This package supports Laravel 6 and above.
Teamwork is the fastest and easiest method to add a User / Team association with Invites to your Laravel 6+ project.
composer require mpociot/teamwork
The Teamwork
Facade will be discovered by Laravel automatically.
To publish Teamwork's configuration and migration files, run the vendor:publish
command.
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Mpociot\Teamwork\TeamworkServiceProvider"
This will create a teamwork.php
in your config directory.
The default configuration should work just fine for you, but you can take a look at it, if you want to customize the table / model names Teamwork will use.
Run the migration
command, to generate all tables needed for Teamwork.
If your users are stored in a different table other than users
be sure to modify the published migration.
php artisan migrate
After the migration, 3 new tables will be created:
- teams — stores team records
- team_user — stores many-to-many relations between users and teams
- team_invites — stores pending invites for email addresses to teams
You will also notice that a new column current_team_id
has been added to your users table.
This column will define the Team, the user is currently assigned to.
Create a Team model inside app/Team.php
using the following example:
<?php namespace App;
use Mpociot\Teamwork\TeamworkTeam;
class Team extends TeamworkTeam
{
}
The Team
model has two main attributes:
owner_id
— Reference to the User model that owns this Team.name
— Human readable name for the Team.
The owner_id
is an optional attribute and is nullable in the database.
When extending TeamworkTeam, remember to change the team_model
variable in config/teamwork.php
to your new model. For instance: 'team_model' => App\Team::class
Add the UserHasTeams
trait to your existing User model:
<?php namespace App;
use Mpociot\Teamwork\Traits\UserHasTeams;
class User extends Model {
use UserHasTeams; // Add this trait to your model
}
This will enable the relation with Team
and add the following methods teams()
, ownedTeams()
currentTeam()
, invites()
, isTeamOwner()
, isOwnerOfTeam($team)
, attachTeam($team, $pivotData = [])
, detachTeam($team)
, attachTeams($teams)
, detachTeams($teams)
, switchTeam($team)
within your User
model.
Don't forget to dump composer autoload
composer dump-autoload
If you would like to use the middleware to protect to current team owner then just add the middleware provider to your app\Http\Kernel.php
file.
protected $routeMiddleware = [
...
'teamowner' => \Mpociot\Teamwork\Middleware\TeamOwner::class,
...
];
Afterwards you can use the teamowner
middleware in your routes file like so.
Route::get('/owner', function(){
return "Owner of current team.";
})->middleware('auth', 'teamowner');
Now only if the authenticated user is the owner of the current team can access that route.
This middleware is aimed to protect routes where only the owner of the team can edit/create/delete that model
And you are ready to go.
The easiest way to give your new Laravel project Team abilities is by using the make:teamwork
command.
php artisan make:teamwork
This command will create all views, routes and controllers to make your new project team-ready.
Out of the box, the following parts will be created for you:
- Team listing
- Team creation / editing / deletion
- Invite new members to teams
Imagine it as a the make:auth
command for Teamwork.
To get started, take a look at the new installed /teams
route in your project.
Let's start by creating two different Teams.
$team = new Team();
$team->owner_id = User::where('username', '=', 'sebastian')->first()->getKey();
$team->name = 'My awesome team';
$team->save();
$myOtherCompany = new Team();
$myOtherCompany->owner_id = User::where('username', '=', 'marcel')->first()->getKey();
$myOtherCompany->name = 'My other awesome team';
$myOtherCompany->save();
Now thanks to the UserHasTeams
trait, assigning the Teams to the user is super easy:
$user = User::where('username', '=', 'sebastian')->first();
// team attach alias
$user->attachTeam($team, $pivotData); // First parameter can be a Team object, array, or id
// or eloquent's original technique
$user->teams()->attach($team->id); // id only
By using the attachTeam
method, if the User has no Teams assigned, the current_team_id
column will automatically be set.
Alternatively, you can also use createOwnedTeam
method from UserHasTeams
trait. It will create team for the user as owner, attach the user to the team and switch to the newly created team.
// Create user owned team and switch the current team to this new team.
$team = $user->createOwnedTeam(['name' => 'My awesome team']);
// If user has another current team active, you should pass second parameter as true to force switch to the new team.
$team = $user->createOwnedTeam(['name' => 'My awesome team'], true);
The function will return the newly created instance of your team model.
The currently assigned Team of a user can be accessed through the currentTeam
relation like this:
echo "I'm currently in team: " . Auth::user()->currentTeam->name;
echo "The team owner is: " . Auth::user()->currentTeam->owner->username;
echo "I also have these teams: ";
print_r( Auth::user()->teams );
echo "I am the owner of these teams: ";
print_r( Auth::user()->ownedTeams );
echo "My team has " . Auth::user()->currentTeam->users->count() . " users.";
The Team
model has access to these methods:
invites()
— Returns a many-to-many relation to associated invitations.users()
— Returns a many-to-many relation with all users associated to this team.owner()
— Returns a one-to-one relation with the User model that owns this team.hasUser(User $user)
— Helper function to determine if a user is a teammember
If you need to check if the User is a team owner (regardless of the current team) use the isTeamOwner()
method on the User model.
if( Auth::user()->isTeamOwner() )
{
echo "I'm a team owner. Please let me pay more.";
}
Additionally if you need to check if the user is the owner of a specific team, use:
$team = Auth::user()->currentTeam;
if( Auth::user()->isOwnerOfTeam( $team ) )
{
echo "I'm a specific team owner. Please let me pay even more.";
}
The isOwnerOfTeam
method also allows an array or id as team parameter.
If your Users are members of multiple teams you might want to give them access to a switch team
mechanic in some way.
This means that the user has one "active" team, that is currently assigned to the user. All other teams still remain attached to the relation!
Glad we have the UserHasTeams
trait.
try {
Auth::user()->switchTeam( $team_id );
// Or remove a team association at all
Auth::user()->switchTeam( null );
} catch( UserNotInTeamException $e )
{
// Given team is not allowed for the user
}
Just like the isOwnerOfTeam
method, switchTeam
accepts a Team object, array, id or null as a parameter.
The best team is of no avail if you're the only team member.
To invite other users to your teams, use the Teamwork
facade.
Teamwork::inviteToTeam( $email, $team, function( $invite )
{
// Send email to user / let them know that they got invited
});
You can also send invites by providing an object with an email
property like:
$user = Auth::user();
Teamwork::inviteToTeam( $user , $team, function( $invite )
{
// Send email to user / let them know that they got invited
});
This method will create a TeamInvite
model and return it in the callable third parameter.
This model has these attributes:
email
— The email that was invited.accept_token
— Unique token used to accept the invite.deny_token
— Unique token used to deny the invite.
In addition to these attributes, the model has these relations:
user()
— one-to-one relation using theemail
as a unique identifier on the User model.team()
— one-to-one relation return the Team, that invite was aiming for.inviter()
— one-to-one relation return the User, that created the invite.
Note:
The inviteToTeam
method will not check if the given email already has a pending invite. To check for pending invites use the hasPendingInvite
method on the Teamwork
facade.
Example usage:
if( !Teamwork::hasPendingInvite( $request->email, $request->team) )
{
Teamwork::inviteToTeam( $request->email, $request->team, function( $invite )
{
// Send email to user
});
} else {
// Return error - user already invited
}
Once you invited other users to join your team, in order to accept the invitation use the Teamwork
facade once again.
$invite = Teamwork::getInviteFromAcceptToken( $request->token ); // Returns a TeamworkInvite model or null
if( $invite ) // valid token found
{
Teamwork::acceptInvite( $invite );
}
The acceptInvite
method does two thing:
- Call
attachTeam
with the invite-team on the currently authenticated user. - Delete the invitation afterwards.
Just like accepting invites:
$invite = Teamwork::getInviteFromDenyToken( $request->token ); // Returns a TeamworkInvite model or null
if( $invite ) // valid token found
{
Teamwork::denyInvite( $invite );
}
The denyInvite
method is only responsible for deleting the invitation from the database.
If you need to run additional processes after attaching/detaching a team from a user or inviting a user, you can Listen for these events:
\Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserJoinedTeam
\Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserLeftTeam
\Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserInvitedToTeam
In your EventServiceProvider
add your listener(s):
/**
* The event listener mappings for the application.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $listen = [
...
\Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserJoinedTeam::class => [
App\Listeners\YourJoinedTeamListener::class,
],
\Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserLeftTeam::class => [
App\Listeners\YourLeftTeamListener::class,
],
\Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserInvitedToTeam::class => [
App\Listeners\YourUserInvitedToTeamListener::class,
],
];
The UserJoinedTeam and UserLeftTeam event exposes the User and Team's ID. In your listener, you can access them like so:
<?php
namespace App\Listeners;
use Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserJoinedTeam;
class YourJoinedTeamListener
{
/**
* Create the event listener.
*
* @return void
*/
public function __construct()
{
//
}
/**
* Handle the event.
*
* @param UserJoinedTeam $event
* @return void
*/
public function handle(UserJoinedTeam $event)
{
// $user = $event->getUser();
// $teamId = $event->getTeamId();
// Do something with the user and team ID.
}
}
The UserInvitedToTeam event contains an invite object which could be accessed like this:
<?php
namespace App\Listeners;
use Mpociot\Teamwork\Events\UserInvitedToTeam;
class YourUserInvitedToTeamListener
{
/**
* Create the event listener.
*
* @return void
*/
public function __construct()
{
//
}
/**
* Handle the event.
*
* @param UserInvitedToTeam $event
* @return void
*/
public function handle(UserInvitedToTeam $event)
{
// $user = $event->getInvite()->user;
// $teamId = $event->getTeamId();
// Do something with the user and team ID.
}
}
If your models are somehow limited to the current team you will find yourself writing this query over and over again: Model::where('team_id', auth()->user()->currentTeam->id)->get();
.
To automate this process, you can let your models use the UsedByTeams
trait. This trait will automatically append the current team id of the authenticated user to all queries and will also add it to a field called team_id
when saving the models.
Note:
This assumes that the model has a field called
team_id
use Mpociot\Teamwork\Traits\UsedByTeams;
class Task extends Model
{
use UsedByTeams;
}
When using this trait, all queries will append WHERE team_id=CURRENT_TEAM_ID
.
If theres a place in your app, where you really want to retrieve all models, no matter what team they belong to, you can use the allTeams
scope.
Example:
// gets all tasks for the currently active team of the authenticated user
Task::all();
// gets all tasks from all teams globally
Task::allTeams()->get();
Teamwork is free software distributed under the terms of the MIT license.
'Marvel Avengers' image licensed under Creative Commons 2.0 - Photo from W_Minshull