This project was done as a part of 3 Microservices project using Lumen and Laradock Can be used as a stand a lone project and part of the Microservices project
Lumen is designed for building lightning fast micro-services and APIs
Laradock is a full PHP development environment for Docker that Includes prepackaged Docker Images, all preconfigured to provide a wonderful PHP development environment. Laradock is well known in the Laravel/lumen community, as the project started with single focus on running Laravel projects on Docker.
Following the instructions one should be able to run this project or at least have a good base how to start a Lumen project using Laradock.
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git clone [email protected]:ahmedalaahagag/books-microserivces.git
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Rename
.env.example
file to.env
. The .env file is the environment file that deals with project configurations like database credentials, api keys, debug mode, application keys etc and this file is out of version control. -
Set your application key to a random string. Typically, this string should be 32 characters long. In .env file it is called eg
APP_KEY=akkfjvlakengoemvgkcgelapchyekci
the same goes toACCEPTED_SECRETS`comma separated list of whitelisted keys`ACCEPTED_SECRETS=akkfjvlakengoemvgkcgelapchyekci,akkfjvlakengoemvgkcgelapchyekci
which is a key that should be sent with every API call to this project inside the request headersAuthorization:ECvSZ5O6P9x1GP1fvbtEVktoN358BofH
. -
Laradock clone it inside the project folder
git clone https://github.com/laradock/laradock.git
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cd laradock
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cp env-example .env
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docker-compose up -d nginx mysql phpmyadmin workspace
=> To start the server -
docker-compose exec workspace bash
=> to get access to virtual machine and here one can execute any artisan command -
Run
composer install
=> to install all php dependencies. This will create a vendor folder which is the core lumen framework -
Inside
.env
file in the project root updateDB_HOST=mysql
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With SQL tool as
PhpMyAdmin
which is already provided by Laradock at portlocalhost:8080
or similar connect to the MySQL to create a new DB. Or use the Docker MySQL workspace bash to use commands instead. -
Default values
host:mysql username:root password:root
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Update database name and else in
.env
Remember all the Docker commands have to be run it under Laradock folder as there the Docker files are placed.
If one wants to run this project as it is after composer install
run migration as php artisan migrate
to update the DB with the right tables. Then seed with php artisan db:seed
to populate the DB with some fake data.
It is possible one has issues with connecting to MySQL image of Docker. A possible solution as follows:
From terminal
$ docker-compose exec mysql bash $ mysql -u root -p # Execute commands ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'root'; ALTER USER 'root'@'%' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'root'; ALTER USER 'default'@'%' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'secret';
May be need to restart the container after the changes
$ docker-compose down $ docker-compose up -d nginx mysql
How to create a Simple Books API. Step by step explanations to get start with Lumen
1) Create a Lumen project
First one need to install Lumen via Composer:
composer global require "laravel/lumen-installer"
Then can run:
lumen new Books
2) Clone Laradock inside the Books folder project
The steps above shows what to do with Laradock and Docker parts.
3) Connect to the MySQL container One can connect via a program like PhpMyAdmin or MysqlWorkBench or else to the MySQL container. Then need to create the DB.
Remember the name of the DB need to be put inside the .env
file along with the credetials of it.
DB_CONNECTION=mysql DB_HOST=mysql -> This need to be in this way and if any connection issues please refer to the troubleshoot section above DB_PORT=3306 -> Change this if you use a different port DB_DATABASE= < DB_NAME > < ex. books > DB_USERNAME= < DB_USERNAME > < ex. root > DB_PASSWORD= < DB_PASSWORD > < ex. root >
After one done the first preliminary set up steps, then is the time to move forward creating the API itself.
4) Eloquent
In simple words allows calling built-in functions instead of writing complex queries.
The Eloquent ORM includes Laravel/Lumen which provides a beautiful, simple ActiveRecord implementation for working with the database.
Each database table has a corresponding Model which is used to interact with that table. Models allow you to query for data in your tables, as well as insert new records into the table. For example, one can say Book::all()
to get all the blog books inside books table rather than writing select * from books
. Where Book in Book::all() is a`model
.
Then to use Eloquent uncomment the $app->withEloquent()
in your bootstrap/app.php
5) Facades
A facade class is a wrapper around a few classes serving a particular purpose to make a series of steps required to perform a task in a single function call.
Then uncomment the $app->withFacades()
call inside bootstrap/app.php
file to use Laravel Facade.
6) Books
Then inside the app folder, will create Book.php
. It is called a model in MVC framework.
It will reflect books table inside database which has not been created yet Inside this model will have set some fillable fields =>name
and gender
and country
as all Eloquent models protect against mass-assignment by default. A mass-assignment vulnerability occurs when a user passes an unexpected HTTP parameter through a request, and that parameter changes a column in your database you did not expect
See more at mass-assignment
7)Create a migration
To create a migration one need to be inside the Docker container workspace:
docker-compose exec workspace bash
Then:
root@688df818e9b7:/var/www# php artisan make:migration create_books_table
This will create migration file inside database/migrations
Example: 2020_02_27_153519_create_books_table.php
A migration file usually defines the schema of the database table.
See more at migrations
Then run command
php artisan migrate
This will migrate schema to database according to what is present in migration file. Now your database will have books table. This is how Eloquent makes it so easy to create tables, share this schema with the team and use its simple functions to generate complex sql queries.
8) Fake data to use for the test of the API
Now the issue how we test the API if we do not have any data to test actually.
Lumen has a very fine way to create dummy data. It is called Model Factories. That uses Faker package behind the scenes. Let’s dive into.
Inside database/factories/ModelFactory.php
will define a factory for each table (1 only for books table in this case). A factory is a suitable word because a factory creates object based on rules defined inside the factory.
Now we need the a seeder class to call this factory to start creating objects and tell it a number to produce as well. So command `php artisan make:seeder BooksTableSeeder.
Alternatively you can create a factory as in database/factories/ModelFactory.php to create objects of Books
Will ask it to create 50 objects whenever it is called. Inside
database/seeds/DatabaseSeeder.php
call BooksFactory
.
Now we will run php artisan db:seed
command to seed the database. Which will call run()
in DatabaseSeeder.php
and seed all listed seeders.
We now have 50 dummy records inside books table.
Example: ![seeds](doc/Screenshot 2019-04-03 at 23.57.20.png)
9) API end points
If we go to routes/web.php
here is we define our endpoints/routes. For example if one wants to get all books one will set an endpoint with url books/all
.
See the file. One used Books::all()
(in a callback function)
which is Eloquent way to fetch all the results for a
model which has also been discussed earlier.
Now if one hit the endpoint through Postman
Attached is a collection that can be imported to Postman
Books.postman_collection.json
or visit in browser`localhost/books` one should see 50 books books in json.
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Standardized response format
ApiResponder.php
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Secret Key
protected endpointsAuthenticateAccess.php
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Standardized exception response format
Handler.php
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RESTful Based API format
web.php
All APIs should be calls with Authorization header
`Authorization`
Which is the key provided in the .env file with the key `ACCEPTED_SECRETS`
Get example
API : GET localhost/books/1
Response :
{
"data": {
"id": 1,
"title": "Unde quia quis sed.",
"description": "Consequatur accusantium fugiat numquam perferendis sed quis id.",
"price": 140,
"author_id": 30,
"created_at": "2020-02-28 13:02:32",
"updated_at": "2020-02-28 13:02:32"
}
}
Error example
API : GET localhost/books/1
Response :
{
"error": "Unauthorized"
}