atymic
Posted on March 1, 2020
Laravel 7 is pretty much upon us (scheduled for release on 3rd March) and brings a bunch of awesome new features & improvements. One of these ones I'm most looking forward to is Custom Eloquent Casts.
Historically you've been limited to the default set of casts provided by Laravel, which cover basic language type plus dates. While there are some existing packages out there implementing custom casting they have a major drawback. Because they override the setAttribute
and getAttribute
methods through a trait, they can't be used with any other
packages that also override those methods.
Now that Laravel 7 supports these casts natively there won't be compatibility issues between libraries!
How custom eloquent casts work
Any object implementing the new CastsAttributes
contract provided by Laravel can now be used in the $casts
property on your model. When accessing properties on your model, Eloquent will first check if there's a custom cast to transform the value with before returning the value to you.
Keep in mind that your cast will be called on every single get and set
operation on the model, so consider caching intensive operations.
Creating Custom Casts
A popular feature suggestion for Laravel has been allowing selective encryption of model properties, and with custom
casts this is super simple to implement.
use Illuminate\Contracts\Database\Eloquent\CastsAttributes;
class EncryptCast implements CastsAttributes
{
public function get($model, $key, $value, $attributes)
{
return encrypt($value);
}
public function set($model, $key, $value, $attributes)
{
return decrypt($value);
}
}
In your model, you can then assign a property to the cast we just created.
class TestModel extends Model
{
/**
* The attributes that should be cast to native types.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $casts = [
'secret' => EncryptCast::class,
];
}
Now that we've set it up, let's test it out! Because the encrypt
/decrypt
functions serialize input, you can store
pretty much anything (but you should probably stick to the simple built-in types).
$model = new TestModel();
$model->secret = 'Hello World'; // Plain text value
// Encrypted value (which will be saved to the database)
// Raw Value: eyJpdiI6InV4Q25ZN0FZUW5YSEZkRCtZSGlVXC9BPT0iLCJ2Y...
$model->getAttributes()['secret'];
$model->save(); // Save & reload the model from the DB
$model->fresh();
echo $model->secret; // Hello World
Because custom casts are just objects, they can be as simple or complex as required. There's a couple of additional features in the implementation, including "Inbound" casts (that only cast set values) and the ability to accept config from the deceleration in the model's $casts
.
For example, we could limit strings to a configurable length, but only when setting values (therefore any existing values would remain the same length).
class LimitCaster implements CastsInboundAttributes
{
public function __construct($length = 25)
{
$this->length = $length;
}
public function set($model, $key, $value, $attributes)
{
return [$key => Str::limit((string) $value, $this->length)];
}
}
In the model, separate the class name of the cast and the parameters with a colon.
class TestModel extends Model
{
protected $casts = [
'limited_str' => LimitCaster::class . ':10', // Limit to 10 characters
];
}
Wrapping Up
I'm really excited to see some of the awesome casts the community comes up with once Laravel 7 is out. It's super easy to publish custom casts as in packages as well, so hopefully we'll see a bunch of packages proving custom casts in the future.
One of the ones I've missed on previous projects is a DateInterval
or CarbonInterval
cast, so I've published a package
in case anyone else has come across the same problem.
Got any questions? Feel free to comment below and I'll do my best to answer them!
Further Reading
Posted on March 1, 2020
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