Laravel Arkitect lets you test and enforce your architectural rules in your Laravel applications, and it's a PHPArkitect wrapper for Laravel. This package helps you to keep your app's architecture clean and consistent.
├─ storage
├─ tests
│ ├─ Architecture ✅
│ ├─ Browser
│ ├─ Feature
│ └─ Unit
└─ vendor
You can install the package via Composer:
composer require mortexa/laravel-arkitect --dev
First, you should create your architectural rules by running the following Artisan command:
php artisan make:arkitect ControllersNaming
By running the command, the ControllersNaming.php
file will be created in your application's tests/Architecture
directory like this:
<?php
namespace Tests\Architecture;
use Arkitect\Rules\DSL\ArchRule;
use Mortexa\LaravelArkitect\Contracts\RuleContract;
use Mortexa\LaravelArkitect\Rules\BaseRule;
class ControllersNaming extends BaseRule implements RuleContract
{
/**
* Define your architectural rule
*
* @link https://github.com/phparkitect/arkitect
*
* @return \Arkitect\Rules\DSL\ArchRule
*/
public static function rule(): ArchRule
{
// TODO: Implement rule() method.
}
/**
* Define the path related to your rule
*
* @example app/Http/Controllers
*
* @return string
*/
public static function path(): string
{
// TODO: Implement path() method.
}
}
Then, you must implement rule()
and path()
methods based on the following example.
And finally, you can run your tests by the following command:
php artisan test:arkitect
Done!
If you want to stop checking command immediately after first violation, you can use
--stop-on-failure
option.
For all available rules, please take a look at the PHPArkitect repository: https://github.com/phparkitect/arkitect
Some opinionated rules are provided by the package and apply by default. These rules are about Laravel user-land structure. You are free to customize or ignore them entirely by publishing config file.
<?php
namespace Tests\Architecture;
use Arkitect\Expression\ForClasses\HaveNameMatching;
use Arkitect\Expression\ForClasses\ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces;
use Arkitect\Rules\DSL\ArchRule;
use Arkitect\Rules\Rule;
use Mortexa\LaravelArkitect\Contracts\RuleContract;
use Mortexa\LaravelArkitect\Rules\BaseRule;
class ControllersNaming extends BaseRule implements RuleContract
{
public static function rule(): ArchRule
{
return Rule::allClasses()
->that(new ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces('App\Http\Controllers'))
->should(new HaveNameMatching('*Controller'))
->because('It\'s a Laravel naming convention');
}
public static function path(): string
{
return 'app/Http/Controllers';
}
}
If you want to customize the default rules provided by the package, You can publish the Laravel Arkitect configuration file using the following Artisan command:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Mortexa\LaravelArkitect\ArkitectServiceProvider" --tag="config"
The arkitect
configuration file will be placed in your application's config
directory.
// config/arkitect.php
<?php
use ...
return [
'rules' => [
'naming' => [
ControllersNaming::class,
ExceptionsNaming::class,
NotificationsNaming::class,
ObserversNaming::class,
ProvidersNaming::class,
RequestsNaming::class,
ResourcesNaming::class,
ChannelsNaming::class,
SeedersNaming::class,
PoliciesNaming::class,
FactoriesNaming::class,
ScopesNaming::class,
BuildersNaming::class,
ContractsNaming::class,
RepositoriesNaming::class,
MailsNaming::class,
],
'extending' => [
ControllersExtending::class,
CommandsExtending::class,
ExceptionsExtending::class,
RequestsExtending::class,
ResourcesExtending::class,
ResourceCollectionsExtending::class,
ModelsExtending::class,
NotificationsExtending::class,
ProvidersExtending::class,
ViewsExtending::class,
FactoriesExtending::class,
SeedersExtending::class,
MailsExtending::class,
],
'implementing' => [
RulesImplementing::class,
CastsImplementing::class,
ScopesImplementing::class,
JobsImplementing::class,
],
],
'ignored_namespaces' => [],
];
If you want to ignore any namespaces from being under architectural test, you should add the related path to ignored_namespaces
key in configuration file.
Thank you for considering contributing! If you find an issue, or have a better way to do something, feel free to open an issue, or a PR.
This repository is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license.