Artisan is the name of the command-line interface included with Laravel. It provides a number of helpful commands for your use while developing your application. It is driven by the powerful Symfony Console component. To view a list of all available Artisan commands, you may use the list
command:
php artisan list
Every command also includes a "help" screen which displays and describes the command's available arguments and options. To view a help screen, simply precede the name of the command with help
:
php artisan help migrate
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/Console/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.
To create a new command, you may use the make:console
Artisan command, which will generate a command stub to help you get started:
php artisan make:console SendEmails
The command above would generate a class at app/Console/Commands/SendEmails.php
. When creating the command, the --command
option may be used to assign the terminal command name:
php artisan make:console SendEmails --command=emails:send
Once your command is generated, you should fill out the signature
and description
properties of the class, which will be used when displaying your command on the list
screen.
The handle
method will be called when your command is executed. You may place any command logic in this method. Let's take a look at an example command.
Note that we are able to inject any dependencies we need into the command's constructor. The Laravel service container will automatically inject all dependencies type-hinted in the constructor. For greater code reusability, it is good practice to keep your console commands light and let them defer to application services to accomplish their tasks.
<?php
namespace App\Console\Commands;
use App\User;
use App\DripEmailer;
use Illuminate\Console\Command;
class SendEmails extends Command
{
/**
* The name and signature of the console command.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $signature = 'email:send {user}';
/**
* The console command description.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $description = 'Send drip e-mails to a user';
/**
* The drip e-mail service.
*
* @var DripEmailer
*/
protected $drip;
/**
* Create a new command instance.
*
* @param DripEmailer $drip
* @return void
*/
public function __construct(DripEmailer $drip)
{
parent::__construct();
$this->drip = $drip;
}
/**
* Execute the console command.
*
* @return mixed
*/
public function handle()
{
$this->drip->send(User::find($this->argument('user')));
}
}
When writing console commands, it is common to gather input from the user through arguments or options. Laravel makes it very convenient to define the input you expect from the user using the signature
property on your commands. The signature
property allows you to define the name, arguments, and options for the command in a single, expressive, route-like syntax.
All user supplied arguments and options are wrapped in curly braces. In the following example, the command defines one required argument: user
:
/**
* The name and signature of the console command.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $signature = 'email:send {user}';
You may also make arguments optional and define default values for optional arguments:
// Optional argument...
email:send {user?}
// Optional argument with default value...
email:send {user=foo}
Options, like arguments, are also a form of user input. However, they are prefixed by two hyphens (--
) when they are specified on the command line. We can define options in the signature like so:
/**
* The name and signature of the console command.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $signature = 'email:send {user} {--queue}';
In this example, the --queue
switch may be specified when calling the Artisan command. If the --queue
switch is passed, the value of the option will be true
. Otherwise, the value will be false
:
php artisan email:send 1 --queue
You may also specify that the option should be assigned a value by the user by suffixing the option name with a =
sign, indicating that a value should be provided:
/**
* The name and signature of the console command.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $signature = 'email:send {user} {--queue=}';
In this example, the user may pass a value for the option like so:
php artisan email:send 1 --queue=default
You may also assign default values to options:
email:send {user} {--queue=default}
To assign a shortcut when defining an option, you may specify it before the option name and use a | delimiter to separate the shortcut from the full option name:
email:send {user} {--Q|queue}
If you would like to define arguments or options to expect array inputs, you may use the *
character:
email:send {user*}
email:send {user} {--id=*}
You may assign descriptions to input arguments and options by separating the parameter from the description using a colon:
/**
* The name and signature of the console command.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $signature = 'email:send
{user : The ID of the user}
{--queue= : Whether the job should be queued}';
While your command is executing, you will obviously need to access the values for the arguments and options accepted by your command. To do so, you may use the argument
and option
methods:
/**
* Execute the console command.
*
* @return mixed
*/
public function handle()
{
$userId = $this->argument('user');
//
}
If you need to retrieve all of the arguments as an array
, call argument
with no parameters:
$arguments = $this->argument();
Options may be retrieved just as easily as arguments using the option
method. Like the argument
method, you may call option
without any parameters in order to retrieve all of the options as an array
:
// Retrieve a specific option...
$queueName = $this->option('queue');
// Retrieve all options...
$options = $this->option();
If the argument or option does not exist, null
will be returned.
In addition to displaying output, you may also ask the user to provide input during the execution of your command. The ask
method will prompt the user with the given question, accept their input, and then return the user's input back to your command:
/**
* Execute the console command.
*
* @return mixed
*/
public function handle()
{
$name = $this->ask('What is your name?');
}
The secret
method is similar to ask
, but the user's input will not be visible to them as they type in the console. This method is useful when asking for sensitive information such as a password:
$password = $this->secret('What is the password?');
If you need to ask the user for a simple confirmation, you may use the confirm
method. By default, this method will return false
. However, if the user enters y
in response to the prompt, the method will return true
.
if ($this->confirm('Do you wish to continue? [y|N]')) {
//
}
The anticipate
method can be used to provide autocompletion for possible choices. The user can still choose any answer, regardless of the auto-completion hints:
$name = $this->anticipate('What is your name?', ['Taylor', 'Dayle']);
If you need to give the user a predefined set of choices, you may use the choice
method. The user chooses the index of the answer, but the value of the answer will be returned to you. You may set the default value to be returned if nothing is chosen:
$name = $this->choice('What is your name?', ['Taylor', 'Dayle'], $default);
To send output to the console, use the line
, info
, comment
, question
and error
methods. Each of these methods will use the appropriate ANSI colors for their purpose.
To display an information message to the user, use the info
method. Typically, this will display in the console as green text:
/**
* Execute the console command.
*
* @return mixed
*/
public function handle()
{
$this->info('Display this on the screen');
}
To display an error message, use the error
method. Error message text is typically displayed in red:
$this->error('Something went wrong!');
If you want to display plain console output, use the line
method. The line
method does not receive any unique coloration:
$this->line('Display this on the screen');
The table
method makes it easy to correctly format multiple rows / columns of data. Just pass in the headers and rows to the method. The width and height will be dynamically calculated based on the given data:
$headers = ['Name', 'Email'];
$users = App\User::all(['name', 'email'])->toArray();
$this->table($headers, $users);
For long running tasks, it could be helpful to show a progress indicator. Using the output object, we can start, advance and stop the Progress Bar. You have to define the number of steps when you start the progress, then advance the Progress Bar after each step:
$users = App\User::all();
$bar = $this->output->createProgressBar(count($users));
foreach ($users as $user) {
$this->performTask($user);
$bar->advance();
}
$bar->finish();
For more advanced options, check out the Symfony Progress Bar component documentation.
Once your command is finished, you need to register it with Artisan so it will be available for use. This is done within the app/Console/Kernel.php
file.
Within this file, you will find a list of commands in the commands
property. To register your command, simply add the class name to the list. When Artisan boots, all the commands listed in this property will be resolved by the service container and registered with Artisan:
protected $commands = [
Commands\SendEmails::class
];
Sometimes you may wish to execute an Artisan command outside of the CLI. For example, you may wish to fire an Artisan command from a route or controller. You may use the call
method on the Artisan
facade to accomplish this. The call
method accepts the name of the command as the first argument, and an array of command parameters as the second argument. The exit code will be returned:
Route::get('/foo', function () {
$exitCode = Artisan::call('email:send', [
'user' => 1, '--queue' => 'default'
]);
//
});
Using the queue
method on the Artisan
facade, you may even queue Artisan commands so they are processed in the background by your queue workers:
Route::get('/foo', function () {
Artisan::queue('email:send', [
'user' => 1, '--queue' => 'default'
]);
//
});
If you need to specify the value of an option that does not accept string values, such as the --force
flag on the migrate:refresh
command, you may pass a boolean true
or false
:
$exitCode = Artisan::call('migrate:refresh', [
'--force' => true,
]);
Sometimes you may wish to call other commands from an existing Artisan command. You may do so using the call
method. This call
method accepts the command name and an array of command parameters:
/**
* Execute the console command.
*
* @return mixed
*/
public function handle()
{
$this->call('email:send', [
'user' => 1, '--queue' => 'default'
]);
//
}
If you would like to call another console command and suppress all of its output, you may use the callSilent
method. The callSilent
method has the same signature as the call
method:
$this->callSilent('email:send', [
'user' => 1, '--queue' => 'default'
]);