:publish
command:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=courier-config