Easily generate unique usernames for a Laravel User Model.
Works for Laravel versions above 5.5 including Laravel 9.
See the Change Log
Via Composer
$ composer require taylornetwork/laravel-username-generator
This will add the config to config/username_generator.php
$ php artisan vendor:publish --provider="TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\ServiceProvider"
This section will help you get up and running fast.
The following steps will be the same for all Laravel versions and assumes you're adding the package to a new installation.
User Model
In App\Models\User
(or App\User
for Laravel 7) add the FindSimilarUsernames
and GeneratesUsernames
traits.
Add 'username'
to the fillable property.
// ...
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\FindSimilarUsernames;
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\GeneratesUsernames;
class User extends Authenticatable
{
// ...
use FindSimilarUsernames;
use GeneratesUsernames;
protected $fillable = [
// ...
'username',
];
// ...
}
Database Migration
In your database/2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table
add a username column.
class CreateUsersTable extends Migration
{
public function up()
{
Schema::create('users', function (Blueprint $table) {
// ...
$table->string('username')->unique();
// ...
});
}
}
Note: if you are not using Laravel Jetstream for your project, simply continue with the Laravel 7 guide below.
Publish the Laravel Fortify config if you haven't already
$ php artisan vendor:publish --tag=fortify-config
In the config/fortify.php
change the 'username' => 'email'
to 'username' => 'username'
// ...
'username' => 'username',
'email' => 'email',
// ...
Update the login view in resources/views/auth/login.blade.php
and replace Email with Username.
<x-jet-label for="email" value="{{ __('Username') }}" />
<x-jet-input id="email" class="block mt-1 w-full" type="text" name="username" :value="old('username')" required autofocus />
In config/username_generator.php
update the User model namespace to match your project.
Using username to login
To use the username to login instead of the email you need to add the following to your LoginController
public function username()
{
return 'username';
}
Add the FindSimilarUsernames
trait on your user model (or whichever model you want to use).
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\FindSimilarUsernames;
class User extends Authenticatable
{
use FindSimilarUsernames;
}
Note: this is required in all cases if you want the username to be unique
This is in the process of being updated on the wiki
See the default config
By default the Generator
class has the following configuration:
Config | Value | Type |
---|---|---|
Unique Username | true |
boolean |
Separator | '' |
string (should be single character) |
Case | 'lower' |
string (one of lower, upper, or mixed) |
Username DB Column | 'username' |
string |
Class | '\App\Models\User' |
string |
The config is stored in config/username_generator.php
You can override config on a new instance by new Generator([ 'unique' => false ]);
etc.
If you need to include additional characters beyond just 'A-Za-z'
you'll need to update the allowed_characters
config option.
You should also update 'convert_to_ascii'
to false
if you want the result to be in the same set.
For example
'allowed_characters' => 'А-Яа-яA-Za-z', // Would also allow Cyrillic characters
'allowed_characters' => 'А-Яа-яA-Za-z-_' // Includes Cyrillic, Latin characters as well as '-' and '_'
'allowed_characters' => '\p{Cyrillic}\p{Greek}\p{Latin}\s ' // Includes cyrillic, greek and latin sets and all spaces
Please note that all characters not included in this list are removed before performing any operations. If you get an empty string returned double check that the characters used are included.
Create a new instance and call generate($name)
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\Generator;
$generator = new Generator();
$username = $generator->generate('Test User');
Returns
'testuser'
If you do not provide a name to the generate method an adjective and noun will be chosen as the name at random, using noun and adjective word lists from alenoir/username-generator, which will then be converted to a username.
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\Facades\UsernameGenerator;
$username = UsernameGenerator::generate();
Returns something similar to
'monogamousswish'
Create a new instance and call generateFor($model)
This will access the model's name
property and convert it to a username.
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\Generator;
class User
{
public $name = 'Some Other User';
public function getUsername()
{
$generator = new Generator();
return $generator->generateFor($this);
}
}
Returns
'someotheruser'
This package also comes with a GeneratesUsernames
trait that you can add to your model and it will automatically call the username generator when the model is saving without the specified username column.
Note: you will also need to include the FindSimilarUsernames
trait either way
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\GeneratesUsernames;
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\FindSimilarUsernames;
class User
{
use FindSimilarUsernames, GeneratesUsernames;
}
You can also add custom config to call before the username is generated.
Override the generatorConfig
method in your model
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\GeneratesUsernames;
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\FindSimilarUsernames;
class User
{
use FindSimilarUsernames, GeneratesUsernames;
public function generatorConfig(&$generator)
{
$generator->setConfig([ 'separator' => '_' ]);
}
}
If you need to modify the data before handing it off to the generator, override the getField
method on your model.
For example if you have a first and last name rather than a single name field, you'll need to add this to your model.
class User
{
// ...
public function getField(): string
{
return $this->first_name . ' ' . $this->last_name;
}
// ...
}
Note: if your code still uses a custom getName
, it will still work, however it was replaced with getField
in v2.1 when driver support was added.
This package includes a UsernameGenerator
facade for easy access
UsernameGenerator::generate('Test User');
UsernameGenerator::generateFor($user);
UsernameGenerator::setConfig([ 'separator' => '_' ])->generate('Test User');
$generator = new Generator([ 'separator' => '_' ]);
$generator->generate('Some User');
Returns
some_user
$generator = new Generator([ 'case' => 'upper' ]);
$generator->generate('Some User');
Returns
SOMEUSER
To change the casing, we make use of the Laravel String Helpers so any value that changes the case will work.
Studly (Pascal)
UsernameGenerator::setConfig([ 'case' => 'studly' ])->generate('test user');
// Returns 'TestUser'
When using studly case the laravel helper will remove the spaces between separate words so if a separator is used it will be overridden. You would need to use title case (seen below) in order to have the same effect.
UsernameGenerator::setConfig([ 'case' => 'studly', 'separator' => '_' ])->generate('test user');
// Returns 'TestUser'
Title
This is the same as studly but the laravel helper will not remove spaces, so it can be used in conjunction with a separator
UsernameGenerator::setConfig([ 'case' => 'title' ])->generate('test user');
// Returns 'TestUser'
UsernameGenerator::setConfig([ 'case' => 'title', 'separator' => '_' ])->generate('test user');
// Returns 'Test_User'
Ucfirst
UsernameGenerator::setConfig([ 'case' => 'ucfirst' ])->generate('test user');
// Returns 'Testuser'
$generator = new Generator([ 'case' => 'mixed' ]);
$generator->generate('Some User');
Returns
SomeUser
Note: Mixed case will just ignore changing case altogether
$generator = new Generator([ 'case' => 'mixed' ]);
$generator->generate('SoMe WeIrD CapitaliZation');
Returns
SoMeWeIrDCapitaliZation
Note: if you pass an invalid value for the case
option, mixed case will be used.
If you want to enforce a minimum length for usernames generated change the min_length
option in config/username_generator.php
'min_length' => 6,
By default if the generator generates a username less than the minimum length it will pad the end of it with a random digit between 0 and 9.
For example
UsernameGenerator::generate('test');
// Would return the following where 0 is a random digit
'test00'
Alternatively you can throw an exception when the minimum length has not been reached
In config/username_generator.php
set
'throw_exception_on_too_short' => true,
UsernameGenerator::generate('test');
Would throw a UsernameTooShortException
If you want to enforce a maximum length for usernames generated change the max_length
option in config/username_generator.php
'max_length' => 6,
By default if the generator generates a username more than the maximum length it will cut it to the max length value and then try to make it unique again. If that becomes too long it will remove one character at a time until a unique username with the correct length has been generated.
For example
UsernameGenerator::generate('test user');
'testus'
Alternatively you can throw an exception when the maximum length has been exceeded
In config/username_generator.php
set
'throw_exception_on_too_long' => true,
UsernameGenerator::generate('test user');
Would throw a UsernameTooLongException
Any other character set can be used if it's encoded with UTF-8. You can either include by adding the set to the 'allowed_characters'
option.
Alternatively you can set 'validate_characters'
to false
to not check.
You will need to set 'convert_to_ascii'
to false
either way
$generator = new Generator([
'allowed_characters' => '\p{Greek}\p{Latin}\s ',
'convert_to_ascii' => false,
]);
$generator->generate('Αυτό είναι ένα τεστ');
// Returns
'αυτόείναιένατεστ'
2 drivers are included, NameDriver
(default) and EmailDriver
To use a specific driver
UsernameGenerator::usingEmail()->generate('testuser@example.com');
// Returns
'testuser'
OR
$generator = new Generator();
$generator->setDriver('email');
$generator->generate('test.user77@example.com');
// Returns
'testuser'
You can make your own custom drivers that extend TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\Drivers\BaseDriver
or override an existing one.
Custom drivers require a public $field
property to be set which is the name of the field on the model to use to generate the username.
Drivers will perform the following operations in order:
[
'stripUnwantedCharacters', // Removes all unwanted characters from the text
'convertCase', // Converts the case of the field to the set value (upper, lower, mixed)
'collapseWhitespace', // Collapses any whitespace to a single space
'addSeparator', // Converts all spaces to separator
'makeUnique', // Makes the username unique (if set)
]
In your custom driver you can add a method to perform an operation before or after any of the above operations.
public function beforeConvertCase(string $text): string
{
// --
}
public function afterStripUnwantedCharacters(string $text): string
{
// --
}
Additionally if there is any operation you want to do as the very first or last thing you can use the first and last hooks.
public function first(string $text): string
{
// Happens first before doing anything else
}
public function last(string $text): string
{
// Happens last just before returning
}
For example if you wanted to append -auto
to all automatically generated usernames, you could make a new driver in App\Drivers\AppendDriver
namespace App\Drivers;
use TaylorNetwork\UsernameGenerator\Drivers\BaseDriver;
class AppendDriver extends BaseDriver
{
public $field = 'name';
public function afterMakeUnique(string $text): string
{
return $text . '-auto';
}
}
And then in config/username_generator.php
add the driver to the top of the drivers array to use it as default.
'drivers' => [
'append' => \App\Drivers\AppendDriver::class,
...
],
See the License