15 KiB
Laravel Folio
- Introduction
- Installation
- Page Paths / URIs
- Subdomain Routing
- Creating Routes
- Nested Routes
- Index Routes
- Route Parameters
- Route Model Binding
- Soft Deleted Models
- Render Hooks
- Named Routes
- Middleware
- Route Caching
Introduction
Laravel Folio is a powerful page based
router designed to simplify routing in Laravel applications. With Laravel
Folio, generating a route becomes as effortless as creating a Blade template
within your application's resources/views/pages directory.
For example, to create a page that is accessible at the /greeting URL, just
create a greeting.blade.php file in your application's
resources/views/pages directory:
1<div>
2 Hello World
3</div>
<div>
Hello World
</div>
Installation
To get started, install Folio into your project using the Composer package manager:
1composer require laravel/folio
composer require laravel/folio
After installing Folio, you may execute the folio:install Artisan command,
which will install Folio's service provider into your application. This
service provider registers the directory where Folio will search for routes /
pages:
1php artisan folio:install
php artisan folio:install
Page Paths / URIs
By default, Folio serves pages from your application's resources/views/pages
directory, but you may customize these directories in your Folio service
provider's boot method.
For example, sometimes it may be convenient to specify multiple Folio paths in the same Laravel application. You may wish to have a separate directory of Folio pages for your application's "admin" area, while using another directory for the rest of your application's pages.
You may accomplish this using the Folio::path and Folio::uri methods. The
path method registers a directory that Folio will scan for pages when
routing incoming HTTP requests, while the uri method specifies the "base
URI" for that directory of pages:
1use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
2
3Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages/guest'))->uri('/');
4
5Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages/admin'))
6 ->uri('/admin')
7 ->middleware([
8 '*' => [
9 'auth',
10 'verified',
11
12 // ...
13 ],
14 ]);
use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages/guest'))->uri('/');
Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages/admin'))
->uri('/admin')
->middleware([
'*' => [
'auth',
'verified',
// ...
],
]);
Subdomain Routing
You may also route to pages based on the incoming request's subdomain. For
example, you may wish to route requests from admin.example.com to a
different page directory than the rest of your Folio pages. You may accomplish
this by invoking the domain method after invoking the Folio::path method:
1use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
2
3Folio::domain('admin.example.com')
4 ->path(resource_path('views/pages/admin'));
use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
Folio::domain('admin.example.com')
->path(resource_path('views/pages/admin'));
The domain method also allows you to capture parts of the domain or
subdomain as parameters. These parameters will be injected into your page
template:
1use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
2
3Folio::domain('{account}.example.com')
4 ->path(resource_path('views/pages/admin'));
use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
Folio::domain('{account}.example.com')
->path(resource_path('views/pages/admin'));
Creating Routes
You may create a Folio route by placing a Blade template in any of your Folio
mounted directories. By default, Folio mounts the resources/views/pages
directory, but you may customize these directories in your Folio service
provider's boot method.
Once a Blade template has been placed in a Folio mounted directory, you may
immediately access it via your browser. For example, a page placed in
pages/schedule.blade.php may be accessed in your browser at
http://example.com/schedule.
To quickly view a list of all of your Folio pages / routes, you may invoke the
folio:list Artisan command:
1php artisan folio:list
php artisan folio:list
Nested Routes
You may create a nested route by creating one or more directories within one
of Folio's directories. For instance, to create a page that is accessible via
/user/profile, create a profile.blade.php template within the pages/user
directory:
1php artisan folio:page user/profile
2
3# pages/user/profile.blade.php → /user/profile
php artisan folio:page user/profile
# pages/user/profile.blade.php → /user/profile
Index Routes
Sometimes, you may wish to make a given page the "index" of a directory. By
placing an index.blade.php template within a Folio directory, any requests
to the root of that directory will be routed to that page:
1php artisan folio:page index
2# pages/index.blade.php → /
3
4php artisan folio:page users/index
5# pages/users/index.blade.php → /users
php artisan folio:page index
# pages/index.blade.php → /
php artisan folio:page users/index
# pages/users/index.blade.php → /users
Route Parameters
Often, you will need to have segments of the incoming request's URL injected into your page so that you can interact with them. For example, you may need to access the "ID" of the user whose profile is being displayed. To accomplish this, you may encapsulate a segment of the page's filename in square brackets:
1php artisan folio:page "users/[id]"
2
3# pages/users/[id].blade.php → /users/1
php artisan folio:page "users/[id]"
# pages/users/[id].blade.php → /users/1
Captured segments can be accessed as variables within your Blade template:
1<div>
2 User {{ $id }}
3</div>
<div>
User {{ $id }}
</div>
To capture multiple segments, you can prefix the encapsulated segment with
three dots ...:
1php artisan folio:page "users/[...ids]"
2
3# pages/users/[...ids].blade.php → /users/1/2/3
php artisan folio:page "users/[...ids]"
# pages/users/[...ids].blade.php → /users/1/2/3
When capturing multiple segments, the captured segments will be injected into the page as an array:
1<ul>
2 @foreach ($ids as $id)
3 <li>User {{ $id }}</li>
4 @endforeach
5</ul>
<ul>
@foreach ($ids as $id)
<li>User {{ $id }}</li>
@endforeach
</ul>
Route Model Binding
If a wildcard segment of your page template's filename corresponds one of your application's Eloquent models, Folio will automatically take advantage of Laravel's route model binding capabilities and attempt to inject the resolved model instance into your page:
1php artisan folio:page "users/[User]"
2
3# pages/users/[User].blade.php → /users/1
php artisan folio:page "users/[User]"
# pages/users/[User].blade.php → /users/1
Captured models can be accessed as variables within your Blade template. The model's variable name will be converted to "camel case":
1<div>
2 User {{ $user->id }}
3</div>
<div>
User {{ $user->id }}
</div>
Customizing the Key
Sometimes you may wish to resolve bound Eloquent models using a column other
than id. To do so, you may specify the column in the page's filename. For
example, a page with the filename [Post:slug].blade.php will attempt to
resolve the bound model via the slug column instead of the id column.
On Windows, you should use - to separate the model name from the key:
[Post-slug].blade.php.
Model Location
By default, Folio will search for your model within your application's
app/Models directory. However, if needed, you may specify the fully-
qualified model class name in your template's filename:
1php artisan folio:page "users/[.App.Models.User]"
2
3# pages/users/[.App.Models.User].blade.php → /users/1
php artisan folio:page "users/[.App.Models.User]"
# pages/users/[.App.Models.User].blade.php → /users/1
Soft Deleted Models
By default, models that have been soft deleted are not retrieved when
resolving implicit model bindings. However, if you wish, you can instruct
Folio to retrieve soft deleted models by invoking the withTrashed function
within the page's template:
1<?php
2
3use function Laravel\Folio\{withTrashed};
4
5withTrashed();
6
7?>
8
9<div>
10 User {{ $user->id }}
11</div>
<?php
use function Laravel\Folio\{withTrashed};
withTrashed();
?>
<div>
User {{ $user->id }}
</div>
Render Hooks
By default, Folio will return the content of the page's Blade template as the
response to the incoming request. However, you may customize the response by
invoking the render function within the page's template.
The render function accepts a closure which will receive the View instance
being rendered by Folio, allowing you to add additional data to the view or
customize the entire response. In addition to receiving the View instance,
any additional route parameters or model bindings will also be provided to the
render closure:
1<?php
2
3use App\Models\Post;
4use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth;
5use Illuminate\View\View;
6
7use function Laravel\Folio\render;
8
9render(function (View $view, Post $post) {
10 if (! Auth::user()->can('view', $post)) {
11 return response('Unauthorized', 403);
12 }
13
14 return $view->with('photos', $post->author->photos);
15}); ?>
16
17<div>
18 {{ $post->content }}
19</div>
20
21<div>
22 This author has also taken {{ count($photos) }} photos.
23</div>
<?php
use App\Models\Post;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth;
use Illuminate\View\View;
use function Laravel\Folio\render;
render(function (View $view, Post $post) {
if (! Auth::user()->can('view', $post)) {
return response('Unauthorized', 403);
}
return $view->with('photos', $post->author->photos);
}); ?>
<div>
{{ $post->content }}
</div>
<div>
This author has also taken {{ count($photos) }} photos.
</div>
Named Routes
You may specify a name for a given page's route using the name function:
1<?php
2
3use function Laravel\Folio\name;
4
5name('users.index');
<?php
use function Laravel\Folio\name;
name('users.index');
Just like Laravel's named routes, you may use the route function to generate
URLs to Folio pages that have been assigned a name:
1<a href="{{ route('users.index') }}">
2 All Users
3</a>
<a href="{{ route('users.index') }}">
All Users
</a>
If the page has parameters, you may simply pass their values to the route
function:
1route('users.show', ['user' => $user]);
route('users.show', ['user' => $user]);
Middleware
You can apply middleware to a specific page by invoking the middleware
function within the page's template:
1<?php
2
3use function Laravel\Folio\{middleware};
4
5middleware(['auth', 'verified']);
6
7?>
8
9<div>
10 Dashboard
11</div>
<?php
use function Laravel\Folio\{middleware};
middleware(['auth', 'verified']);
?>
<div>
Dashboard
</div>
Or, to assign middleware to a group of pages, you may chain the middleware
method after invoking the Folio::path method.
To specify which pages the middleware should be applied to, the array of
middleware may be keyed using the corresponding URL patterns of the pages they
should be applied to. The * character may be utilized as a wildcard
character:
1use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
2
3Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages'))->middleware([
4 'admin/*' => [
5 'auth',
6 'verified',
7
8 // ...
9 ],
10]);
use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages'))->middleware([
'admin/*' => [
'auth',
'verified',
// ...
],
]);
You may include closures in the array of middleware to define inline, anonymous middleware:
1use Closure;
2use Illuminate\Http\Request;
3use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
4
5Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages'))->middleware([
6 'admin/*' => [
7 'auth',
8 'verified',
9
10 function (Request $request, Closure $next) {
11 // ...
12
13 return $next($request);
14 },
15 ],
16]);
use Closure;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Laravel\Folio\Folio;
Folio::path(resource_path('views/pages'))->middleware([
'admin/*' => [
'auth',
'verified',
function (Request $request, Closure $next) {
// ...
return $next($request);
},
],
]);
Route Caching
When using Folio, you should always take advantage of Laravel's route caching
capabilities. Folio listens for the
route:cache Artisan command to ensure that Folio page definitions and route
names are properly cached for maximum performance.