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Artisan Development

Introduction

In addition to the commands provided with Artisan, you may also build your own custom commands for working with your application. You may store your custom commands in the app/commands directory; however, you are free to choose your own storage location as long as your commands can be autoloaded based on your composer.json settings.

Building A Command

Generating The Class

To create a new command, you may use the command:make Artisan command, which will generate a command stub to help you get started:

Generate A New Command Class

php artisan command:make FooCommand

By default, generated commands will be stored in the app/commands directory; however, you may specify custom path or namespace:

php artisan command:make FooCommand --path=app/classes --namespace=Classes

When creating the command, the --command option may be used to assign the terminal command name:

php artisan command:make AssignUsers --command=users:assign

Writing The Command

Once your command is generated, you should fill out the name and description properties of the class, which will be used when displaying your command on the list screen.

The fire method will be called when your command is executed. You may place any command logic in this method.

Arguments & Options

The getArguments and getOptions methods are where you may define any arguments or options your command receives. Both of these methods return an array of commands, which are described by a list of array options.

When defining arguments, the array definition values represent the following:

array($name, $mode, $description, $defaultValue)

The argument mode may be any of the following: InputArgument::REQUIRED or InputArgument::OPTIONAL.

When defining options, the array definition values represent the following:

array($name, $shortcut, $mode, $description, $defaultValue)

For options, the argument mode may be: InputOption::VALUE_REQUIRED, InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL, InputOption::VALUE_IS_ARRAY, InputOption::VALUE_NONE.

The VALUE_IS_ARRAY mode indicates that the switch may be used multiple times when calling the command:

php artisan foo --option=bar --option=baz

The VALUE_NONE option indicates that the option is simply used as a "switch":

php artisan foo --option

Retrieving Input

While your command is executing, you will obviously need to access the values for the arguments and options accepted by your application. To do so, you may use the argument and option methods:

Retrieving The Value Of A Command Argument

$value = $this->argument('name');

Retrieving All Arguments

$arguments = $this->argument();

Retrieving The Value Of A Command Option

$value = $this->option('name');

Retrieving All Options

$options = $this->option();

Writing Output

To send output to the console, you may use the info, comment, question and error methods. Each of these methods will use the appropriate ANSI colors for their purpose.

Sending Information To The Console

$this->info('Display this on the screen');

Sending An Error Message To The Console

$this->error('Something went wrong!');

Asking Questions

You may also use the ask and confirm methods to prompt the user for input:

Asking The User For Input

$name = $this->ask('What is your name?');

Asking The User For Secret Input

$password = $this->secret('What is the password?');

Asking The User For Confirmation

if ($this->confirm('Do you wish to continue? [yes|no]'))
{
	//
}

You may also specify a default value to the confirm method, which should be true or false:

$this->confirm($question, true);

Registering Commands

Once your command is finished, you need to register it with Artisan so it will be available for use. This is typically done in the app/start/artisan.php file. Within this file, you may use the Artisan::add method to register the command:

Registering An Artisan Command

Artisan::add(new CustomCommand);

If your command is registered in the application IoC container, you may use the Artisan::resolve method to make it available to Artisan:

Registering A Command That Is In The IoC Container

Artisan::resolve('binding.name');

Calling Other Commands

Sometimes you may wish to call other commands from your command. You may do so using the call method:

Calling Another Command

$this->call('command:name', array('argument' => 'foo', '--option' => 'bar'));