Jump Gate

JumpGate App Walkthrough: Database


Introduction

In this step of creating our todo app, we are going to build out the todo service. We call this architecture a micro-service. You can learn more about how we view this in our micro services doc.

{info} You can see the source code at GitHub.

This step is stored as a branch called database.

Directories

To start off, we need our folders. Create a folder called ToDo in your app/Services folder. This is where all of our code for the todo system will live. We will need a few folders in here by default.

šŸ“app
  šŸ“Services
    šŸ“ToDo
      šŸ“Http
        šŸ“Controllers
        šŸ“Routes
      šŸ“Models

This should look somewhat familiar to you. This is basically a miniature version of the app directory.

Planning the Tables

Let’s start with the data. We need somewhere to store our lists and tasks. To do this we will need database tables and models to interact with them. I know the basic data structure I want, and detailed the basic structure below..

# todo_lists
id:            auto increments primary key
user_id:       unsigned foreign key
name:          string not null
slug:          string not null
description:   text nullable
complete_flag: boolean default(0)
timestamps

# todo_tasks
id:            auto increments primary key
list_id:       unsigned foreign key
name:          string not null
description:   text nullable
complete_flag: boolean default(0)
timestamps

For now I think these are the only tables I will need. I normally use this set up for database columns.

  1. IDs
    1. These will be the ID of the table and any foreign key IDs.
  2. Data fields
    1. Things that are data for this particular object.
  3. Flags
    1. Anything that is a 0 or 1 value.
  4. Date fields
    1. Laravel’s default created_at and updated_at along with any custom date fields.

I also follow a certain convention for table names: <service>_<purpose>. In this case, these are in the todo service so that is the prefix they are given. I find this useful since it groups the tables in SQL making them easier to identify at a glance.

Migrations

So now we need to add these to our database. Laravel has a built in migration system that we will leverage. To do this, we can run an artisan command to generate our migration files for us.

php artisan make:migration create_todo_lists_table --create=todo_lists
php artisan make:migration create_todo_tasks_table --create=todo_tasks

These commands will create our migration files in database/migrations and populate them with boilerplate for our table names. They should be easy to spot in that folder. Open up <date>_create_todo_lists_table.php first.

In this file you will see two methods: up and down. Up is used when we are creating the table (when we run php artisan migrate). The down method is used when we rollback our migrations (php artisan migrate:rollback). For now we only need to worry about the up method.

You should see the following boilerplate when you open the file.

Schema::create('todo_lists', function (Blueprint $table) {
    $table->increments('id');
    $table->timestamps();
});

As you can see this already has two of the fields we wanted: id and timestamps. So we just need to add the other ones.

Schema::create('todo_lists', function (Blueprint $table) {
    $table->increments('id');
    $table->integer('user_id')->unsigned();
    $table->string('name');
    $table->string('slug')->index();
    $table->text('description')->nullable();
    $table->boolean('complete_flag')->default(0)->index();
    $table->timestamps();
});

All of our fields are accounted for now. There are a few things to notice here. The user_id column is marked unsigned since all of Laravel’s auto incrementing keys are this way as well. We also added an index to slug and complete_flag. We did this to make searching a bit faster since these are two columns that will likely be used in our where clauses frequently. Now, we should make a foreign key to the users table.

$table->increments('id');
$table->integer('user_id')->unsigned();
$table->string('name');
$table->string('slug')->index();
$table->text('description')->nullable();
$table->boolean('complete_flag')->default(0)->index();
$table->timestamps();

$table->foreign('user_id')
    ->references('id')
    ->on('users')
    ->onDelete('cascade');

We added the foreign key mark up now. This is how Laravel sets these up. It will give the foreign key a name following it’s standard conventions. I also enabled onDelete('cascade'). Should a user be deleted, it will clean up our task lists for us. Now, do the same thing for todo_tasks.

$table->increments('id');
$table->integer('list_id')->unsigned();
$table->string('name');
$table->text('description')->nullable();
$table->boolean('complete_flag')->default(0)->index();
$table->timestamps();

$table->foreign('list_id')
    ->references('id')
    ->on('todo_lists')
    ->onDelete('cascade');

That’s it! Now we just migrate them into our database.

php artisan migrate

When this is done, you can refresh your SQL viewer and see the tables in your database. You will also see entries in the migrations table for these migrations.

Models

Let’s interact with our tables. To do this we need to create models in Laravel. These all follow a fairly simple format.

{warning} We can’t use Laravel’s php artisan make:model command since we are not storing them in the default location Laravel expects.

Go to your app/Services/ToDo/Models folder. Here we will make two files: Task.php and TaskList.php.

Task.php

<?php

namespace App\Services\ToDo\Models;

use App\Models\BaseModel;

class Task extends BaseModel
{
    public $table = 'todo_tasks';

    protected $fillable = [
        'list_id',
        'name',
        'description',
        'complete_flag',
    ];

    public function taskList()
    {
        return $this->belongsTo(TaskList::class, 'list_id');
    }
}

TaskList.php

<?php

namespace App\Services\ToDo\Models;

use App\Models\BaseModel;
use App\Models\User;

class TaskList extends BaseModel
{
    public $table = 'todo_lists';

    protected $fillable = [
        'user_id',
        'name',
        'description',
        'complete_flag',
    ];

    public function user()
    {
        return $this->belongsTo(User::class, 'user_id');
    }

    public function tasks()
    {
        return $this->hasMany(Task::class, 'list_id');
    }
}

As you can see, we have very similar data in each model. The table property is required to know what database table this model maps to. Next, the fillable property is used to let Laravel know what data can be set in mass assignment. This would be instances where you use create() or update() to set multiple columns at once. This is done to protect against a mass assignment vulnerability. Next, is the relationship methods. Laravel has a lot of built in methods to handle the many different types of relationships. We only need a standard one-to-many here. So a TaskList has many Task models, while a Task belongs to a TaskList. A TaskList also belongs to a user so we added that relationship too.

{info} You can learn more about mass assignment vulnerability in the Laravel docs.

Slugging

You may have noticed that we did not make the slug column on TaskList a fillable column. That is because we will be using a package to handle slugging our names.

composer require cviebrock/eloquent-sluggable:^4.6
php artisan package:discover

{info} You can learn more about this package on GitHub.

This package handles slugging table columns very well and is extremely configurable. It’s why it’s our go-to for slugging tables. Let’s go ahead and add the needed configuration to our TaskList model.

<?php

namespace App\Services\ToDo\Models;

use App\Models\BaseModel;
use App\Models\User;
use Cviebrock\EloquentSluggable\Sluggable;

class TaskList extends BaseModel
{
    use Sluggable;

    // Table Properties...

    /**
     * Return the sluggable configuration array for this model.
     *
     * @return array
     */
    public function sluggable()
    {
        return [
            'slug' => [
                'source' => 'name',
            ],
        ];
    }

    // Relationship Methods...
}

To make this package work we need two things: the Sluggable trait and a sluggable() method. The sluggable method expects to return an array. The keys of this array tell it what column to store the slug to. In our case that was slug. The value of that array is another array containing the details of how to create the slug. In our case we want it to use the name column as the source, so that’s what we set. You can test this easily. Using php artisan tinker or just opening app/Http/Controller/HomeController and putting the following code in the index() method and refreshing your homepage will generate a new task list.

\App\Services\ToDo\Models\TaskList::create([
    'user_id' => auth()->id(),
    'name' => 'Testing task lists',
]);

Look in your todo_lists table and make sure you have a row with the following details.

id user_id name slug description complete_flag
1 1 Testing task lists testing-task-lists NULL 0

If you ran it again, you would see the following rows.

id user_id name slug description complete_flag
1 1 Testing task lists testing-task-lists NULL 0
1 1 Testing task lists testing-task-lists-1 NULL 0

You can see the sluggable package working because it added the -1 to the second task list. Perfect! Feel free to delete these rows from your table and continue on to set up your HTTP details.

{info} The walkthrough continues in Setting up Routes and Links.