eastree / uniquewith-validator
Custom Laravel Validator for combined unique indexes
Requires
- php: >=5.4.0
- illuminate/support: 5.*
- illuminate/validation: 5.*
Requires (Dev)
- bossa/phpspec2-expect: dev-phpspec-3.2
- phpspec/phpspec: ^3.2
README
This package contains a variant of the validateUnique
rule for Laravel, that allows for validation of multi-column UNIQUE indexes.
Documentation for older versions
Installation
Install the package through Composer. On the command line:
composer require felixkiss/uniquewith-validator
Configuration
Add the following to your providers
array in config/app.php
:
'providers' => [ // ... Felixkiss\UniqueWithValidator\ServiceProvider::class, ],
Usage
Use it like any Validator
rule:
$rules = [ '<field1>' => 'unique_with:<table>,<field2>[,<field3>,...,<ignore_rowid>]', ];
See the Validation documentation of Laravel.
Specify different column names in the database
If your input field names are different from the corresponding database columns, you can specify the column names explicitly.
e.g. your input contains a field 'last_name', but the column in your database is called 'sur_name':
$rules = [ 'first_name' => 'unique_with:users, middle_name, last_name = sur_name', ];
Example
Pretend you have a users
table in your database plus User
model like this:
<?php use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration; use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint; class CreateUsersTable extends Migration { /** * Run the migrations. * * @return void */ public function up() { Schema::create('users', function(Blueprint $table) { $table->increments('id'); $table->timestamps(); $table->string('first_name'); $table->string('last_name'); $table->unique(['first_name', 'last_name']); }); } /** * Reverse the migrations. * * @return void */ public function down() { Schema::drop('users'); } }
<?php class User extends Eloquent { }
Now you can validate a given first_name
, last_name
combination with something like this:
Route::post('test', function() { $rules = [ 'first_name' => 'required|unique_with:users,last_name', 'last_name' => 'required', ]; $validator = Validator::make(Input::all(), $rules); if($validator->fails()) { return Redirect::back()->withErrors($validator); } $user = new User; $user->first_name = Input::get('first_name'); $user->last_name = Input::get('last_name'); $user->save(); return Redirect::home()->with('success', 'User created!'); });
You can also specify a row id to ignore (useful to solve unique constraint when updating)
This will ignore row with id 2
$rules = [ 'first_name' => 'required|unique_with:users,last_name,2', 'last_name' => 'required', ];
To specify a custom column name for the id, pass it like
$rules = [ 'first_name' => 'required|unique_with:users,last_name,2 = custom_id_column', 'last_name' => 'required', ];
If your id is not numeric, you can tell the validator
$rules = [ 'first_name' => 'required|unique_with:users,last_name,ignore:abc123', 'last_name' => 'required', ];
You can also set additional clauses. For example, if your model uses soft deleting then you can use the following code to select all existing rows but marked as deleted
$rules = [ 'first_name' => 'required|unique_with:users,last_name,deleted_at,2 = custom_id_column', 'last_name' => 'required', ];
License
MIT