47 KiB
File Storage
- Introduction
- Configuration
- The Local Driver
- The Public Disk
- Driver Prerequisites
- Scoped and Read-Only Filesystems
- Amazon S3 Compatible Filesystems
- Obtaining Disk Instances
- On-Demand Disks
- Retrieving Files
- Downloading Files
- File URLs
- Temporary URLs
- File Metadata
- Storing Files
- Prepending and Appending To Files
- Copying and Moving Files
- Automatic Streaming
- File Uploads
- File Visibility
- Deleting Files
- Directories
- Testing
- Custom Filesystems
Introduction
Laravel provides a powerful filesystem abstraction thanks to the wonderful Flysystem PHP package by Frank de Jonge. The Laravel Flysystem integration provides simple drivers for working with local filesystems, SFTP, and Amazon S3. Even better, it's amazingly simple to switch between these storage options between your local development machine and production server as the API remains the same for each system.
Configuration
Laravel's filesystem configuration file is located at
config/filesystems.php. Within this file, you may configure all of your
filesystem "disks". Each disk represents a particular storage driver and
storage location. Example configurations for each supported driver are
included in the configuration file so you can modify the configuration to
reflect your storage preferences and credentials.
The local driver interacts with files stored locally on the server running
the Laravel application, while the sftp storage driver is used for SSH key-
based FTP. The s3 driver is used to write to Amazon's S3 cloud storage
service.
You may configure as many disks as you like and may even have multiple disks that use the same driver.
The Local Driver
When using the local driver, all file operations are relative to the root
directory defined in your filesystems configuration file. By default, this
value is set to the storage/app/private directory. Therefore, the following
method would write to storage/app/private/example.txt:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3Storage::disk('local')->put('example.txt', 'Contents');
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
Storage::disk('local')->put('example.txt', 'Contents');
The Public Disk
The public disk included in your application's filesystems configuration
file is intended for files that are going to be publicly accessible. By
default, the public disk uses the local driver and stores its files in
storage/app/public.
If your public disk uses the local driver and you want to make these files
accessible from the web, you should create a symbolic link from source
directory storage/app/public to target directory public/storage:
To create the symbolic link, you may use the storage:link Artisan command:
1php artisan storage:link
php artisan storage:link
Once a file has been stored and the symbolic link has been created, you can
create a URL to the files using the asset helper:
1echo asset('storage/file.txt');
echo asset('storage/file.txt');
You may configure additional symbolic links in your filesystems
configuration file. Each of the configured links will be created when you run
the storage:link command:
1'links' => [
2 public_path('storage') => storage_path('app/public'),
3 public_path('images') => storage_path('app/images'),
4],
'links' => [
public_path('storage') => storage_path('app/public'),
public_path('images') => storage_path('app/images'),
],
The storage:unlink command may be used to destroy your configured symbolic
links:
1php artisan storage:unlink
php artisan storage:unlink
Driver Prerequisites
S3 Driver Configuration
Before using the S3 driver, you will need to install the Flysystem S3 package via the Composer package manager:
1composer require league/flysystem-aws-s3-v3 "^3.0" --with-all-dependencies
composer require league/flysystem-aws-s3-v3 "^3.0" --with-all-dependencies
An S3 disk configuration array is located in your config/filesystems.php
configuration file. Typically, you should configure your S3 information and
credentials using the following environment variables which are referenced by
the config/filesystems.php configuration file:
1AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<your-key-id>
2AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<your-secret-access-key>
3AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=us-east-1
4AWS_BUCKET=<your-bucket-name>
5AWS_USE_PATH_STYLE_ENDPOINT=false
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<your-key-id>
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<your-secret-access-key>
AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=us-east-1
AWS_BUCKET=<your-bucket-name>
AWS_USE_PATH_STYLE_ENDPOINT=false
For convenience, these environment variables match the naming convention used by the AWS CLI.
FTP Driver Configuration
Before using the FTP driver, you will need to install the Flysystem FTP package via the Composer package manager:
1composer require league/flysystem-ftp "^3.0"
composer require league/flysystem-ftp "^3.0"
Laravel's Flysystem integrations work great with FTP; however, a sample
configuration is not included with the framework's default
config/filesystems.php configuration file. If you need to configure an FTP
filesystem, you may use the configuration example below:
1'ftp' => [
2 'driver' => 'ftp',
3 'host' => env('FTP_HOST'),
4 'username' => env('FTP_USERNAME'),
5 'password' => env('FTP_PASSWORD'),
6
7 // Optional FTP Settings...
8 // 'port' => env('FTP_PORT', 21),
9 // 'root' => env('FTP_ROOT'),
10 // 'passive' => true,
11 // 'ssl' => true,
12 // 'timeout' => 30,
13],
'ftp' => [
'driver' => 'ftp',
'host' => env('FTP_HOST'),
'username' => env('FTP_USERNAME'),
'password' => env('FTP_PASSWORD'),
// Optional FTP Settings...
// 'port' => env('FTP_PORT', 21),
// 'root' => env('FTP_ROOT'),
// 'passive' => true,
// 'ssl' => true,
// 'timeout' => 30,
],
SFTP Driver Configuration
Before using the SFTP driver, you will need to install the Flysystem SFTP package via the Composer package manager:
1composer require league/flysystem-sftp-v3 "^3.0"
composer require league/flysystem-sftp-v3 "^3.0"
Laravel's Flysystem integrations work great with SFTP; however, a sample
configuration is not included with the framework's default
config/filesystems.php configuration file. If you need to configure an SFTP
filesystem, you may use the configuration example below:
1'sftp' => [
2 'driver' => 'sftp',
3 'host' => env('SFTP_HOST'),
4
5 // Settings for basic authentication...
6 'username' => env('SFTP_USERNAME'),
7 'password' => env('SFTP_PASSWORD'),
8
9 // Settings for SSH key-based authentication with encryption password...
10 'privateKey' => env('SFTP_PRIVATE_KEY'),
11 'passphrase' => env('SFTP_PASSPHRASE'),
12
13 // Settings for file / directory permissions...
14 'visibility' => 'private', // `private` = 0600, `public` = 0644
15 'directory_visibility' => 'private', // `private` = 0700, `public` = 0755
16
17 // Optional SFTP Settings...
18 // 'hostFingerprint' => env('SFTP_HOST_FINGERPRINT'),
19 // 'maxTries' => 4,
20 // 'passphrase' => env('SFTP_PASSPHRASE'),
21 // 'port' => env('SFTP_PORT', 22),
22 // 'root' => env('SFTP_ROOT', ''),
23 // 'timeout' => 30,
24 // 'useAgent' => true,
25],
'sftp' => [
'driver' => 'sftp',
'host' => env('SFTP_HOST'),
// Settings for basic authentication...
'username' => env('SFTP_USERNAME'),
'password' => env('SFTP_PASSWORD'),
// Settings for SSH key-based authentication with encryption password...
'privateKey' => env('SFTP_PRIVATE_KEY'),
'passphrase' => env('SFTP_PASSPHRASE'),
// Settings for file / directory permissions...
'visibility' => 'private', // `private` = 0600, `public` = 0644
'directory_visibility' => 'private', // `private` = 0700, `public` = 0755
// Optional SFTP Settings...
// 'hostFingerprint' => env('SFTP_HOST_FINGERPRINT'),
// 'maxTries' => 4,
// 'passphrase' => env('SFTP_PASSPHRASE'),
// 'port' => env('SFTP_PORT', 22),
// 'root' => env('SFTP_ROOT', ''),
// 'timeout' => 30,
// 'useAgent' => true,
],
Scoped and Read-Only Filesystems
Scoped disks allow you to define a filesystem where all paths are automatically prefixed with a given path prefix. Before creating a scoped filesystem disk, you will need to install an additional Flysystem package via the Composer package manager:
1composer require league/flysystem-path-prefixing "^3.0"
composer require league/flysystem-path-prefixing "^3.0"
You may create a path scoped instance of any existing filesystem disk by
defining a disk that utilizes the scoped driver. For example, you may create
a disk which scopes your existing s3 disk to a specific path prefix, and
then every file operation using your scoped disk will utilize the specified
prefix:
1's3-videos' => [
2 'driver' => 'scoped',
3 'disk' => 's3',
4 'prefix' => 'path/to/videos',
5],
's3-videos' => [
'driver' => 'scoped',
'disk' => 's3',
'prefix' => 'path/to/videos',
],
"Read-only" disks allow you to create filesystem disks that do not allow write
operations. Before using the read-only configuration option, you will need
to install an additional Flysystem package via the Composer package manager:
1composer require league/flysystem-read-only "^3.0"
composer require league/flysystem-read-only "^3.0"
Next, you may include the read-only configuration option in one or more of
your disk's configuration arrays:
1's3-videos' => [
2 'driver' => 's3',
3 // ...
4 'read-only' => true,
5],
's3-videos' => [
'driver' => 's3',
// ...
'read-only' => true,
],
Amazon S3 Compatible Filesystems
By default, your application's filesystems configuration file contains a
disk configuration for the s3 disk. In addition to using this disk to
interact with Amazon S3, you may use it to
interact with any S3-compatible file storage service such as
MinIO, DigitalOcean
Spaces, Vultr Object
Storage, Cloudflare
R2, or Hetzner
Cloud Storage.
Typically, after updating the disk's credentials to match the credentials of
the service you are planning to use, you only need to update the value of the
endpoint configuration option. This option's value is typically defined via
the AWS_ENDPOINT environment variable:
1'endpoint' => env('AWS_ENDPOINT', 'https://minio:9000'),
'endpoint' => env('AWS_ENDPOINT', 'https://minio:9000'),
MinIO
In order for Laravel's Flysystem integration to generate proper URLs when
using MinIO, you should define the AWS_URL environment variable so that it
matches your application's local URL and includes the bucket name in the URL
path:
1AWS_URL=http://localhost:9000/local
AWS_URL=http://localhost:9000/local
Generating temporary storage URLs via the temporaryUrl method may not work
when using MinIO if the endpoint is not accessible by the client.
Obtaining Disk Instances
The Storage facade may be used to interact with any of your configured
disks. For example, you may use the put method on the facade to store an
avatar on the default disk. If you call methods on the Storage facade
without first calling the disk method, the method will automatically be
passed to the default disk:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3Storage::put('avatars/1', $content);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
Storage::put('avatars/1', $content);
If your application interacts with multiple disks, you may use the disk
method on the Storage facade to work with files on a particular disk:
1Storage::disk('s3')->put('avatars/1', $content);
Storage::disk('s3')->put('avatars/1', $content);
On-Demand Disks
Sometimes you may wish to create a disk at runtime using a given configuration
without that configuration actually being present in your application's
filesystems configuration file. To accomplish this, you may pass a
configuration array to the Storage facade's build method:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3$disk = Storage::build([
4 'driver' => 'local',
5 'root' => '/path/to/root',
6]);
7
8$disk->put('image.jpg', $content);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
$disk = Storage::build([
'driver' => 'local',
'root' => '/path/to/root',
]);
$disk->put('image.jpg', $content);
Retrieving Files
The get method may be used to retrieve the contents of a file. The raw
string contents of the file will be returned by the method. Remember, all file
paths should be specified relative to the disk's "root" location:
1$contents = Storage::get('file.jpg');
$contents = Storage::get('file.jpg');
If the file you are retrieving contains JSON, you may use the json method to
retrieve the file and decode its contents:
1$orders = Storage::json('orders.json');
$orders = Storage::json('orders.json');
The exists method may be used to determine if a file exists on the disk:
1if (Storage::disk('s3')->exists('file.jpg')) {
2 // ...
3}
if (Storage::disk('s3')->exists('file.jpg')) {
// ...
}
The missing method may be used to determine if a file is missing from the
disk:
1if (Storage::disk('s3')->missing('file.jpg')) {
2 // ...
3}
if (Storage::disk('s3')->missing('file.jpg')) {
// ...
}
Downloading Files
The download method may be used to generate a response that forces the
user's browser to download the file at the given path. The download method
accepts a filename as the second argument to the method, which will determine
the filename that is seen by the user downloading the file. Finally, you may
pass an array of HTTP headers as the third argument to the method:
1return Storage::download('file.jpg');
2
3return Storage::download('file.jpg', $name, $headers);
return Storage::download('file.jpg');
return Storage::download('file.jpg', $name, $headers);
File URLs
You may use the url method to get the URL for a given file. If you are using
the local driver, this will typically just prepend /storage to the given
path and return a relative URL to the file. If you are using the s3 driver,
the fully qualified remote URL will be returned:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3$url = Storage::url('file.jpg');
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
$url = Storage::url('file.jpg');
When using the local driver, all files that should be publicly accessible
should be placed in the storage/app/public directory. Furthermore, you
should create a symbolic link at public/storage which points to the
storage/app/public directory.
When using the local driver, the return value of url is not URL encoded.
For this reason, we recommend always storing your files using names that will
create valid URLs.
URL Host Customization
If you would like to modify the host for URLs generated using the Storage
facade, you may add or change the url option in the disk's configuration
array:
1'public' => [
2 'driver' => 'local',
3 'root' => storage_path('app/public'),
4 'url' => env('APP_URL').'/storage',
5 'visibility' => 'public',
6 'throw' => false,
7],
'public' => [
'driver' => 'local',
'root' => storage_path('app/public'),
'url' => env('APP_URL').'/storage',
'visibility' => 'public',
'throw' => false,
],
Temporary URLs
Using the temporaryUrl method, you may create temporary URLs to files stored
using the local and s3 drivers. This method accepts a path and a
DateTime instance specifying when the URL should expire:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3$url = Storage::temporaryUrl(
4 'file.jpg', now()->addMinutes(5)
5);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
$url = Storage::temporaryUrl(
'file.jpg', now()->addMinutes(5)
);
Enabling Local Temporary URLs
If you started developing your application before support for temporary URLs
was introduced to the local driver, you may need to enable local temporary
URLs. To do so, add the serve option to your local disk's configuration
array within the config/filesystems.php configuration file:
1'local' => [
2 'driver' => 'local',
3 'root' => storage_path('app/private'),
4 'serve' => true,
5 'throw' => false,
6],
'local' => [
'driver' => 'local',
'root' => storage_path('app/private'),
'serve' => true,
'throw' => false,
],
S3 Request Parameters
If you need to specify additional [S3 request
parameters](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/API/RESTObjectGET.html#RESTObjectGET-
requests), you may pass the array of request parameters as the third argument
to the temporaryUrl method:
1$url = Storage::temporaryUrl(
2 'file.jpg',
3 now()->addMinutes(5),
4 [
5 'ResponseContentType' => 'application/octet-stream',
6 'ResponseContentDisposition' => 'attachment; filename=file2.jpg',
7 ]
8);
$url = Storage::temporaryUrl(
'file.jpg',
now()->addMinutes(5),
[
'ResponseContentType' => 'application/octet-stream',
'ResponseContentDisposition' => 'attachment; filename=file2.jpg',
]
);
Customizing Temporary URLs
If you need to customize how temporary URLs are created for a specific storage
disk, you can use the buildTemporaryUrlsUsing method. For example, this can
be useful if you have a controller that allows you to download files stored
via a disk that doesn't typically support temporary URLs. Usually, this method
should be called from the boot method of a service provider:
1<?php
2
3namespace App\Providers;
4
5use DateTime;
6use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
7use Illuminate\Support\Facades\URL;
8use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
9
10class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
11{
12 /**
13 * Bootstrap any application services.
14 */
15 public function boot(): void
16 {
17 Storage::disk('local')->buildTemporaryUrlsUsing(
18 function (string $path, DateTime $expiration, array $options) {
19 return URL::temporarySignedRoute(
20 'files.download',
21 $expiration,
22 array_merge($options, ['path' => $path])
23 );
24 }
25 );
26 }
27}
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use DateTime;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\URL;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Storage::disk('local')->buildTemporaryUrlsUsing(
function (string $path, DateTime $expiration, array $options) {
return URL::temporarySignedRoute(
'files.download',
$expiration,
array_merge($options, ['path' => $path])
);
}
);
}
}
Temporary Upload URLs
The ability to generate temporary upload URLs is only supported by the s3
driver.
If you need to generate a temporary URL that can be used to upload a file
directly from your client-side application, you may use the
temporaryUploadUrl method. This method accepts a path and a DateTime
instance specifying when the URL should expire. The temporaryUploadUrl
method returns an associative array which may be destructured into the upload
URL and the headers that should be included with the upload request:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3['url' => $url, 'headers' => $headers] = Storage::temporaryUploadUrl(
4 'file.jpg', now()->addMinutes(5)
5);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
['url' => $url, 'headers' => $headers] = Storage::temporaryUploadUrl(
'file.jpg', now()->addMinutes(5)
);
This method is primarily useful in serverless environments that require the client-side application to directly upload files to a cloud storage system such as Amazon S3.
File Metadata
In addition to reading and writing files, Laravel can also provide information
about the files themselves. For example, the size method may be used to get
the size of a file in bytes:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3$size = Storage::size('file.jpg');
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
$size = Storage::size('file.jpg');
The lastModified method returns the UNIX timestamp of the last time the file
was modified:
1$time = Storage::lastModified('file.jpg');
$time = Storage::lastModified('file.jpg');
The MIME type of a given file may be obtained via the mimeType method:
1$mime = Storage::mimeType('file.jpg');
$mime = Storage::mimeType('file.jpg');
File Paths
You may use the path method to get the path for a given file. If you are
using the local driver, this will return the absolute path to the file. If
you are using the s3 driver, this method will return the relative path to
the file in the S3 bucket:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3$path = Storage::path('file.jpg');
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
$path = Storage::path('file.jpg');
Storing Files
The put method may be used to store file contents on a disk. You may also
pass a PHP resource to the put method, which will use Flysystem's
underlying stream support. Remember, all file paths should be specified
relative to the "root" location configured for the disk:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3Storage::put('file.jpg', $contents);
4
5Storage::put('file.jpg', $resource);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
Storage::put('file.jpg', $contents);
Storage::put('file.jpg', $resource);
Failed Writes
If the put method (or other "write" operations) is unable to write the file
to disk, false will be returned:
1if (! Storage::put('file.jpg', $contents)) {
2 // The file could not be written to disk...
3}
if (! Storage::put('file.jpg', $contents)) {
// The file could not be written to disk...
}
If you wish, you may define the throw option within your filesystem disk's
configuration array. When this option is defined as true, "write" methods
such as put will throw an instance of League\Flysystem\UnableToWriteFile
when write operations fail:
1'public' => [
2 'driver' => 'local',
3 // ...
4 'throw' => true,
5],
'public' => [
'driver' => 'local',
// ...
'throw' => true,
],
Prepending and Appending To Files
The prepend and append methods allow you to write to the beginning or end
of a file:
1Storage::prepend('file.log', 'Prepended Text');
2
3Storage::append('file.log', 'Appended Text');
Storage::prepend('file.log', 'Prepended Text');
Storage::append('file.log', 'Appended Text');
Copying and Moving Files
The copy method may be used to copy an existing file to a new location on
the disk, while the move method may be used to rename or move an existing
file to a new location:
1Storage::copy('old/file.jpg', 'new/file.jpg');
2
3Storage::move('old/file.jpg', 'new/file.jpg');
Storage::copy('old/file.jpg', 'new/file.jpg');
Storage::move('old/file.jpg', 'new/file.jpg');
Automatic Streaming
Streaming files to storage offers significantly reduced memory usage. If you
would like Laravel to automatically manage streaming a given file to your
storage location, you may use the putFile or putFileAs method. This method
accepts either an Illuminate\Http\File or Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile
instance and will automatically stream the file to your desired location:
1use Illuminate\Http\File;
2use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
3
4// Automatically generate a unique ID for filename...
5$path = Storage::putFile('photos', new File('/path/to/photo'));
6
7// Manually specify a filename...
8$path = Storage::putFileAs('photos', new File('/path/to/photo'), 'photo.jpg');
use Illuminate\Http\File;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
// Automatically generate a unique ID for filename...
$path = Storage::putFile('photos', new File('/path/to/photo'));
// Manually specify a filename...
$path = Storage::putFileAs('photos', new File('/path/to/photo'), 'photo.jpg');
There are a few important things to note about the putFile method. Note that
we only specified a directory name and not a filename. By default, the
putFile method will generate a unique ID to serve as the filename. The
file's extension will be determined by examining the file's MIME type. The
path to the file will be returned by the putFile method so you can store the
path, including the generated filename, in your database.
The putFile and putFileAs methods also accept an argument to specify the
"visibility" of the stored file. This is particularly useful if you are
storing the file on a cloud disk such as Amazon S3 and would like the file to
be publicly accessible via generated URLs:
1Storage::putFile('photos', new File('/path/to/photo'), 'public');
Storage::putFile('photos', new File('/path/to/photo'), 'public');
File Uploads
In web applications, one of the most common use-cases for storing files is
storing user uploaded files such as photos and documents. Laravel makes it
very easy to store uploaded files using the store method on an uploaded file
instance. Call the store method with the path at which you wish to store the
uploaded file:
1<?php
2
3namespace App\Http\Controllers;
4
5use Illuminate\Http\Request;
6
7class UserAvatarController extends Controller
8{
9 /**
10 * Update the avatar for the user.
11 */
12 public function update(Request $request): string
13 {
14 $path = $request->file('avatar')->store('avatars');
15
16 return $path;
17 }
18}
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
class UserAvatarController extends Controller
{
/**
* Update the avatar for the user.
*/
public function update(Request $request): string
{
$path = $request->file('avatar')->store('avatars');
return $path;
}
}
There are a few important things to note about this example. Note that we only
specified a directory name, not a filename. By default, the store method
will generate a unique ID to serve as the filename. The file's extension will
be determined by examining the file's MIME type. The path to the file will be
returned by the store method so you can store the path, including the
generated filename, in your database.
You may also call the putFile method on the Storage facade to perform the
same file storage operation as the example above:
1$path = Storage::putFile('avatars', $request->file('avatar'));
$path = Storage::putFile('avatars', $request->file('avatar'));
Specifying a File Name
If you do not want a filename to be automatically assigned to your stored
file, you may use the storeAs method, which receives the path, the filename,
and the (optional) disk as its arguments:
1$path = $request->file('avatar')->storeAs(
2 'avatars', $request->user()->id
3);
$path = $request->file('avatar')->storeAs(
'avatars', $request->user()->id
);
You may also use the putFileAs method on the Storage facade, which will
perform the same file storage operation as the example above:
1$path = Storage::putFileAs(
2 'avatars', $request->file('avatar'), $request->user()->id
3);
$path = Storage::putFileAs(
'avatars', $request->file('avatar'), $request->user()->id
);
Unprintable and invalid unicode characters will automatically be removed from
file paths. Therefore, you may wish to sanitize your file paths before passing
them to Laravel's file storage methods. File paths are normalized using the
League\Flysystem\WhitespacePathNormalizer::normalizePath method.
Specifying a Disk
By default, this uploaded file's store method will use your default disk. If
you would like to specify another disk, pass the disk name as the second
argument to the store method:
1$path = $request->file('avatar')->store(
2 'avatars/'.$request->user()->id, 's3'
3);
$path = $request->file('avatar')->store(
'avatars/'.$request->user()->id, 's3'
);
If you are using the storeAs method, you may pass the disk name as the third
argument to the method:
1$path = $request->file('avatar')->storeAs(
2 'avatars',
3 $request->user()->id,
4 's3'
5);
$path = $request->file('avatar')->storeAs(
'avatars',
$request->user()->id,
's3'
);
Other Uploaded File Information
If you would like to get the original name and extension of the uploaded file,
you may do so using the getClientOriginalName and
getClientOriginalExtension methods:
1$file = $request->file('avatar');
2
3$name = $file->getClientOriginalName();
4$extension = $file->getClientOriginalExtension();
$file = $request->file('avatar');
$name = $file->getClientOriginalName();
$extension = $file->getClientOriginalExtension();
However, keep in mind that the getClientOriginalName and
getClientOriginalExtension methods are considered unsafe, as the file name
and extension may be tampered with by a malicious user. For this reason, you
should typically prefer the hashName and extension methods to get a name
and an extension for the given file upload:
1$file = $request->file('avatar');
2
3$name = $file->hashName(); // Generate a unique, random name...
4$extension = $file->extension(); // Determine the file's extension based on the file's MIME type...
$file = $request->file('avatar');
$name = $file->hashName(); // Generate a unique, random name...
$extension = $file->extension(); // Determine the file's extension based on the file's MIME type...
File Visibility
In Laravel's Flysystem integration, "visibility" is an abstraction of file
permissions across multiple platforms. Files may either be declared public
or private. When a file is declared public, you are indicating that the
file should generally be accessible to others. For example, when using the S3
driver, you may retrieve URLs for public files.
You can set the visibility when writing the file via the put method:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3Storage::put('file.jpg', $contents, 'public');
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
Storage::put('file.jpg', $contents, 'public');
If the file has already been stored, its visibility can be retrieved and set
via the getVisibility and setVisibility methods:
1$visibility = Storage::getVisibility('file.jpg');
2
3Storage::setVisibility('file.jpg', 'public');
$visibility = Storage::getVisibility('file.jpg');
Storage::setVisibility('file.jpg', 'public');
When interacting with uploaded files, you may use the storePublicly and
storePubliclyAs methods to store the uploaded file with public visibility:
1$path = $request->file('avatar')->storePublicly('avatars', 's3');
2
3$path = $request->file('avatar')->storePubliclyAs(
4 'avatars',
5 $request->user()->id,
6 's3'
7);
$path = $request->file('avatar')->storePublicly('avatars', 's3');
$path = $request->file('avatar')->storePubliclyAs(
'avatars',
$request->user()->id,
's3'
);
Local Files and Visibility
When using the local driver, public visibility translates to 0755
permissions for directories and 0644 permissions for files. You can modify
the permissions mappings in your application's filesystems configuration
file:
1'local' => [
2 'driver' => 'local',
3 'root' => storage_path('app'),
4 'permissions' => [
5 'file' => [
6 'public' => 0644,
7 'private' => 0600,
8 ],
9 'dir' => [
10 'public' => 0755,
11 'private' => 0700,
12 ],
13 ],
14 'throw' => false,
15],
'local' => [
'driver' => 'local',
'root' => storage_path('app'),
'permissions' => [
'file' => [
'public' => 0644,
'private' => 0600,
],
'dir' => [
'public' => 0755,
'private' => 0700,
],
],
'throw' => false,
],
Deleting Files
The delete method accepts a single filename or an array of files to delete:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3Storage::delete('file.jpg');
4
5Storage::delete(['file.jpg', 'file2.jpg']);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
Storage::delete('file.jpg');
Storage::delete(['file.jpg', 'file2.jpg']);
If necessary, you may specify the disk that the file should be deleted from:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3Storage::disk('s3')->delete('path/file.jpg');
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
Storage::disk('s3')->delete('path/file.jpg');
Directories
Get All Files Within a Directory
The files method returns an array of all files within a given directory. If
you would like to retrieve a list of all files within a given directory
including subdirectories, you may use the allFiles method:
1use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
2
3$files = Storage::files($directory);
4
5$files = Storage::allFiles($directory);
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
$files = Storage::files($directory);
$files = Storage::allFiles($directory);
Get All Directories Within a Directory
The directories method returns an array of all directories within a given
directory. If you would like to retrieve a list of all directories within a
given directory including subdirectories, you may use the allDirectories
method:
1$directories = Storage::directories($directory);
2
3$directories = Storage::allDirectories($directory);
$directories = Storage::directories($directory);
$directories = Storage::allDirectories($directory);
Create a Directory
The makeDirectory method will create the given directory, including any
needed subdirectories:
1Storage::makeDirectory($directory);
Storage::makeDirectory($directory);
Delete a Directory
Finally, the deleteDirectory method may be used to remove a directory and
all of its files:
1Storage::deleteDirectory($directory);
Storage::deleteDirectory($directory);
Testing
The Storage facade's fake method allows you to easily generate a fake disk
that, combined with the file generation utilities of the
Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile class, greatly simplifies the testing of file
uploads. For example:
Pest PHPUnit
1<?php
2
3use Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile;
4use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
5
6test('albums can be uploaded', function () {
7 Storage::fake('photos');
8
9 $response = $this->json('POST', '/photos', [
10 UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo1.jpg'),
11 UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo2.jpg')
12 ]);
13
14 // Assert one or more files were stored...
15 Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists('photo1.jpg');
16 Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists(['photo1.jpg', 'photo2.jpg']);
17
18 // Assert one or more files were not stored...
19 Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing('missing.jpg');
20 Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing(['missing.jpg', 'non-existing.jpg']);
21
22 // Assert that the number of files in a given directory matches the expected count...
23 Storage::disk('photos')->assertCount('/wallpapers', 2);
24
25 // Assert that a given directory is empty...
26 Storage::disk('photos')->assertDirectoryEmpty('/wallpapers');
27});
<?php
use Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
test('albums can be uploaded', function () {
Storage::fake('photos');
$response = $this->json('POST', '/photos', [
UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo1.jpg'),
UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo2.jpg')
]);
// Assert one or more files were stored...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists('photo1.jpg');
Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists(['photo1.jpg', 'photo2.jpg']);
// Assert one or more files were not stored...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing('missing.jpg');
Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing(['missing.jpg', 'non-existing.jpg']);
// Assert that the number of files in a given directory matches the expected count...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertCount('/wallpapers', 2);
// Assert that a given directory is empty...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertDirectoryEmpty('/wallpapers');
});
1<?php
2
3namespace Tests\Feature;
4
5use Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile;
6use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
7use Tests\TestCase;
8
9class ExampleTest extends TestCase
10{
11 public function test_albums_can_be_uploaded(): void
12 {
13 Storage::fake('photos');
14
15 $response = $this->json('POST', '/photos', [
16 UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo1.jpg'),
17 UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo2.jpg')
18 ]);
19
20 // Assert one or more files were stored...
21 Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists('photo1.jpg');
22 Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists(['photo1.jpg', 'photo2.jpg']);
23
24 // Assert one or more files were not stored...
25 Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing('missing.jpg');
26 Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing(['missing.jpg', 'non-existing.jpg']);
27
28 // Assert that the number of files in a given directory matches the expected count...
29 Storage::disk('photos')->assertCount('/wallpapers', 2);
30
31 // Assert that a given directory is empty...
32 Storage::disk('photos')->assertDirectoryEmpty('/wallpapers');
33 }
34}
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function test_albums_can_be_uploaded(): void
{
Storage::fake('photos');
$response = $this->json('POST', '/photos', [
UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo1.jpg'),
UploadedFile::fake()->image('photo2.jpg')
]);
// Assert one or more files were stored...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists('photo1.jpg');
Storage::disk('photos')->assertExists(['photo1.jpg', 'photo2.jpg']);
// Assert one or more files were not stored...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing('missing.jpg');
Storage::disk('photos')->assertMissing(['missing.jpg', 'non-existing.jpg']);
// Assert that the number of files in a given directory matches the expected count...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertCount('/wallpapers', 2);
// Assert that a given directory is empty...
Storage::disk('photos')->assertDirectoryEmpty('/wallpapers');
}
}
By default, the fake method will delete all files in its temporary
directory. If you would like to keep these files, you may use the
"persistentFake" method instead. For more information on testing file uploads,
you may consult the HTTP testing documentation's information on file
uploads.
The image method requires the GD
extension.
Custom Filesystems
Laravel's Flysystem integration provides support for several "drivers" out of the box; however, Flysystem is not limited to these and has adapters for many other storage systems. You can create a custom driver if you want to use one of these additional adapters in your Laravel application.
In order to define a custom filesystem you will need a Flysystem adapter. Let's add a community maintained Dropbox adapter to our project:
1composer require spatie/flysystem-dropbox
composer require spatie/flysystem-dropbox
Next, you can register the driver within the boot method of one of your
application's service providers. To accomplish this,
you should use the extend method of the Storage facade:
1<?php
2
3namespace App\Providers;
4
5use Illuminate\Contracts\Foundation\Application;
6use Illuminate\Filesystem\FilesystemAdapter;
7use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
8use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
9use League\Flysystem\Filesystem;
10use Spatie\Dropbox\Client as DropboxClient;
11use Spatie\FlysystemDropbox\DropboxAdapter;
12
13class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
14{
15 /**
16 * Register any application services.
17 */
18 public function register(): void
19 {
20 // ...
21 }
22
23 /**
24 * Bootstrap any application services.
25 */
26 public function boot(): void
27 {
28 Storage::extend('dropbox', function (Application $app, array $config) {
29 $adapter = new DropboxAdapter(new DropboxClient(
30 $config['authorization_token']
31 ));
32
33 return new FilesystemAdapter(
34 new Filesystem($adapter, $config),
35 $adapter,
36 $config
37 );
38 });
39 }
40}
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Foundation\Application;
use Illuminate\Filesystem\FilesystemAdapter;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
use League\Flysystem\Filesystem;
use Spatie\Dropbox\Client as DropboxClient;
use Spatie\FlysystemDropbox\DropboxAdapter;
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Register any application services.
*/
public function register(): void
{
// ...
}
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Storage::extend('dropbox', function (Application $app, array $config) {
$adapter = new DropboxAdapter(new DropboxClient(
$config['authorization_token']
));
return new FilesystemAdapter(
new Filesystem($adapter, $config),
$adapter,
$config
);
});
}
}
The first argument of the extend method is the name of the driver and the
second is a closure that receives the $app and $config variables. The
closure must return an instance of Illuminate\Filesystem\FilesystemAdapter.
The $config variable contains the values defined in config/filesystems.php
for the specified disk.
Once you have created and registered the extension's service provider, you may
use the dropbox driver in your config/filesystems.php configuration file.