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Laravel package to provide frontend template routes for non-production environments.

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engageinteractive/laravel-frontend

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Laravel Frontend

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Laravel package to provide frontend template routes for non-production environments.

Installation

composer require engageinteractive/laravel-frontend

The package's service provider will be autoloaded on startup.

Next publish the templates and config file:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="EngageInteractive\LaravelFrontend\ServiceProvider"

The files published this way are examples of structure and are not enforced by the package. Edit config/frontend.php to change the paths of these files. If you also need to change the filename of config/frontend.php see Config File Customisation.

Basic Usage

Add the following key to your .env file to enable the frontend routes (typically, local and staging):

FRONTEND_ENABLED=true

If this key is already in use for your project, you can change this in the config/frontend.php file.

Now you can visit /frontend/ and see the templates.

Page Defaults

Often within an app, it is useful to have view composers that load fallback variables from a configuration or the database when not provided by the controller explicitly. An example of this could be the page title in the HTML <head> for example. Depending on the setup you might not have a database defined when building the frontend templates, or you might not even want the database involved. In this case you still want your layout templates to recieve this variables, but it would be nice to hard code them for all the frontend templates.

To do this you can subclass the PageDefaultsViewComposer and add register it within a service provider:

Subclass the View Composer implementing your own values

<?php

namespace App\Providers;

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\View;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;

use EngageInteractive\LaravelFrontend\PageDefaultsViewComposer as BaseViewComposer;

class PageDefaultsViewComposer extends BaseViewComposer
{
    /**
     * Gets frontend default variables.
     *
     * @return array
     */
    protected function defaultsForFrontend()
    {
        return [
            'page' => [
                'title' => 'HTML Meta Title',
                'description' => 'HTML Meta Description',
                ...
            ],
        ];
    }

    /**
     * Gets application default variables (i.e. ones used when not in the
     * frontend templates.)
     *
     * @return array
     */
    protected function defaultsForApp()
    {
        return [
            'page' => [
                'title' => config('app.name'),
                ...
            ],
        ];
    }
}

Register your View Composer

<?php

namespace App\Http\ViewComposers;

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\View;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;

use App\Http\ViewComposers\PageDefaultsViewComposer;

class ViewComposerServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    /**
     * Register bindings in the container.
     *
     * @return void
     */
    public function boot()
    {
        // Here the 'app/' directory is assumed to be all the individual pages,
        // and does not contain partials, or layouts. This is because the
        // composer will be ran multiple times if the Blade template extends
        // from files also in the 'app/' directory.
        View::composer('app/*', PageDefaultsViewComposer::class);
    }
}

Config File Customisation

By default the package uses the config/frontend.php file to define all the settings, such as route name, URL path, template file paths etc. However, the package uses Laravel Config Provider to allow you change to which file is used. To do so bind your own instance of ConfigProvider in your AppServiceProvider. This is useful in cases where config/example-package.php is already in use within your project for example.

First create your own provider:

namespace App\Config;

use EngageInteractive\LaravelFrontend\ConfigProvider;

class FrontendConfigProvider extends ConfigProvider
{
    /**
     * Key to use when retrieving config values.
     *
     * @var string
     */
    protected $configKey = 'laravel-frontend';
}

Then, add the provider to your bindings on startup.

class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
...

    /**
     * All of the container bindings that should be registered.
     *
     * @var array
     */
    public $bindings = [
        \EngageInteractive\LaravelFrontend\ConfigProvider::class => \App\Config\FrontendConfigProvider::class,
    ];

...
}

Now, throughout the package when the ConfigProvider is requested via the Laravel service container, yours will be created instead.

Laravel Compatibility

Works on Laravel 5.5, 5.6 and 5.7.

License

Laravel Frontend is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license.

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Laravel package to provide frontend template routes for non-production environments.

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