This package is a ServiceProvider for Snappy: https://github.com/KnpLabs/snappy.
Choose one of the following options to install wkhtmltopdf/wkhtmltoimage.
- Download wkhtmltopdf from here;
- Or install as a composer dependency. See wkhtmltopdf binary as composer dependencies for more information.
Attention! Please note that some dependencies (libXrender for example) may not be present on your system and may require manual installation.
After installing you should be able to run wkhtmltopdf from the command line / shell.
If you went for the second option the binaries will be at /vendor/h4cc/wkhtmltoimage-amd64/bin
and /vendor/h4cc/wkhtmltopdf-amd64/bin
.
Move the binaries to a path that is not in a synced folder, for example:
cp vendor/h4cc/wkhtmltoimage-amd64/bin/wkhtmltoimage-amd64 /usr/local/bin/
cp vendor/h4cc/wkhtmltopdf-amd64/bin/wkhtmltopdf-amd64 /usr/local/bin/
and make it executable:
chmod +x /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltoimage-amd64
chmod +x /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf-amd64
This will prevent the error 126.
Require this package in your composer.json and update composer.
composer require barryvdh/laravel-snappy
Laravel 5.5 uses Package Auto-Discovery, so doesn't require you to manually add the ServiceProvider/Facade. If you also use laravel-dompdf, watch out for conflicts. It could be better to manually register the Facade.
After updating composer, add the ServiceProvider to the providers array in config/app.php
Barryvdh\Snappy\ServiceProvider::class,
Optionally you can use the Facade for shorter code. Add this to your facades:
'PDF' => Barryvdh\Snappy\Facades\SnappyPdf::class,
'SnappyImage' => Barryvdh\Snappy\Facades\SnappyImage::class,
Finally you can publish the config file:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Barryvdh\Snappy\ServiceProvider"
The main change to this config file (config/snappy.php) will be the path to the binaries.
For example, when loaded with composer, the line should look like:
'binary' => base_path('vendor/h4cc/wkhtmltopdf-amd64/bin/wkhtmltopdf-amd64'),
If you followed the vagrant steps, the line should look like:
'binary' => '/usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf-amd64',
For windows users you'll have to add double quotes to the bin path for wkhtmltopdf:
'binary' => '"C:\Program Files\wkhtmltopdf\bin\wkhtmltopdf"'
In bootstrap/app.php
add:
class_alias('Barryvdh\Snappy\Facades\SnappyPdf', 'PDF');
$app->register(Barryvdh\Snappy\LumenServiceProvider::class);
Optionally, add the facades like so:
class_alias(Barryvdh\Snappy\Facades\SnappyPdf::class, 'PDF');
class_alias(Barryvdh\Snappy\Facades\SnappyImage::class, 'SnappyImage');
To customise the configuration file, copy the file /vendor/barryvdh/laravel-snappy/config/snappy.php
to the /config
folder.
You can create a new Snappy PDF/Image instance and load a HTML string, file or view name. You can save it to a file, or inline (show in browser) or download.
Using the App container:
$snappy = App::make('snappy.pdf');
//To file
$html = '<h1>Bill</h1><p>You owe me money, dude.</p>';
$snappy->generateFromHtml($html, '/tmp/bill-123.pdf');
$snappy->generate('http://www.github.com', '/tmp/github.pdf');
//Or output:
return new Response(
$snappy->getOutputFromHtml($html),
200,
array(
'Content-Type' => 'application/pdf',
'Content-Disposition' => 'attachment; filename="file.pdf"'
)
);
Using the wrapper:
$pdf = App::make('snappy.pdf.wrapper');
$pdf->loadHTML('<h1>Test</h1>');
return $pdf->inline();
Or use the facade:
$pdf = PDF::loadView('pdf.invoice', $data);
return $pdf->download('invoice.pdf');
You can chain the methods:
return PDF::loadFile('http://www.github.com')->inline('github.pdf');
You can change the orientation and paper size
PDF::loadHTML($html)->setPaper('a4')->setOrientation('landscape')->setOption('margin-bottom', 0)->save('myfile.pdf')
If you need the output as a string, you can get the rendered PDF with the output() function, so you can save/output it yourself.
See the wkhtmltopdf manual for more information/settings.
As an alternative to mocking, you may use the PDF
facade's fake
method. When using fakes, assertions are made after the code under test is executed:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
use PDF;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function testPrintOrderShipping()
{
PDF::fake();
// Perform order shipping...
PDF::assertViewIs('view-pdf-order-shipping');
PDF::assertSee('Name');
}
}
PDF::assertViewIs($value);
PDF::assertViewHas($key, $value = null);
PDF::assertViewHasAll(array $bindings);
PDF::assertViewMissing($key);
PDF::assertSee($value);
PDF::assertSeeText($value);
PDF::assertDontSee($value);
PDF::assertDontSeeText($value);
PDF::assertFileNameIs($value);
This Snappy Wrapper for Laravel is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license