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This is a page for taking notes for current workflow process. Intended for further processing and organization.

Laravel 5

  • Tested on Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS, Apache/2.4.9, PHP 5.5.15RC1, Laravel (5.0; installer version 1.2.0) / medium / less than 10 minutes

Installation

Prerequisite environment setup

Make sure you have PHP 5.4 or greater version installed. On a Debian-derived distribution such as Ubuntu, it's as simple as # apt-get install php5.

Other basic requirements are mcrypt, mbstring. OpenSSL support is built-in on this version[1]. I also install JSON, xdebug, sqlite, readline, mysql, memcached, intl, and curl.

mhan@brahms:~/testing $ sudo apt-get install php5-mcrypt php5-json php5-xdebug php5-sqlite php5-readline php5-mysql php5-memcached php5-intl php5-curl

mbstring is a part of libapache2-mod-php5 package[2].

mhan@brahms:~/testing $ sudo apt-get install libapache2-mod-php5

Files and applications

Download Laravel installer using Composer.

$ composer global require "laravel/installer=~1.1"
Changed current directory to /home/mhan/.composer
./composer.json has been created
Loading composer repositories with package information
Updating dependencies (including require-dev)
  - Installing symfony/process (v2.6.4)
    Down    Downloading: 100%

  - Installing symfony/console (v2.6.4)
    Down    Downloading: 100%

  - Installing guzzlehttp/streams (2.1.0)
    Down    Downloading: 100%

  - Installing guzzlehttp/guzzle (4.2.3)
    Down    Downloading: 100%

  - Installing laravel/installer (v1.2.0)
    Down    Downloading: 100%

symfony/console suggests installing symfony/event-dispatcher ()
symfony/console suggests installing psr/log (For using the console logger)
Writing lock file
Generating autoload files

Instead of adding ~/.composer/vendor/bin to the PATH environment variable, I simply made a symbolic link to it in ~/bin/ folder.

$ ln -s ~/.composer/vendor/bin/laravel ~/bin/laravel

Create a new Laravel application.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ laravel new sanban
Crafting application...
Generating optimized class loader
Compiling common classes
Compiling views
Application key [CJwBsllwDbWLlxy7zH7zRATmSu2laUyA] set successfully.
Application ready! Build something amazing.

Then I enable access to this new application via web. This is an apache config.

<VirtualHost *:80>
        ServerAdmin admin@hostname.com
        ServerName sanban.hostname.com
        ServerSignature Off
        DocumentRoot /srv/www/sanban/public

        <Directory /srv/www/sanban/public>
                Options -Indexes +FollowSymLinks -MultiViews
                AllowOverride All
                Require all granted
        </Directory>
</VirtualHost>

Make sure to restart the httpd (i.e. $ service apache2 restart on Ubuntu).

Post-installation updates

Laravel installation through its own installer may not get the latest version, so execute $ composer update once from the project home directory. In this example, I'd run it from /srv/www/sanban.

Update app.url, app.timezone[3].

<?php
// config/app.php
..
'url' => 'http://hostname.com',
..
'timezone' => 'America/Denver',
..

Make sure storage is writable by the web server. There are several ways to do this, and one of the ways is to change the ownership so that the web server and you, a developer, can write freely to it.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ sudo chown -R www-data:mhan storage

I also like to add a link to artisan PHP executable into my ~/bin folder.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ chmod u+x artisan.sanban && ln -s /srv/www/sanban/artisan ~/bin/artisan.sanban

I add the application short name as an extension to artisan because I have multiple instances of Laravel applications and create links to corresponding artisan executables.

For unit testing

For compatibility reasons, it's better to use the composer-installed phpunit package. You can do this by running $ composer update --dev which will install phpunit package automatically. You may also want to create a symlink to it. This example creates a phpunit.sanban symlink which you can use for this particular instance.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ chmod u+x vendor/phpunit/phpunit/phpunit $ ln -s /srv/www/sanban/vendor/phpunit/phpunit/phpunit ~/bin/phpunit.sanban

I also want the unit testing to stop on a failure. You can change stopOnFailure attribute to true in phpunit.xml file.

If you use VIM like I do, you can insert this into your ~/.vimrc file and just hit ,t (comma and then t) key combination to run the unit test wherever you are under the project directory.

nmap ,t :!if [ -d .git ] \|\| git rev-parse --git-dir > /dev/null 2>&1; then phpunit.$(cat $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/phpspec.yml \| grep "namespace" \| awk '{print tolower(substr($0,20));exit}') -c $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel); else phpunit.$(cat $(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)/phpspec.yml \| grep "namespace" \| awk '{print tolower(substr($0,20));exit}'); fi<cr>

In order for this to work properly your project directory has to be initialized as a git repository.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /srv/www/sanban/.git/

Personal preferences

I browse, search, and many other things all in CLI, and sometimes it's cumbersome to type in long path names. Symlinks to the rescue! I use i for /vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ ln -s ./vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate i

Configuration

Name the application

I'm naming the application sanban.

mhan@brahms:/srv/www/sanban $ artisan.sanban app:name Sanban

Generate an application key

This is mostly used for the encryption.

mhan@brahms:~/sanban $ artisan.sanban key:generate

References

  1. Stack Exchange. Program documentation. Stack Exchange. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Feb. 2015. <http://askubuntu.com/questions/323005/php-openssl-extension-has-a-package>.
  2. Stack Exchange. Program documentation. Stack Exchange. N.p., n.d. Web. 26 Feb. 2015. <http://askubuntu.com/questions/491629/how-to-install-php-mbstring-extension-in-ubuntu>.
  3. 26 Feb 2015. <http://php.net/manual/en/timezones.php>.