Sends messages to Slack with your Laravel application. See the original package here.
This package provides:
-
Send message to slack with a Laravel command.
-
Send stats about your Laravel app with this customizable command.
-
Output to Slack useful information about exceptions when they occurred.
-
Get alerted when a job failed.
-
Keep an eye on the result of your scheduled commands.
- Laravel 5.1 or greater
- PHP 5.5.9 or greater
You can install the package using the Composer package manager. You can install it by running this command in your project root:
composer require Atbox/laravel-slack-output
You need to include the service provider and the facade in your Laravel app.
Add the service provider to the providers
array in config/app.php
:
'providers' => [
...
Atbox\SlackOutput\ServiceProvider::class,
],
and then add the facade to your aliases
array:
'aliases' => [
...
'SlackOutput' => Atbox\SlackOutput\Facade\SlackOutput::class,
],
Publish the configuration file with:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Atbox\SlackOutput\ServiceProvider"
You need to add the webhook URL to the configuration file in order for the package to post to Slack.
Create an incoming webhook on your Slack account.
Copy the webhook url and open config/slack-output.php
and set the webhook url to endpoint
.
If null
is set for any, the package will fall back on the default settings set by the webhook.
The command slack:post
posts message to Slack. It can take as arguments:
message
: the message to sendto
: the channel or person to post toattach
: the attachment payload
You can find information about the attach argument here: https://api.slack.com/docs/attachments
You can call it by the running the command:
php artisan slack:post "Hello, I'm a bot" @nico
You can also call it in your Laravel app:
Artisan::queue('slack:post', [
'to' => "#api-output",
'attach' => $someAttachment,
'message' => "Hello, I'm a bot"
]);
Note the Artisan::queue
, the command will be executed in background and will not block the current request.
The command slack:stats
send useful stats about your app to slack.
You need to configure this command by setting in config/slack-output.php
the Eloquent classes and dates you prefer.
You can add constraints to the classes to limit the number of counted data.
'classes' => [
\App\Models\User::class => [
'is_active' => true //optional constraint
]
],
The dates array is the form 'name of the date' => Carbon::instance()
. Like:
'dates' => [
'yesterday' => \Carbon\Carbon::yesterday(),
'last week' => \Carbon\Carbon::today()->subWeek(1)
]
To schedule this command every day, simple add to app/Console/Kernel.php
:
protected function schedule(Schedule $schedule)
{
$schedule->command('slack:stats')->daily()
}
To report useful exception to Slack, open app/Exceptions/Handler.php
, and transform it like:
use Atbox\SlackOutput\Facade\SlackOutput;
...
public function report(Exception $e)
{
if ($this->shouldReport($e)) {
SlackOutput::exception($e);
}
parent::report($e);
}
This will only reports exceptions that are not in the $dontReport
array in the same file.
To report failed jobs to Slack, open app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php
, and transform it like:
use Atbox\SlackOutput\Facade\SlackOutput;
...
public function boot()
{
Queue::failing(function (JobFailed $job) {
SlackOutput::jobFailed($job);
});
}
To report the output of scheduled commands to Slack, open app/Console/Kernel.php
, and transform it like:
use Atbox\SlackOutput\Facade\SlackOutput;
...
protected function schedule(Schedule $schedule)
{
SlackOutput::scheduledCommand(
$schedule->command('db:backup-auto')->daily()
);
}
If you have problems, found a bug or have a feature suggestion, please add an issue on GitHub. Pull requests are also welcomed!
This package is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license