Koala Pouch is a fork of Fuzz Production's Magic Box
- To create a two-way interchange format, so that the JSON representations of models broadcast by APIs can be re-applied back to their originating models for updating existing resources and creating new resources.
- Provide an interface for API clients to request exactly the data they want in the way they want.
-
composer require koala/pouch
-
Use or extend
Koala\Pouch\Middleware\RepositoryMiddleware
into your project and register your class under the$routeMiddleware
array inapp/Http/Kernel.php
.RepositoryMiddleware
contains a variety of configuration options that can be overridden -
If you're using
fuzz/api-server
, you can use magical routing by updatingapp/Providers/RouteServiceProvider.php
,RouteServiceProvider@map
, to include:/** * Define the routes for the application. * * @param \Illuminate\Routing\Router $router * @return void */ public function map(Router $router) { // Register a handy macro for registering resource routes $router->macro('restful', function ($model_name, $resource_controller = 'ResourceController') use ($router) { $alias = Str::lower(Str::snake(Str::plural(class_basename($model_name)), '-')); $router->resource($alias, $resource_controller, [ 'only' => [ 'index', 'store', 'show', 'update', 'destroy', ], ]); }); $router->group(['namespace' => $this->namespace], function ($router) { require app_path('Http/routes.php'); }); }
-
Set up your Pouch resource routes under the middleware key you assign to your chosen
RepositoryMiddleware
class -
Set up a
YourAppNamespace\Http\Controllers\ResourceController
, here is what a ResourceController might look like . -
Set up models according to
Model Setup
section
Just run phpunit
after you composer install
.
Koala\Pouch\EloquentRepository
implements a CRUD repository that cascades through relationships,
whether or not related models have been created yet.
Consider a simple model where a User has many Posts. EloquentRepository's basic usage is as follows:
Create a User with the username Steve who has a single Post with the title Stuff.
$repository = (new EloquentRepository)
->setModelClass('User')
->setInput([
'username' => 'steve',
'nonsense' => 'tomfoolery',
'posts' => [
'title' => 'Stuff',
],
]);
$user = $repository->save();
When $repository->save()
is invoked, a User will be created with the username "Steve", and a Post will
be created with the user_id
belonging to that User. The nonsensical "nonsense" property is simply
ignored, because it does not actually exist on the table storing Users.
A limitation on Eloquent HasManyThrough relationships:
Inputs that define a model related through a HasManyThrough
relationship must refer to an already existing model.
In this example, a User
has many Reaction
s through a Post
. The Reaction
model must exist and be related to a
Post
in order to correctly relate to the User
.
$repository = (new EloquentRepository)
->setModelClass('User')
->setInput([
'username' => 'steve',
'posts' => [
'title' => 'Stuff',
],
'reactions' => [
[
'id': 1 //The Reaction model must already exist, and relate to a Post
]
]
]);
$user = $repository->save();
A workaround for new Reaction
and Post
models attached to a User
involves nesting the Reaction
model data under the related Post
$repository = (new EloquentRepository)
->setModelClass('User')
->setInput([
'username' => 'steve',
//The Post is related to the User, and the Reaction is related to the Post. User Reactions are related through the Post.
'posts' => [
'title' => 'Stuff',
'reactions' => [
[
'name' => 'John Doe',
'icon' => 'thumbs-up'
]
]
],
]);
$user = $repository->save();
Support for new models defined through a HasThroughMany
relationship will come soon.
By itself, EloquentRepository is a blunt weapon with no access controls that should be avoided in any public APIs. It will clobber every relationship it touches without prejudice. For example, the following is a BAD way to add a new Post for the user we just created.
$repository
->setInput([
'id' => $user->id,
'posts' => [
['title' => 'More Stuff'],
],
])
->save();
This will delete poor Steve's first post—not the intended effect. The safe(r) way to append a Post would be either of the following:
$repository
->setInput([
'id' => $user->id,
'posts' => [
['id' => $user->posts->first()->id],
['title' => 'More Stuff'],
],
])
->save();
$post = $repository
->setModelClass('Post')
->setInput([
'title' => 'More Stuff',
'user' => [
'id' => $user->id,
],
])
->save();
Generally speaking, the latter is preferred and is less likely to explode in your face.
The public API methods that return models from a repository are:
create
read
update
delete
save
, which will either callcreate
orupdate
depending on the state of its inputfind
, which will find a model by IDfindOrFail
, which will find a model by ID or throw\Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\ModelNotFoundException
The public API methods that return an \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection
are:
all
Koala\Pouch\Filter
handles Eloquent Query Builder modifications based on filter values passed through the filters
parameter.
Tokens and usage:
Token | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
^ |
Field starts with | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[name]=^John |
$ |
Field ends with | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[name]=$Smith |
~ |
Field contains | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[favorite_cheese]=~cheddar |
< |
Field is less than | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[lifetime_value]=<50 |
> |
Field is greater than | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[lifetime_value]=>50 |
>= |
Field is greater than or equals | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[lifetime_value]=>=50 |
<= |
Field is less than or equals | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[lifetime_value]=<=50 |
= |
Field is equal to | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[username]==Specific%20Username |
!= |
Field is not equal to | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[username]=!=common%20username |
[...] |
Field is one or more of | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[id]=[1,5,10] |
![...] |
Field is not one of | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[id]=![1,5,10] |
NULL |
Field is null | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[address]=NULL |
NOT_NULL |
Field is not null | https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?filters[email]=NOT_NULL |
Assuming we have users and their related tables resembling the following structure:
[
'username' => 'Bobby',
'profile' => [
'hobbies' => [
['name' => 'Hockey'],
['name' => 'Programming'],
['name' => 'Cooking']
]
]
]
We can filter users by their hobbies with users?filters[profile.hobbies.name]=^Cook
.
This filter can be read as select users with whose profile.hobbies.name begins with "Cook"
Relationships can be of arbitrary depth.
We can use AND
and OR
statements to build filters such as users?filters[username]==Bobby&filters[or][username]==Johnny&filters[and][profile.favorite_cheese]==Gouda
. The PHP array that's built from this filter is:
[
'username' => '=Bobby',
'or' => [
'username' => '=Johnny',
'and' => [
'profile.favorite_cheese' => '=Gouda',
]
]
]
and this filter can be read as select (users with username Bobby) OR (users with username Johnny whose profile.favorite_cheese attribute is Gouda)
.
We can limit the amount of data that comes back with your query by adding pick
to the URL.
Usage:
https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?pick=id,username,occupation
https://api.yourdomain.com/1.0/users?pick[]=id&pick[]=username&pick[]=occupation
Models need to implement Koala\Pouch\Contracts\PouchResource
before Pouch will allow them to be exposed as a Pouch resource. This is done so exposure is an explicit process and no more is exposed than is needed.
Models also need to define their own $fillable
array including attributes and relations that can be filled through this model. For example, if a User has many posts and has many comments but an API consumer should only be able to update comments through a user, the $fillable
array would look like:
protected $fillable = ['username', 'password', 'name', 'comments'];
Pouch will only modify attributes/relations that are explicitly defined.
Pouch is great and all, but we don't want to resolve model classes ourselves before we can instantiate a repository...
If you've configured a RESTful URI structure with pluralized resources (i.e. https://api.mydowmain.com/1.0/users
maps to the User model), you can use Koala\Pouch\Utility\Modeler
to resolve a model class name from a route name.
phpunit
:)
- Route service provider should be pre-setup
- Support more relationships (esp. polymorphic relations) through cascading saves.
- Support paginating nested relations