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Package generators
Short Description Extend Laravel 5's generators.
License MIT
Informations about the package generators
Laravel 5 Extended Generators
If you're familiar with my Laravel 4 Generators, then this is basically the same thing - just upgraded for Laravel 5.
L5 includes a bunch of generators out of the box, so this package only needs to add a few things, like:
make:migration:schema
make:migration:pivot
make:seed
With one or two more to come.
Usage
Step 1: Install Through Composer
Step 2: Add the Service Provider
You'll only want to use these generators for local development, so you don't want to update the production providers
array in config/app.php
. Instead, add the provider in app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php
, like so:
Step 3: Run Artisan!
You're all set. Run php artisan
from the console, and you'll see the new commands in the make:*
namespace section.
Examples
- Migrations With Schema
- Pivot Tables
- Database Seeders
Migrations With Schema
Notice the format that we use, when declaring any applicable schema: a comma-separate list...
So any of these will do:
Using the schema from earlier...
...this will give you:
When generating migrations with schema, the name of your migration (like, "create_users_table") matters. We use it to figure out what you're trying to accomplish. In this case, we began with the "create" keyword, which signals that we want to create a new table.
Alternatively, we can use the "remove" or "add" keywords, and the generated boilerplate will adapt, as needed. Let's create a migration to remove a column.
Now, notice that we're using the correct Schema methods.
Here's a few other examples of commands that you might write:
php artisan make:migration:schema create_posts_table
php artisan make:migration:schema create_posts_table --schema="title:string, body:text, excerpt:string:nullable"
php artisan make:migration:schema remove_excerpt_from_posts_table --schema="excerpt:string:nullable"
Now, when you create a migration, you typically want a model to go with it, right? By default, we'll go ahead and create an Eloquent model to go with your migration. This means, if you run, say:
You'll get a migration, populated with the schema...but you'll also get an Eloquent model at app/Dog.php
. Naturally, you can opt out of this by adding the --model=false
flag/option.
Foreign Constraints
There's also a secret bit of sugar for when you need to generate foreign constraints. Imagine that you have a posts table, where each post belongs to a user. Let's try:
Notice that "foreign" option (user_id:integer:foreign
)? That's special. It signals that user_id` should receive a foreign constraint. Following conventions, this will give us:
As such, for that full command, our schema should look like so:
Neato.
Pivot Tables
So you need a migration to setup a pivot table in your database? Easy. We can scaffold the whole class with a single command.
Here we pass, in any order, the names of the two tables that we need a joining/pivot table for. This will give you:
Notice that the naming conventions are being followed here, regardless of what order you pass the table names.
Database Seeders
This one is fairly basic. It just gives you a quick seeder class in the "database/seeds" folder.