eightyfive/laravel-autoroute

This package is abandoned and no longer maintained. The author suggests using the eyf/laravel-autoroute package instead.

Laravel YAML routes


README

Autoroute helps you register Laravel routes as YAML.

"La route? Là où on va, on a pas besoin... De route."

Install

composer require eyf/laravel-autoroute

Usage

<?php
// app/Providers/RouteServiceProvider.php

use Eyf\Autoroute\Autoroute;

class RouteServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    public function map(Autoroute $autoroute)
    {
        $autoroute->load(["api.yaml"]);
    }
}

Note: It will automatically look for files inside the Laravel routes/ folder.

Sample api.yaml

domain: api.example.org
prefix: v1
middleware:
    - api
namespace: App\Http\Controllers\Api
paths:
    "users":
        get:
            uses: UserController@index

        post:
            uses: UserController@store

    "users/{id}":
        get:
            uses: UserController@find

        put:
            uses: UserController@update

Or using the compact syntax:

domain: api.example.org
prefix: v1
middleware:
    - api
namespace: App\Http\Controllers\Api
paths:
    "users":
        get: user.index
        post: user.store

    "users/{id}":
        get: user.find
        put: user.update

Template parameters

Autoroute supports light parameters in YAML files. The format is %<parameter_name>%.

For instance let's say you need to work with a local API subdomain:

<?php
// app/Providers/RouteServiceProvider.php

use Eyf\Autoroute\Autoroute;

class RouteServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    public function map(Autoroute $autoroute)
    {
        $parameters = [
            "app_domain" => env("APP_DOMAIN", "example.org"),
        ];

        $autoroute->load(["api.yaml"], $parameters);
    }
}

And in your local .env file:

APP_DOMAIN=localhost:8000
# APP_DOMAIN=example.org # PROD

And in your api.yaml file:

domain: api.%app_domain%
prefix: v1
# ...

Default route names

If you don't provide an as option in your route definition:

"users/{id}":
    get:
      uses: UserController@find
        as: my_user_find_route_name

Autoroute will generate a default route name based on the current namespace, controller and action names:

"users/{id}":
    get:
        uses: UserController@find
        # as: api.user.find (generated)

Custom default route name

If you're not happy with the default route name format, you can implement your own Eyf\Autoroute\RouteNamerInterface and bind it accordingly in your Laravel app service provider:

<?php
// app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php

use Eyf\Autoroute\RouteNamerInterface;
use App\Services\MyRouteNamer;

class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    public function register()
    {
        $this->app->bind(RouteNamerInterface::class, MyRouteNamer::class);
    }
}

uses compact syntax

If you're not using any route options (as, etc...), you can use a "compact" syntax to specify your controllers:

domain: api.%app_domain%
prefix: v1
middleware:
    - api
namespace: App\Http\Controllers\Api
paths:
    "users":
        get: user.index
        post: user.store

    "users/{id}":
        get: user.find
        put: user.update

Custom compact syntax

You can customize the shorthand syntax by implementing RouteNamerInterface::getUses(string $compact).