spatie / laravel-morph-map-generator
Automatically generate morph maps in your Laravel application
Installs: 334 459
Dependents: 1
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Forks: 11
Open Issues: 1
Requires
- php: ^7.4|^8.0
- ext-json: *
- illuminate/console: ^8.0|^9.0|^10.0|^11.0
- illuminate/contracts: ^8.0|^9.0|^10.0|^11.0
- illuminate/database: ^8.0|^9.0|^10.0|^11.0
Requires (Dev)
- mockery/mockery: ^1.4
- orchestra/testbench: ^6.24|^7.0|^8.0|^9.0
- pestphp/pest-plugin-laravel: ^1.3|^2.1
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.6|^10.5
- spatie/temporary-directory: ^1.2
- vimeo/psalm: ^4.2|^5.20
README
With this package, you shouldn't worry about forgetting to add models to your application's morph map. Each model will autoregister itself in the morph map. The only thing you should do is implementing the getMorphClass
method on your models like this:
class Post extends Model { public function getMorphClass(): string { return 'post'; } }
From now on, the Post
model will be represented as post
within your morph map.
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Installation
You can install the package via composer:
composer require spatie/laravel-morph-map-generator
You can publish the config file with:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Spatie\LaravelMorphMapGenerator\MorphMapGeneratorServiceProvider" --tag="config"
This is the contents of the published config file:
return [ /* * When enabled, morph maps will be automatically generated when the * application is booted. */ 'autogenerate' => true, /** * Change the base directory if the models don't reside in the default App namespace. * * For example, the base directory would become 'src' if: * - Application is in src/App * - Models are in src/Domain */ 'base_directory' => '/', /* * Within these paths, the package will search for models to be included * in the generated morph map. */ 'paths' => [ app_path(), ], /* * Only models that extend from one of the base models defined here will * be included in the generated morph map. */ 'base_models' => [ Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model::class, ], /* * When generating the morph map, these models will not be included. */ 'ignored_models' => [], /* * Morph maps can be cached, there's a `FilesystemMorphMapCacheDriver` which * stores the morph map as a file in a directory or you can also use the * Laravel built-in cache by using `LaravelMorphMapCacheDriver`. * * Both drivers have their own config: * - `FilesystemMorphMapCacheDriver` requires a `path` to store the file * - `LaravelMorphMapCacheDriver` requires a `key` for storage */ 'cache' => [ 'type' => Spatie\LaravelMorphMapGenerator\Cache\FilesystemMorphMapCacheDriver::class, 'path' => storage_path('app/morph-map-generator'), ], ];
Usage
First, you have to implement getMorphClass
for the models you want to include in your morph map. We suggest you create a new base model class in your application from which all your models extend. So you could throw an exception when getMorphClass
was not yet implemented:
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model; abstract class BaseModel extends Model { public function getMorphClass() { throw new Exception('The model should implement `getMorphClass`'); } }
When a model is not implementing getMorphClass
, it will throw an exception when building the generated morph map, making it possible to quickly find models that do not have a morph map entry.
When autogenerate
is enabled in the morph-map-generator
config file, the morph map in your application will be dynamically generated each time the application boots. This is great in development environments since each time your application boots, the morph map is regenerated. For performance reasons, you should cache the dynamically generated morph map by running the following command:
php artisan morph-map:cache
Removing a cached morph map can be done by running:
php artisan morph-map:clear
When using Laravel 11+, the morph map can also be cached by using Laravel's optimize commands: optimize
and optimize:clear
Using a custom resolver
You can also determine morph class values programmatically by using a custom resolver. For example, you could use the following to automatically derive the value based on the singular form of the model's table name:
MorphMapGenerator::resolveUsing(fn ($model) => Str::singular($model->getTable()));
Be warned! When the output of the closure above is not stable then you'll manually need to update all the morhp_type
columns within your database. Using something like the table name is a good idea since those do not change that often.
You may set the resolver in the boot
method of one of your service providers.
Models outside your path
Some models like the default Laravel User model and models defined by packages will not be discovered by this package since it only searches for models within the app path and not the complete vendor directory. You can include these models in your morph map by using the default morph map feature from Laravel:
Relation::enforceMorphMap([ 'post' => 'App\Models\Post', 'video' => 'App\Models\Video', ]);
Testing
composer test
Changelog
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
Security Vulnerabilities
Please review our security policy on how to report security vulnerabilities.
Credits
License
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.